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Thursday 25 February 2016

Upcoming Events in Mahutonga Matariki

Upcoming events in Mahutonga Matariki

  • Camp is fast approaching.  We will have the activity groups and Cabin groups sorted and shared with the kids early next week.  They are very excited!
  • Our Inquiry continues with some focused activity around the coast.  We will be doing some more science at Worser Bay Beach on Wednesday and other activities.  If the weather permits we are hoping to do Sailing and Kayaking also.  The will be more on the blog on this early next week. Coincidentally this is taking place during the nationwide Sea Week so we are able to coordinate some of our learning with this much larger event.
  • Camouflage Crab

  • Island Bay Marine Centre visit.  On the 17th of March we will be heading to Island Bay for a full day of activity connected to the centre there.  Later in the year (term 4 we have scheduled some snorkelling with the assistance of Julian form the Marine Centre.  

The Hunters Come Home

Some Trapping Success!

Watch out pests!  You might as well pack your bags and move to a different planet.  This mouse has met our trapping team and I bet you he wishes he had made the move yesterday!

Powhiri Practice

Powhiri Practice
Practicing the Hongi

We are working hard on our Haka and Waiata for the Powhiri.  The stamping feet are making the earth tremble and dust is sent up to the sky in clouds. Our voices can be heard ringing from the clifftops, drifting out above the waves.    

The Powhiri is a fantastic occasion, welcoming new whanau to our school.  It is a time where we come together, acknowledge the past and the stories of the people who have come before us.  For example did you know that this is the place where Ngai Tara, the first long term inhabitants of Te Whanganui a Tara, lived?  It is their Pa and we celebrate that fact.

It takes some time and a whole lot of energy to get it right but we are willing.  We are looking forward to meeting you all.

To the kids who are leading the Haka and Karanga, to the teachers and parents who are having a new experience we say: Kia Kaha, Kia Manawa Nui    

Eastern Zones Cricket

On Wednesday a group of 45 students went to the Eastern Zones Cricket tournament. It was lots of fun with some of us experiencing cricket for the first time. We saw fantastic team work and support amongst the Worser Bay students. 

A big thank to the parents who umpired, scored, cheered and organised. We wouldn't have been able to offer this opportunity without your help. 



What a great day to be outside moving about. 

  

  




Wednesday 24 February 2016

Our trip exploring legends about Kupe, geology of Wellington and conducting marine metre squared investigations

On Monday 22 February, we went for a school trip past Worser Bay and Seatoun Beach. We stopped along the way at the pou at Seatoun beach. We heard stories about Kupe and the wheke and how his nieces (Matiu and Makaro, the names of the big islands in the harbour) scratched themselves in mourning after they believed Kupe had died so much that they bled and the rocks at Red Rocks turned red from their blood. We walked up the hill to the pa site with another pou and sketched our surroundings. 



Deb (Elliot's mum who is a geologist) talked to us about how the land around us had changed over time and how the big rocks that came from the Hutt river transformed and became smaller and smaller and smoother until they became sand.

Once we walked around the corner from Breaker Bay we set up our metre squared. In our learning groups we laid out our metre squared and looked carefully and lifted up rocks to find animals and sometimes we saw little things moving under seaweed so we moved the seaweed. We recorded what types of sea life we found different types of - starfish, crabs, mussels, baby paua, limpets, sea cucumbers, sea snails and seaweed. We found a lot more life than we expected in 1 metre squared. We were amazed, astonished and proud that we found so much more than we expected to find!




We want to do some more metre squared investigations - you should try it too! Thanks to all the people who came out and helped us to achieve this learning experience.



I learned that there was a pa site above Seatoun - Louise.
I learned that most of the land near the beach was under water before the earthquakes- Raiha.
I learned that the islands were names after Kupe's nieces - Charlie.
I was curious about how snails eat  - Alyssa.

By Louise, Charlie, Raiha, Alyssa and Gabrielle

Saturday 20 February 2016

Assembly 19th Feb

Thank you to our wonderful presenters who organised our assembly.
Mahutonga shared their trapping stories.
Autahi shared their class treaty
Tautoru shared their "Beautiful" writing.

Principal Awards for thinking.


Thursday 18 February 2016

Preparation for our trip towards Breaker Bay

We have been working on measuring things in maths. Tomorrow we hope to get down towards Breaker Bay and be part of the Marine Metre Squared project as part of which we will examine carefully what is living in a square metre of our coastline.

