St Hugh of Lincoln Catholic Primary School Five Oaks Close, St John’s, Woking, Surrey GU21 8TU Telephone: 01483 480441 2014-2015, issue 22 27 February 2015 Website: www.sthugh-of-lincoln.surrey.sch.uk Twitter: @StHughSchool Dear Parents, What a lot has happened since the last newsletter! Since we broke up for the half-term holiday there has been a lot going on in the school. Contractors were in school throughout halfterm, including weekends, stripping out the Year 5 and 6 cloakrooms and fitting new facilities. A reconfiguration of each cloakroom has enabled us to put in two additional toilets. Both cloakrooms have been tiled throughout and they are now much more pleasant environments for the children to use. Children told us last year that the toilet areas were places in school they would like to see improved. I am really pleased that we have been able to do this this year in such a comprehensive way with this work in the Year 5 and 6 cloakrooms added to that already done earlier in the year on the facilities used by children in Years 1-4. The fencing work around the school is nearly complete. I hope parents like the results. Again, the fencing contractors have worked really hard, including working weekends to cause as little disruption as possible. During half term the wooden door through which children in Key Stage 2 entered and exited the building was replaced with a much more suitable door and frame. This provides much greater security and improves the overall appearance of that part of the building. This work follows quickly on from the replacement of the fire exit doors in Years 4, 5 and 6, which were done last Summer. The Key Stage 2 playground resurfacing has been completed. Half of the playground closest to the field was resurfaced a small number of years ago and there has been a real need to complete the job with the half closest to the building being done. I am pleased that this has now taken place with a resultant improvement in drainage and in quality of surface. None of this work would be possible without the Governors Maintenance Fund. For the fencing, cloakroom and resurfacing work we were successful in obtaining grants to cover the large majority of the costs, but as a voluntary aided school it is a requirement that 10% of the project costs are met by the governors’ fund. The replacement entrance and exit door has been paid for entirely from the governors’ fund. The governors’ fund has also supported the school in other essential ways recently, such as funding the replacement of computer servers both in the school office and in the ICT suite. A big thank you, then, to parents who contribute annually to the Governors’ Maintenance Fund— many essential improvements to the fabric of the school would not be possible without your help. A big thank you is also due to Mrs Twose, our Bursar, who has worked tirelessly to coordinate and project manage all this different work being done at the same time. THANK YOU! God bless, Mr George This issue includes: Dear Parents 1 Safeguarding 1 Year 4 trip 2 Volunteers 2 Forthcoming dates 2 WORLD WILDLIFE DAY / BOOK DAY 3 Absence 4 At St Hugh of Lincoln School we are fully committed to safeguarding. Mr George and Mrs Ashby the school’s Designated Child Protection Officers: any concerns regarding safeguarding should be raised with either of them. School Mass Fr Alexander celebrated Mass for the whole school on Wednesday. It was very nice to be able to welcome parents, parishioners and friends—all part of our school community. Fr Alexander reminded us of the importance of Lent and about how we should use the time of Lent to reflect on our attitudes towards one another, our generosity towards one another and the time that we give to one another. Remember that Mass is celebrated in the school hall at 8.30am each Wednesday during term time—it may be that during Lent some parents, with their children, may wish to come to this Mass, which it is a real privilege to be able to do in school in the middle of the week. Year 4 trip to Butser Ancient Farm Despite cold and wet weather, Year 4 enjoyed their trip to Butser Ancient Farm on Thursday. The children experienced what it was like to live in an Iron Age house and a Roman house and undertook a number of activities such as jewellery making, mosaics, and carving with flint. As always when classes go on trips the children were complimented by the staff at the farm for their excellent behaviour and their interest in what they were learning about. Well done to the children, and thank you very much to Miss Whitfield for organising this educational visit. Volunteers A big thank you to parents who have volunteered to help in school on a regular basis. We would love to hear from other parents who may be able to commit a couple of hours a week to help in a class—it can be the class your child is in, or another class. If you think you would like to help in this way please speak to me, one of the office staff, or any classteacher. All volunteers need to attend a meeting with me about safeguarding, our code of conduct, and health and safety, and need to obtain (through the school) a satisfactory Disclosure and Barring Service check. One way in which volunteers can really support classteachers is in supporting children with reading—we would love to have more volunteers who are able to do this. Forthcoming dates: 28 February—Friends Quiz Night 2&3 March—Parent consultation meetings 3 March—World Wildlife Day 5 March—World Book Day (celebrated in school on 6 March—remember dressing up) 9 March—Year 5 to Royal Grammar School Tudor experience 10-13 March—Year 5 bikeability 10, 17, 24 March—Cross country events 11 March—Catenian public speaking competition (Year 6) 13 March—Year 2 class assembly 16 March—Woking Schools Music Festival (Aldershot) 18 March—’Youth Speaks’ event (Year 6) 18 March—Netball rally 20 March—Year 1 class assembly 20 March—Confessions in school 24 March—Year 6 to Junior Citizen 24 March—Year 3 trip to Haslemere Museum I enjoyed teaching Year 4 and Year 5 on Monday afternoon, where we were revising some French vocabulary, specifically days of the week and months of the year. On