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Issue 20 | Thursday 21 July 2022
upcoming major events
A conversation with the Head of College Mr John Weeks
Welcome back to the new school term! I trust that the three week break has been refreshing for all our staff and students and that we are ready to make the most of the opportunities before us. This is a very important term for our Senior Year 12 and 11 students. For Year 12, it is the final term of preparation and assessment before the September break and the state-wide HSC examinations. We wish Year 12 well as they complete courses and prepare for the challenges and opportunities before them.
25-27 July 2022
JS Parent/Teacher Interviews
Parent/Teacher interviews will take place for Junior and Prep students.
Year 11 students will finish the preliminary HSC before commencing the examinable course in Term 4. It is also an important time for Year 11 students to considering offering themselves for one of the student leadership roles in the College. Year 10 and Year 8 students are receiving information about the content of elective courses to enable them to make informed choices about study for 2023. Mrs Rendall, Mr Adams and our Team Leaders will all be involved in this over the next few weeks. In our Junior School, parent/teacher interviews are taking place to provide feedback on student performance and from our Prep many of the children are starting to prepare for “big school” in 2023, with the help of our teachers.
15 August 2022
Trial HSC Exams
Year 12 students will commence their Trial HSC Examinations.
On a global level, the College will finalise enrolments and classes this term to enable the 2023 staffing requirements to the considered recruitment to be undertaken and timetables to be created. Lots to keep us all busy this term!
30 August 2022
Senior School Athletics Carnival
Let’s make it a good one!
Junior School Campus Preparatory School, Junior (Years K–6) 70 Eglinton Road BATHURST NSW 2795
Senior students 7-12 will be competing in the Inter-House Athletics Carnival.
Senior School Campus Senior, Boarding (Years 7-12) 4173 O’Connell Road BATHURST NSW 2795
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From the Chaplain Rev. Michael Bennett Chaplain
Goal Setting I was recently reading about goal-setting, and there seems to be a variety of ways to set goals and to keep yourself accountable. At the time, I was also reading the first book of the Bible, Genesis. What emerged from this material was one of those rare moments when an idea is crystallised out of two very different types of literature.
humanity could be reunited with God and forever enjoy a loving relationship with their Heavenly Father. I encourage you to never give up on your goals and never give up on God. His goals are always realised. Therefore, His promises are trustworthy, and His love is an incredible gift that keeps on giving (despite the human desire to turn our back on Him). Amen.
What occurred to me as I read the beginning of Genesis was that God is a goal-setting God. You might remember the Adam and Eve story in Genesis. Adam and Eve are tricked by the ‘evil-one’, they reject God's advice and choose to live their own way. This decision undermines their relationship with God, ruins their relationship with each other, and begins the environmental degradation of creation. Even though Adam and Eve give up on God, He doesn’t give up on humanity. He could have said, “Let us start all over again. … Let there be light … ” But he doesn’t. God announces His goal, which is to save His people, and specifies how that goal is going to be achieved. In Genesis 3:15, God states concerning Satan (disguised as a serpent) that someone will come and “he will crush your head, and you will strike his heel.” In this one phrase, we discover God’s goal of defeating evil and rescuing his people. He shall send a saviour, who shall ‘crush’ the evil one, but be killed in the process. The rest of the Bible outlines how God remains accountable to this goal and goes about achieving it. The Apostle Peter points out that this goal has been achieved through God’s Son, Jesus Christ. He writes: “For Christ also suffered once for sins, the righteous for the unrighteous, that he might bring us to God, being put to death in the flesh but made alive in the spirit” (1 Peter 3:18) God's patience and love for humankind are evident throughout history and the Bible's narrative. He never wavered in His ultimate goal: he delivered a saviour whose willing sacrifice – at great cost – ensured
Junior School Campus Preparatory School, Junior (Years K–6) 70 Eglinton Road BATHURST NSW 2795
Senior School Campus Senior, Boarding (Years 7-12) 4173 O’Connell Road BATHURST NSW 2795
Engineering Australia
Yesterday we welcomed Sean Johnson back to school to talk about engineering as a career path. Sean graduated at The Scots School in 2010 and it was a similar talk during Year 12 that led him to study engineering at UNSW. Sean is a representative from Engineers Australia, who advocates for the profession, encouraging students to get involved. He currently works at Calare Civil. Sean took part in a question and answer session with students interested in this field and answered questions regarding study and working in the industry.
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Junior School Mr Chris Jackman Head of Junior School
Congratulations to Jodie Shurmer (Year 2 Teacher) and her husband, Nathan, on the birth of their third child, Oliver. Assemblies this Term Parents and carers are most welcome to our K to 6 Assembly in the Kemmis Building every Week B beginning at 9:00 am.