This week we have been learning about identifying and classifying the types of flora and fauna we found on our trip to Worser Bay rock pools last week. Today we problem solved in groups how we could use string and rulers to work out how big a metre squared really is and come up with some ways of helping us recreate it on the beach tomorrow.

We had to measure four lots of one metre accurately with a ruler then identify each metre on our piece of string. We hope the weather will hold up and we'll be able to explore our coastline tomorrow!




Visitors from Zealandia

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On Monday the 15th, two visitors from Zealandia came to talk to us about trapping and what pests are. They brought with them a bird house and four traps for mice and rats. The bird house was a gift to us because a group of girls, Emma S, Emma M, Josie, Betty Jo and Danielle set up a fundraiser for Zealandia. They gave a cheque to staff at Zealandia during the last week of school last year. It will be interesting to see whether the nesting box will attract any visitors? Did you know that some birds don’t make their own nests. Kaka and Ruru (Morepork) are two such species living within the Wellington area. Which of these birds is most likely to be first to set up house at Worser Bay School? What will happen if Sparrows try to move in instead? We had a really great time learning about pests, different types of birds and where they live.   




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Wednesday 17 February 2016

What's Growing in the Garden?

All this hot weather is good for growing Zucchinis!
Or are they Marrows? Wait, I just thought of a joke-

When does a Zucchini become a Marrow? If you don’t pick them; until toMarrow.
It has been exciting to see things growing in our new garden.  The peas have been popular because they are delicious.  There are some beans too and of course these Zucchinis/Marrows.

What shall we do with them?  Leave a comment with your suggestions.

Pest Trappers

Trapping Pests!

Would you trust these guys?

Do you like peanut butter? Well, if you do make sure you don’t put your nose into this box; you might get it squashed in a trap!
We have been gifted four trapping boxes by the staff at Zealandia so that we can try to eradicate all of the pests harming native habitats.  Did you know that Hedgehogs can eat up to 40 Weta in just one night?  Not only is this greedy but we need those insects for a healthy ecosystem.  
Last year when we did some research around the school and down the bank we discovered that there were very few insects at all; a sure sign of rodents and other pests.  If we are pest free, the future might see naturally regenerating bush and many more birds in our trees, including the insect loving Ruru, living in our nesting box.

With our trapping team on the loose the future looks bright!  

Friday 12 February 2016

What's in the Rock Pool?


We had a great time exploring our rock pools. We were amazed to find so much different flora and fauna. It sparked lots of questions and ideas for getting into the inquiry. Our next step is in researching what some of these creatures are and classifying them like scientists.

Do you know what these are?





Thursday 11 February 2016

Parent Evening Workshop

Parent Evening Feedback

Thank you for the great turn out on Tuesday night.  It was very impressive considering the amazing evening and how inviting the sea looked from our view-point on the hill.

We asked, How do you see your child flourishing within the framework of our Worser Bay School Curriculum Document?  We are very excited about the document which succinctly expresses our approach to learning and the philosophy which supports the emotional, spiritual, physical, social and academic growth and achievement of our children.  Although the document has been available on the school website for some time, Tuesday’s meeting was a kind of unofficial ‘unveiling’.  

Comments and responses to the question posed are as varied as the learners the document represents.  Here are a sample of responses:
  • The key concepts are so modern and relevant-it is exciting and hopeful!
  • Our children will become aware that they are part of something ‘bigger’
  • We are ‘aiming high’
  • Students will stay engaged in their learning
  • They can express themselves
  • They feel connected to the history of Worser Bay School and the surrounds
  • Different children and their learning styles are recognised and catered for
  • Imagination and creativity is encouraged and celebrated
  • Students are thinking for themselves and are learning to be critical
  • Being taught the ‘art of learning’
  • Students are collaborating, solving problems together
  • Learning from others and passing on knowledge to others
  • Positive and genuine relationships are flourishing, connecting family, student and school
  • Modelling a healthy community and citizenship.  This can be a applied when children are introduced to wider society
  • Skills are taught which enable students to flourish beyond Worser Bay School
  • Being able to discover and learn both inside and outside the school
  • Collaboration across the school and whole school planning which gives coverage of the curriculum in a progressive manner
  • They will have the skills to connect and to work with others
  • Inquiry allows growth in core curriculum areas (students are reading, writing and doing maths while involved in their own Inquiry projects)
  • Learning is flexible and adaptable
  • Good teaching, good learning cycle
  • Having fun learning
  • There is a place for risk taking and discovering capabilities in supported environments
  • All elements of the child are equally important; the social, emotional, spiritual, physical and academic
  • Unexpected things are happening

There is a palpable sense of excitement within the Mahutonga Matariki area.  Our students are buzzing, ready for the challenges and hard work which are part and parcel of profound learning.  It is heartening to see this come together in a practical sense, kids engaged in their learning while philosophically it is encapsulated in this curriculum document.  