Wednesday I enjoyed teaching Reception Class where, amongst other things, we were learning about different fruits and vegetables and the parts of the world in which they are grown. Also on Wednesday I enjoyed teaching Year 5 for a short time where the children were learning to program a computer to control a set of traffic lights, with some software called ‘Coco’. On Thursday I enjoyed accompanying Year 4 on their educational visit to Butser Ancient Farm. I am looking forward to teaching Years 1 and 2 on Friday afternoon. Please make sure all items of school uniform and coats etc are properly labelled. I am particularly anxious that when the new coat pegs go up in the Year 5 and Year 6 cloakrooms on Tuesday we should not find coats, jumpers etc. ending up on the floor because nobody knows who they belong to and so which pegs to put them on. Where children have trainers that do not go in their PE bag please can they be provided with a carrier bag that can also be hung on their peg so that we have nothing on the floor. Thank you. World Wildlife Day / World Book Day Please remember that on 6 March we would like children to dress up to celebrate World Wildlife Day and World Book Day. We would like children to dress as a book character, preferably incorporating an animal as part of their outfit (of course, the whole outfit could be an animal!) Parents have suggested to me another good idea for World Book Day—children may well have books at home they have enjoyed reading but have now ‘finished with’ - any children with a book or books they would be happy to bring into school to swap for a book or books brought in by another child will have the opportunity to do this on 6 March—I will oversee the swaps. Scholastic Book Fayre The Book Fayre will be in school next week—it will be open during the parent consultation meetings and after school on Wednesday and Thursday. All the children will have the opportunity to visit the Book Fayre during school time. Please do have a look at the books on offer—every purchase from the Book Fayre generates commission for the school which we can then use to purchase books for the library or for curriculum use. Parent Consultation Meetings Parent consultation meetings will take place on Monday and Tuesday next week. Our usual after school clubs will be happening as normal on Monday and Tuesday, and children will be the hall until the end of school on Tuesday, so access to the hall will be limited to parents during these times. Please look out for signs directing parents. Parents will have the opportunity to look at children’s work in their trays prior to meeting with the teacher. Interim reports for children in Years 1-6 will be sent home today. Amongst all the work going on in school during half-term I had an unexpected phone call—from a reporter working for The TES—the national education newspaper. The reporter wanted to speak with a Catholic school Headteacher about whether it is essential, desirable, or neither, for Catholic schools to employ Catholic teachers. My response was included in an article in last Friday’s TES, with my name and the name of the school (and a photograph!) Communications Do you receive the newsletter each week by email? Or do you receive notification that the newsletter is online via a Twitter account? Many parents do now receive the newsletter in one of these ways. If you do not currently receive the newsletter by email but would like to please send an email to: news@sthugh-of-lincoln.surrey.sch.uk and you will be added to the mailing list. Our Twitter account @StHughSchool has over 400 tweets, all about the school. It is never the exclusive way of sharing essential news, but I try to make it interesting and relevant—there are new tweets most days of the school year. We have 71 followers at present. Absence—for information As parents will probably be aware there has been an increasing expectation in recent years that schools and local authority Education Welfare Officers monitor attendance very carefully, particularly in any cases where a child’s attendance / absence record is classified as ‘persistent absentee’. This is a government term. Until recent years a persistent absentee was a pupil with an attendance record of below 80%. That was then changed so the current definition of persistent absenteeism is an attendance rate of below 85%. The government has announced that from September 2015 the definition will change again so that an attendance record of below 90% is to be regarded as persistent absenteeism. Surrey County Council have produced the following table, which is helpful in converting percentages into sessions (half days): 15 % absence 10 % absence Half-term 1 10 or more sessions 7 or more sessions Half-term 1-2 (autumn term) 22 or more sessions 14 or more sessions Half-term 1-3 30 or more sessions 20 or more sessions Half-term 1-4 (autumn term and spring term combined) 38 or more sessions 25 or more sessions Half-term 1-5 46 or more sessions 31 or more sessions Half-term 1-6 (full academic year) 56 or more sessions 38 or more sessions Friends Quiz Night Good luck to all those attending the Friends Quiz Night on Saturday evening. Thank you for all your support for the school. I know that it will be a great evening. Very big thanks to all those involved in organising the event. Sainsbury Vouchers If you shop at Sainsbury please collect their school vouchers and let us have them— each year we exchange them for useful resources for the school. Please also ask any work colleagues / friends / family who may be willing to give to you to pass onto us any vouchers they collect that they have no other intended use for. Thank you. Please continue to pray for those in our school community who are not well at this time. Please look out for those who may be in need, and pray for the health of all in our school family. We could ask for the intercession of St Hugh, and of our class patron saints: St Bernadette (Reception), St George (Year 1), St Francis of Assisi (Year 2), St Joan of Arc (Year 3), St Patrick (Year 4), St Raphael (Year 5), St Maximilian Kolbe (Year 6).Thank you.
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