Assistant Principal's Report
Katrina Spicer - Mental Health, Wellbeing and Inclusion,

Assistant Principal's Report
Katrina Spicer - Mental Health, Wellbeing and Inclusion,
This week, we held our Term 1 SWPBS Rewards Day. Students in Prep, 1 and 2 enjoyed some fun Easter activities, whilst the senior school students participated in Games Day, where they brought games from home to share.
Our Term 2 Reward Options will be selected by our student captains during the first week of next term.














Yesterday we held our annual Cross Country carnival at Brentwood Reserve. Students from years 3, 4, 5 and 6 enjoyed a lovely morning participating in their events.
The results were:
1st - Murnalong
2nd - Bunjil
3rd - Marram
4th - Bundabun
Thank you to Ms Purcell and Mrs Drury for organising another fun and successful Cross Country event.












































Wishing you all a very happy Easter and school holidays.
We look forward to seeing you back at school on Monday, April 20th.
Katrina Spicer
Assistant Principal for Wellbeing and Inclusion
katrina.spicer@education.vic.gov.au


By Dr Justin Coulson
I don't know any parent who, at 7:30pm as they drag themselves through another hell-ish night with kids refusing to eat, contribute, or make life easy for anyone, looked at their husband/wife/partner and said, "You know what? I'm just so tired... but we are nailing it!"
There is simply no parenting hack I can offer you that will "lighten the load" better than this one: get enough sleep. Be well rested.
I know, I know. It seems unfair. "Don't you know how busy I am?"; "I don't have time to do it all"; "The kids won't let me."
There are a million reasons why we're sleep-deprived. Sometimes it's medical. Sometimes it's psychological. Sometimes it's the reality of shift work, a crying baby, illness, insomnia, or any number of challenges.
But what is irrefutable is that sleep makes us better parents.
The research on sleep is striking:
A 2024 study of 154 studies on sleep found that all forms of sleep loss or poor sleep affects emotional functioning - badly. (Another massive 2021 study emphasises how sleep reduces emotional regulation.)
Another 2024 study with close to 44000 participants showed sleep quality affects couples' relationships, our responsiveness to one another, and how much conflict we have in our homes.
And a specific parenting study from 2019 of 314 toddler mums found that when parents had less hours of sleep, later bed times, and more variable sleep/wake patterns, they reported more dysfunctional parenting.
You don't need the studies to prove what you already know though. Sleep matters. It's hard to be a good parent or partner - or to have a happy home life - when everyone's exhausted.
So, here are some simple tips you don't always hear about - for you and the kids.
Getting enough rest isn't a dream - it's the foundation of not losing your temper with the kids.

