NEWS DESK
Teachers’ outdoor experience TEACHERS from across Victoria have taken time out from being in front of the class to be taught all about Nature Pedagogy. The course taught by Claire Warden at the Woodleigh school’s Minimbah campus to 42 teachers saw them sitting at desks in the classroom as well as going outside to make miniature shelters, baskets and tie knots. The six-day Nature Pedagogy course gives teachers skills for working with children indoors and outdoors. Ms Warden is an educational consultant who has also written several books, including The Potential of a Puddle (outdoor play); Talking and Thinking Floorbooks (planning methodology that supports consultation and democracy in early education);
The Right to be Me (rights of children to high quality provision); Nurture through Nature (working with children under three outside); and Nature Kindergartens (children’s connection to nature and naturalistic spaces such as forest schools and kindergartens, woodland camps and nature kindergartens). The pedagogy course being taught at Minimbah is described as being an inspirational journey to show teachers how to use natural elements “to deliver exciting authentic play and learning experiences for children from birth to 11 years”. The teachers were shown how to “document” children’s voices and their theories of the world “so that nature based learning is embedded in core teaching and learning”
Woodleigh teacher Kate Marino said Woodleigh already runs an “amazing outdoor education program” which had inspired Claire Warden to make her visit and use the school grounds and creek at the back of the Mt Eliza property as a site for her lessons. Ms Marino said children at the Minimbah campus spend one day a week out of the classroom in “a wild space”. To find out more about nature pedagogy go to naturepedagogy.com
Outside class: Educational consultant Claire Warden steps across the creek at Woodleigh school’s Minimbah campus where she taught teachers about working with children outdoors. Picture: Gary Sissons
Bigger plans for shire’s ‘super’ ward Keith Platt keith@mpnews.com.au
In its submission signed by president Colin Watson, the NRA gives examples of proposed developments in Sorrento and casts doubt on the “problematic” expansion of Martha Cove, Safety Beach. Eddie Matt, of Rye, has written to the VEC saying that as a farmer he wants to remain in Red Hill ward. “Our interests as voters in the current Red Hill ward are best served by having a vote in the agricultural land use which is predominantly the Red Hill wards landscape,” Mr Matt states. “This vote gives us a greater collective voice in the use and protection of the Green Wedge instead of being shifted into the Nepean ward which is predominantly zoned urban and used as residential/holiday homes where our agricultural voice would be lost.” Andrew Raff, who lives in Fingal close to St Andrews Beach, says he has previously taken his concerns to the Nepean Ward councillor rather than the one representing Red Hill ward “for which, geographically and sociologically, we have had very little to do with”. “I believe the Nepean ward boundary should enclose the area from Truemans Rd and all to the west to Point Nepean,” Mr Raff said. “The area to the west of Truemans Rd has very little – except it is in the Mornington Peninsula Shire – to do with the Red Hill ward and basically it is completely associated with the southern peninsula region, thus it should be in the Nepean ward.”
Proposed ward boundary changes
MORNINGTON Peninsula Shire’s Red Hill ward may encompass more than half the municipality, if proposals put forward by the Victorian Electoral Commission are adopted. The VEC’s review of ward boundaries based on the number of voters, not size, is likely to mean that just one councillor will represent as much property as that of the other 10 councillors combined. Red Hill ward is currently represented by Cr Tim Wood, elected in a by-election in August 2014 following the resignation of Frank Martin. The VEC review of boundary changes – to ensure the number of voters represented by each councillor is within the 10 per cent average for the municipality – is being made before the council elections in October. The final report is due to be released Wednesday 6 April. The proposed boundary changes, although mostly minor, have again sparked criticism of a single councillor being able to adequately represent such a large ward. The legality of Australia’s local government system is also being questioned by Samuel Crane, of Rosebud West, who wants the VEC to “closely investigate” his belief that the Local Government Act 1989 “did not receive a valid royal assent”. The Balnarring Beach Community Association says voters in Red Hill ward lose some of their democratic
rights because “one councillor in a very large ward cannot deal with all concerns adequately”. Association president David Gill, a councillor and shire president of the former Shire of Mornington, said if the one councillor was ill other councillors could make decisions about the ward without being “fully aware of issues or the local knowledge”. “The community and their one local ward councillor may disagree on an issue. In practice, other ward council-
lors usually follow the lead of the ward councillors on an issue in their ward,” Mr Gill said. “We suggest that Red Hill ward should have two councillors and that 12 councillors be elected for the [shire] with chair having both a deliberative and casting vote as normal.” A submission by the Friends of Cape Schanck also calls for Red Hill ward to be represented by more than one councillor. The group wants the VEC to investi-
gate cutting the ward into two or three “and then explore adding more populated areas into those sections to meet the voter threshold for each councillor”. Further south, the Nepean Ratepayers Association believes adding St Andrews Beach to Nepean ward would be a “better fit” than moving the boundaries to include “thinly populated” land centred on The Dunes golf course and “the whole of Tootgarook” and its 4479 voters.
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117 EASTBOURNE ROAD, ROSEBUD PHONE: 5986 1066 Southern Peninsula News 29 March 2016
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