Acting Principal's Talanoa
Moana Iese
Kia ora koutou, talofa lava and warm greetings to our Weymouth Community, Parents, Grandparents, Aunts and Uncles, Cousins and our beautiful Tamariki.
Reporting to Whānau
Our teachers have been busy writing your child/ren's school reports and are now in the finalising stages. School reports will come home with your children in the last week of term: Thursday 4 July. Along with your child's report will be an accompanying letter to support the reports, as well as information about our Learning Conversations which will be held in Term 3, Week 2 Wednesday 31 July. Here you will be able to discuss your child's report and their learning goals for the second half of the year. Bookings for Learning Conversations on HERO will be open on Friday 5 July.
Lockdown Exercise - Monday 24 June
As part of keeping our school safe we need to be able to respond safely and quickly to a range of emergency situations.
We work alongside an independent company, Harrison Tew®, who specialises in emergency management planning for schools, whose procedures have been successfully implemented in hundreds of schools throughout New Zealand.
As part of maintaining our emergency procedures in our school, specialised training is being conducted with our senior leadership and staff by Harrison Tew®.
The students will also receive information on how to respond in an emergency directed at their respective age groups from either their teacher or Harrison Tew®.
We will then be conducting a lockdown exercise under the guidance and support of Harrison Tew®.
During the exercise you will receive a notification from the school, so it is important that your emergency contact details are up to date and correct. The notification will emphasise that this is an exercise/practice and will explain that all updated information will then be posted on the school website.
In a genuine incident, should you become aware of a lockdown or evacuation at the school, can I please ask that you do not attend the school or phone, as we will not be able to respond. Your presence or contact may make it more difficult for us or the emergency services to manage a situation. Thank you for your support.
Mānawatia a Matariki me Puanga - Market
This Thursday 27 June, from 11.30-12.30, we will be holding our annual Market Day out under the cloud. Our children have been planning, making, and preparing the wares that they will be selling. This learning has been an integration of the Arts, Mathematics, Financial Literacy, English, Technology, and in some cases a follow-on from their Science learning. We hope you can all make it down - bring along your silver and gold coins. There is something for everyone. All proceeds will go back to the class and the decision as to how it is spent will be up to them. Last year we had classes that donated to charities, brought fun games and resources to add to their class, or contributed their money towards a class treat.
Matariki - Public Holiday Friday 28 June - School Closed
Matariki is an official public holiday, and therefore school will be closed.
Matariki is the name of a star cluster in the constellation of Taurus, commonly also known as Pleiades, which rises on the horizon towards the end of May each year and heralds Te Mātahi o te Tau, the Māori New Year. The arrival of Matariki signals that it is time for people to gather, honour the dead, celebrate the present, and make plans for the future.
The word “Matariki” is an abbreviation of “Ngā mata o te ariki o Tāwhirimātea”, or "the eyes of the god Tāwhirimātea". Matariki was taken as a wife by Rehua (Antares) and she gave birth to eight children, each star having a unique purpose and defined role in ao Māori.
All iwi celebrate the Māori New Year in June or July, but not all iwi refer specifically to this time of year as Matariki. Instead, other iwi will name this time of year ‘Puanga’. Puanga is given prominence mainly because some iwi (The tribes of Whanganui, Taranaki, parts of the Far North, and parts of the South Island) struggle to see Matariki clearly from their locality and therefore look to the next important star near Matariki. That star is Puanga. Puanga is the star Rigel and is the brightest star in the Orion constellation. Matariki is seen below Puanga and to the left of Tautoru (the three stars of Orion’s Belt) in the late autumn and early winter night sky.
Mānwatia a Matariki me Puanga.
Basic Facts A Thon
Next term we will be having a Basic Facts A Thon - a fabulous way for our tamariki to learn their Basic Facts in Mathematics, which includes addition & subtraction facts, as well as multiplication and division facts. These Number Knowledge facts are important for students to know, as they can make solving number problems so much easier and quicker. More information will come home over the next two weeks so that you can start practicing and learning the facts over the term break.
