Student Leaders

School Leaders
Bailey, Emma, Logan & Mackenzie
The School Leaders and Miss French went to the Shrine of Remembrance for a schools ANZAC Day Ceremony. The School Leaders laid a wreath by the eternal flame, and got a tour of the memorial museum. The school leaders had a great time and are hoping that next year the school leaders are invited again.
Environment Leaders
Allie & Harlei
Today the Environmental Leaders are going to talk about the new, Nude Food Warrior tokens to make sure students do not take rubbish outside.
Our Nude Food Warrior tokens are for students to bring no rubbish to school. If you bring wrappers to school and do not finish eating in class, you must eat undercover outside so when you are done with the packaging you will put it straight in the bin. Every time you bring nude food you will get a token that you put in the class bucket. Then we will put the tokens in for assembly. Every second week the Environment Leaders announce the winner at assembly. The class that has the most tokens at the end of the two-weeks will get 10 minutes extra time at recess or lunch the next week.
House Captains
Maximus, Niklaus, Caitlin and Oakley
On April 30th, our school competed in the District Cross-Country. A number of our students will now profess to the Northern Peninsula Divisional Cross-Country on Wednesday 4th June. Congratulations to Jaxon, Kyson, Logan, Dean, Mitchell, Emma, Oakley, Oden, Blake, Jordan, Mackenzie, Caitlin, Axel, Max, Bindi, Zhia and Maddie.
Communication Leaders
Library Leaders - Book Report
Jenna & Emily
This book is about ten children who are horrible, disgusting, annoying, snotty, stinky, rude and couch potatoes. In this book you'll learn how these children deal with cranky headmistresses, pitiful parents and surprised fellow people.
Jenna- I like the thought put into this book and how they made simple life lessons like showering and being honest into life changing amazing stories.
Emily- I think this book is great the small details really make it POP
Reading Level
Level of reading | Level 3 | ||||
How good they are at reding | Ok reading and can read by themselves | ||||
Age recommendation | 8-9 |
Art Leaders - Shapes
Zara & Ben
The Circle: The circle is round but not always perfect. Some shapes that look like a circle are a zero, an egg, an oval, and even a love heart. You can spot circles in real life in lots of places—like a tennis ball, a basketball, your eye’s pupil, or even your nostrils! A sphere is like a 3D circle.
The Crescent: The crescent is a curved shape with two sides. Not many shapes look exactly like it, but it still shows up in real life. You might see a crescent in the moon on some nights, a blade of grass, or even a banana!
The Triangle: A triangle has three sides and comes in three main types. Did you know that if you add up all the angles in a triangle, they make 180 degrees? That’s a lot! The most well-known triangle is the equilateral triangle. The others are isosceles and scalene. You can find triangles in real life in things like the triangle musical instrument, arrow tips, and road signs.
The Square: A square is a 2D shape with four equal sides. It’s also a special kind of rectangle. While rectangles have two long sides and two short sides, a square has all sides the same length. You can find squares in places like Minecraft, on keyboards, in tables, and many more everyday things.
The Pentagon: The pentagon has five sides and five corners (called vertices). It kind of looks like a squished house! You might not see perfect pentagons very often, but if you count houses, there are billions—and some of them might be close!
The Hexagon: The hexagon has six sides. It’s one of the coolest shapes—and also my favourite! Fun fact: It’s the shape found in beehives.
The Heptagon: The heptagon has seven sides. I didn’t know much about it, so I looked it up. It’s a pretty rare shape to see in real life, but it’s fun to learn about new ones!
The Octagon: The octagon has eight sides. You’ve probably seen one before—it’s the shape of a stop sign!
The Nonagon: The nonagon has nine sides. I don’t know much else about it yet—but there’s always more to learn!