MESSAGE FROM ISLAND SCHOOL – YEAR 6 PARENTS

Message from Island School 

We are looking forward to welcoming your son/ daughter to Island School for their Induction Day on May 29th  8am – 2.30pm. Currently we are sorting students into Houses and you will be informed by letter by May 16th of your child’s House allocation as well as the outline for the day on May 29th.In addition to welcoming your child to the school we will have a Welcome Evening in the Hall and then moving to House areas for parents on the evening of May 29th from 5.30pm – 7.00pm.

We look forward to meeting you then.
Kate Sommerville
Senior Head of House with responsibility for Year 7

 

ESF STAKEHOLDERS SURVEY

Hopefully by now you have received an email with a link to the ESF STAKEHOLDERS SURVEY.  Can I please encourage you to click on the link to complete the survey.  The results will be used to inform our strategic and annual plan moving forward.  There are about 20 questions in total, much less than the 40 or 50 that was asked in the survey shared 2 years ago.

Out of those 20 questions, 9 of them have been generated specifically by the school to help us understand and appreciate your views on issues specific to Peak School.  We are one of 5 ESF schools that have taken up the opportunity to add specific questions about Peak School.

I know we have an open door policy and that our parents are terrific at sharing with us what is working well and what we could do to develop an area but this is a great opportunity for all the information to be collated into one precise document so that the school can then reflect on the findings and use it to shape future direction.

The survey results will be used by the staff and the school council so can I please encourage you to take the the 10 minutes required to tell us what you think our strengths are and what our areas are to develop.

TALKING MATH

As you may have realised I have strong interest in maths and when I came across this recent article I felt I had to share it with you. Although it is aimed at parents of children of pre school age I couldn’t help but think that it was relevant regardless of the age of the child. Of most interest was the fact that a study found that parents tend to talk numbers with their sons much more than with their daughters. Perhaps that is why boys generally perform better than girls at primary school?  The article below was written by Annie Paul who describes herself as an author, journalist, consultant and speaker.

Our library has some fantastic books linked closely to math concepts and this is a terrific way to start the conversation.

The Importance of “Talking Math” With Kids

Monday, January 13, 2014

Do you speak math with your kids?

Many of us feel completely comfortable talking about letters, words and sentences with our children—reading to them at night, helping them decode their own books, noting messages on street signs and billboards.

But speaking to them about numbers, fractions, and decimals? Not so much. And yet studies show that “number talk” at home is a key predictor of young children’s achievement in math once they get to school. Research provides evidence that gender is also part of the equation: Parents speak to their daughters about numbers far less than their sons.

study published in the Journal of Language and Social Psychology drew on a collection of recordings of mothers talking to their toddlers, aged 20 to 27 months. Alicia Chang, a researcher at the University of Delaware, and two coauthors determined that mothers spoke to boys about number concepts twice as often as they spoke to girls. Children this age are rapidly building their vocabularies, Chang notes, and helping them become familiar with number words can
promote their interest in math later on.

That was made clear in another study, published in Developmental Psychology in 2010, which also used recordings of parents talking to their children to gauge how often number words were used (the kids in this study were between the ages of 14 and 30 months). Psychologist Susan Levine of the University of Chicago and her coauthors found huge variation among the families studied: Some children were hearing their parents speak only about two dozen number words a week, while others were hearing such words about 1,800 times weekly.

The frequency of number talk in the children’s homes had a big impact on how well the youngsters understood basic mathematical concepts such as the cardinal number principle, which holds that the last number reached when counting a set of objects determines the size of the set (“One, two, three—three apples in the bowl!”). A subsequent study by Levine found that the kind of number talk that most strongly predicted later knowledge of numbers involved counting or labeling sets of objects that are right there in front of parent and child–especially large sets, containing between four and ten objects.

Though it may not come naturally at first, parents can develop the habit of talking about numbers as often as they talk about letters and words. Some simple ways to work numbers into the conversation:

• Note numbers on signs when you’re walking or driving with children: speed limits and exit numbers, building addresses, sale prices in store windows.
• Ask children to count how many toys they’re playing with, how many books they’ve pulled out to read, or how many pieces of food are on their plate.
• Use numbers when you refer to time, dates, and temperatures: how many hours and minutes until bedtime, how many weeks and days until a holiday, the high and low the weatherman predicts for that day.
• With older children, math can become a part of talking about sports, science, history, video games, or whatever else they’re interested in.

With practice, parents and children alike will find that math makes a very satisfying second language.

SOUTH KOREAN TRAGEDY

No doubt you have heard about the recent Ferry tragedy in South Korea.  As a Foundation we sent a letter to Danwon High School to express our deepest sympathies for their loses.  Danwon High School is the Secondary School who had a large number of students on the ferry that sank and as yet a number of children are still unaccounted for.

As a school community we held a moments silence on Wednesday morning in respect to those families who have lost a loved one.

A copy of the letter sent by Pam Ryan on behalf of the Foundation can be seen by clicking HERE.