REMINDER: TERM 2 FINISHES ON Friday 5 July at 2pm.
Ngā mihi
Whaea Moana
Our teachers have been busy writing your child/ren's school reports and are now in the finalising stages. School reports will come home with your children in the last week of term: Thursday 4 July. Along with your child's report will be an accompanying letter to support the reports, as well as information about our Learning Conversations which will be held in Term 3, Week 2 Wednesday 31 July. Here you will be able to discuss your child's report and their learning goals for the second half of the year. Bookings for Learning Conversations on HERO will be open on Friday 5 July.
Lockdown Exercise - Monday 24 June
As part of keeping our school safe we need to be able to respond safely and quickly to a range of emergency situations.
We work alongside an independent company, Harrison Tew®, who specialises in emergency management planning for schools, whose procedures have been successfully implemented in hundreds of schools throughout New Zealand.
As part of maintaining our emergency procedures in our school, specialised training is being conducted with our senior leadership and staff by Harrison Tew®.
The students will also receive information on how to respond in an emergency directed at their respective age groups from either their teacher or Harrison Tew®.
We will then be conducting a lockdown exercise under the guidance and support of Harrison Tew®.
During the exercise you will receive a notification from the school, so it is important that your emergency contact details are up to date and correct. The notification will emphasise that this is an exercise/practice and will explain that all updated information will then be posted on the school website.
In a genuine incident, should you become aware of a lockdown or evacuation at the school, can I please ask that you do not attend the school or phone, as we will not be able to respond. Your presence or contact may make it more difficult for us or the emergency services to manage a situation. Thank you for your support.
Mānawatia a Matariki me Puanga - Market
This Thursday 27 June, from 11.30-12.30, we will be holding our annual Market Day out under the cloud. Our children have been planning, making, and preparing the wares that they will be selling. This learning has been an integration of the Arts, Mathematics, Financial Literacy, English, Technology, and in some cases a follow-on from their Science learning. We hope you can all make it down - bring along your silver and gold coins. There is something for everyone. All proceeds will go back to the class and the decision as to how it is spent will be up to them. Last year we had classes that donated to charities, brought fun games and resources to add to their class, or contributed their money towards a class treat.
Matariki - Public Holiday Friday 28 June - School Closed
Matariki is an official public holiday, and therefore school will be closed.
Matariki is the name of a star cluster in the constellation of Taurus, commonly also known as Pleiades, which rises on the horizon towards the end of May each year and heralds Te Mātahi o te Tau, the Māori New Year. The arrival of Matariki signals that it is time for people to gather, honour the dead, celebrate the present, and make plans for the future.
The word “Matariki” is an abbreviation of “Ngā mata o te ariki o Tāwhirimātea”, or "the eyes of the god Tāwhirimātea". Matariki was taken as a wife by Rehua (Antares) and she gave birth to eight children, each star having a unique purpose and defined role in ao Māori.
All iwi celebrate the Māori New Year in June or July, but not all iwi refer specifically to this time of year as Matariki. Instead, other iwi will name this time of year ‘Puanga’. Puanga is given prominence mainly because some iwi (The tribes of Whanganui, Taranaki, parts of the Far North, and parts of the South Island) struggle to see Matariki clearly from their locality and therefore look to the next important star near Matariki. That star is Puanga. Puanga is the star Rigel and is the brightest star in the Orion constellation. Matariki is seen below Puanga and to the left of Tautoru (the three stars of Orion’s Belt) in the late autumn and early winter night sky.
Mānwatia a Matariki me Puanga.
Basic Facts A Thon
Next term we will be having a Basic Facts A Thon - a fabulous way for our tamariki to learn their Basic Facts in Mathematics, which includes addition & subtraction facts, as well as multiplication and division facts. These Number Knowledge facts are important for students to know, as they can make solving number problems so much easier and quicker. More information will come home over the next two weeks so that you can start practicing and learning the facts over the term break.
REMINDER: TERM 2 FINISHES ON Friday 5 July at 2pm.
Ngā mihi
Whaea Moana