futurum
St Paul’s Grammar School Penrith
No. 41 Autumn 2007
Learning by
‘The best Junior New benchmarks
THE SCHOOL RECOGNISES THAT learning takes place in as many different ways as there are people. Angela and Joanne, the two Aboriginal girls in the photo above from Uluru who joined the school for a term late last year, learn differently from many others. All of us have a natural love of learning, but not all of us find standard classroom practice the easiest way to learn.
AT THE END OF ITS INSPECTION for registration in September last year, the head inspector said that the Junior School was ‘the best Junior school I have ever seen’. Behind this successful outcome was a lot of work and expertise, as Mrs Jenny Mahoney, Stage 1 Leader and Curriculum Coordinator, makes clear: Originating and putting together
alternative pathways
In the original documents connected with the founding of the school, the first chairman of the school council Michael Barratt expressed his vision for a learning support building at the school in the recognition that all of us have been created by God differently and learn differently and the school should cater for these differences. Increasingly since then, the school has resourced learning for those who need alternative pathways. But only now, more than 20 years after the school was established, are definite plans afoot for a discrete learning support building. On the eve of this building being erected, FUTURUM here interviews some of the members of staff who work in this area, starting with Mrs Erica Galbraith, Special Education Coordinator K-6: I keep coming across parents who are sending their children to the school because we provide
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School I have ever seen’
the K to 6 policy and curriculum documents for the inspection began at the end of 2004 and was complete by March 2006. As the overview developed, all programs were reviewed to reflect the overview. As it needed to reflect the aims of both the NSW Board of Studies and the International Baccalaureate, the documentation was a complex process. From March to September 2006, teachers had the completed curriculum documents to implement in class before the inspectors came. The inspectors were thorough, going through every book in every pile of children’s books. In the end, they gave the school the best possible report card: no extra work was required.
The school congratulates then Head of the Junior School Mrs Christine Roberts and Junior School staff members who put in so much effort to achieve registration.
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in Year 12 results
FOR YET ANOTHER YEAR, ST Paul’s Year 12 students have achieved the best results in the school’s history in their final examinations and assessments. Four of the happy successful students are seen in the photo above. Over one-quarter of students were in the top 5% of the State, well over one-third, 42 in all, were in the top 10%, and seven students, with UAIs above 99, gained places in the top 1% of the State, the top students, Sarah Hellyer and Annika Lees with 99.85, equalling the best results the school has ever received. While there was a full range of responses by the Year 12 students to the results, some 90% of those the school was able to contact were happy with their UAI and an even higher percentage have been able to get into their course of choice. Of the small number of students whose career prospects did not depend on a UAI, most are happy with their apprenticeships and TAFE courses, ranging across electrical apprenticeships, drafting, event management and interior design. Others are doing TAFE courses in remedial massage, accounting, communications and music. Mitchell Wearn’s has a slightly different twist:‘I will go to a YMCA Sport and Recreation Leadership camp in Canada in 2007, do some
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