As we all become more familiar with it no doubt you will think of other responses.  Please share these with us as you see fit.

Maths Problem Solving Strategies.

Maths Problem Solving Strategies.

We have been getting stuck in to new learning in Maths.  Here you can see students involved in collaborative problem solving exercises.  We have been discussing and practicing different strategies for solving complex problems.  Some of the methods we have looked at already are Trial and Improvement (formerly known as Trial and Error) and Drawing a Diagram.  Some students actually made a model of one problem.
What does Problem Solving require?
  • Creative and flexible thinking
  • Discussion
  • Questioning each other
  • Exploring possibilities
  • Perseverance

Kids comments……….
What have you found out about Problem Solving?
  • It can be hard
  • You have to keep talking to each other
  • We are using Trial and Improvement and drawing a diagram and sometimes, using them both at the same time




Our Changing Coastline Inquiry.

Our Changing Coastline Inquiry.

We are very excited to have begun our Inquiry with a trip to stunning Worser Bay Beach on Wednesday. This was the first activity in Tuning in to this Inquiry. (Read more about it on the blog post What’s in The Rockpool?)

This year the theme is ‘Change’.  We will begin by exploring some of the change evident in our immediate environment.  We have already been able to make strong connections to the work we did last year, using the words Flora and Fauna to describe the plant and animal life we have observed.  There is a strong science focus.  We are encouraging students to be observers, to look closely and carefully and to ‘look’ with all of our senses.  It was interesting to see that some people tried eating some of the seaweeds today.  They were ‘observing’ with their taste buds!

We will be doing some detailed ‘Finding Out’ about particular species which live in the tidal zone.  We will then move to a Scientific Investigation in which kids will be able to predict, observe, explore, test and come up with their own explanations of the phenomena which they are investigating.  This will be very ‘hands on’.

Of course this means more time at the beach!  And, because we will be there we are planning to do more sailing and kayaking, taking advantage of the brilliant weather we have been having.  More on this later.

Wednesday 10 February 2016

How Big is Your Stride?

 We've started looking at measurement through estimating then measuring how many strides we take in 10 metres. We learnt to measure 10 metres and then counted our paces. There was quite a variety of step sizes - some people took 12 steps in 10 metres and others 28, but most people took about 20 steps.

Next we'll use this information to work out how long our steps are in both metres and centimetres.


Thursday 4 February 2016

Co-operative Learners

We've been practising our co-operative skills in our learning groups by creating a game with two balloons. There were some varied and creative games that the groups came up with, ranging from: can you find the nose on a moving balloon while blindfolded?, guess who's holding the balloon, and whose balloon will zoom out of air the fastest? We had to practice talking and listening to each other's ideas and communicating our ideas to others.




We Are Collaborators

We Are Collaborators!
We have been thinking about the attributes of effective learners when we work in groups.  Are this group doing all of the things you would expect to see when people are cooperating, using all their strengths and helping each other with learning?


They are:

  • Talking to each other
  • With their heads together
  • All contributing
  • Taking turns
What do you think would be a good goal for collaboration?

Delicious Sultanas, or not.....

Wednesday 3 February 2016

Road Patrol Term 1 2016

Road Patrol- Term 1 2016 (Feb)
Morning please be on patrol at 8.45am
Afternoon please be on patrol at 2.55pm


Monday
Tuesday
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday
Morning
Bottom
Teddy
Blake
John
Arabella
Elliot
Hamish
Hugo
Emma R
John
Dani
Molly
Chrissy
Kaia
Meg
Scott
Morning
Top
Alex B
Gemma
Suz
Meg
Josie
Nic
Hayley
Lucie
Shona
Rory
Jasper
Gabrielle
Hayley
Lucie
Hamish






Afternoon
Bottom
Chester
Cody
John
Sophia
Isaac
Hamish
Jasper
Oto
Hamish
Isaac
Oto
Gabrielle
Blake
Cody
Chrissy
Afternoon
Top
Louise
Evie
Jude
Emma M
Angelina
Jude
Lucas
Chester
Jude
Sam
Sam
Jude
Liv
Betty
Jude