Welcome Back It was wonderful to welcome back the students for the start of a new school term. I have heard many stories of exciting explorations and adventures to different places during the week. We have an exciting calendar of events planned for Term 3. We look forward to a STEAM Incursion, Innovation Week and Book Week. COVID Precautions We are encouraging staff and students to wear masks indoors as a risk mitigation strategy against the new strains of COVID-19, which have emerged in the past few weeks.
New Learning Support Teacher’s Aide We welcome Mrs Ginny Hennessy to the Junior School staff this term. Mrs Hennessy will join the Learning Support team and will help us further cater for individual needs where necessary. New Students This term, we welcome Asha Beaumont (Year 6N), Archer Beaumont (Year KM), Aryan Lankathilaka (4W) and Senaya Lankathilaka (KW) to our College.
Whilst this is not mandatory, I ask that you please support the following recommendations:
Mr Anthony Roohan
1. Send your children to school with a mask to wear in class and assemblies. 2. Children travelling on buses should wear masks while on the bus. 3. Visitors to the College should wear a mask, especially when indoors. 4. The College has a supply of masks which will be made available.
Deputy Head of Junior School
Term Overviews Class teachers are finalising their overviews for the term, so you should receive yours in the next few days. The term overview is a great way to find out about what your child/children is/are learning about this term.
Parent Teacher Interviews
Seesaw
Parent Teacher interviews for Kindergarten to Year 6 (excluding Year 4) will be in Week 2. This also includes the Prep Wattle class. Year 4 and Prep Eucalypt and Banksia will be in Week 3.
It’s great to see so many families using Seesaw. Seesaw enables teachers to closely share their child’s learning journey with you, and you can watch your child grow over the years. Teachers and students regularly upload samples of work from a range of learning areas. If you’re new to the College or haven’t had a chance to access Seesaw just yet, I’d encourage you to contact your child’s teacher, who will forward you a QR code and instructions on how to access Seesaw.
Parents will be required to wear a mask for the interview when inside the classroom. Congratulations A big congratulations to Jane Café (nee Stewart), Teacher’s Aide in Prep, on her beautiful wedding in the holidays.
Junior School Campus Preparatory School, Junior (Years K–6) 70 Eglinton Road BATHURST NSW 2795
Senior School Campus Senior, Boarding (Years 7-12) 4173 O’Connell Road BATHURST NSW 2795
continued page 4
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It’s Rocket Science As part of our STEAM and Innovation Program we will welcome the team from ‘It’s Rocket Science’ to the Junior Campus in Week 4. Every year we invite a STEAM company to inspire our students and develop their knowledge in the STEAM field. You may remember the fine work students did last year as they worked on the Lego Amusement Park and with Virtual Reality. This year, all of our Prep-Year 6 classes will have a 60-90-minute session learning about flight and space along with making age-appropriate predictions and fair testing as they prepare to launch rockets from Watson Oval. It’s sure to be an engaging and exciting session for our students and links in nicely with many curriculum outcomes. Students will need to bring in an empty 1.25L soft drink bottle prior to Week 4. Bottles need to be labelled with the child’s name and handed into the class teacher before Friday, 5 August. Learning Assets Many of you will be familiar with our Mission, Goals and Values as a College which can be found on our website. One of the ways we seek to achieve our goals is through excellence in teaching and learning practices and by offering a broad range of academic courses and activities, which challenge students to achieve their personal best. School today is no longer just about gaining and regurgitating information. Whilst we continue to seek excellence in the development of foundational Literacy and Numeracy skills, a contemporary education seeks to assist students to thrive in all aspects of their 21st century life. Information is so accessible these days, and we have constant 24-hour access to it, usually on our phones. Real learning in today’s schools is about helping students develop the skills and dispositions that will enable them to locate, access, understand, critique, imagine, design and create. One way we can do this is by developing ‘Learning Assets’ in our young people. Kath Murdoch writes extensively about these assets in her book ‘The Power of Inquiry.’ Throughout my fortnightly section in The
Junior School Campus Preparatory School, Junior (Years K–6) 70 Eglinton Road BATHURST NSW 2795
Senior School Campus Senior, Boarding (Years 7-12) 4173 O’Connell Road BATHURST NSW 2795
Roar this term, I will focus on one asset which seeks to develop students as learners both now and beyond school. 1. Collaborating
Collaborating is all about working with others on shared goals, questions and challenges. Students need to know how to be a constructive part of a team and be able to listen to and respect other people’s views. Below you will find a few strategies and terms that may be useful to discuss on a needs basis with your child/children as we work together to develop this concept of collaboration: taking turns, sharing, compromising, negotiating, respectfully disagreeing, empathizing, affirming, uniting, equity, participating. ICAS Every year the University of NSW administers a range of academic competitions through the International Competitions and Assessments for Schools (ICAS) program. Recently Mr Cant and Mrs Phillips invited students in Years 2 to Year 6 to participate in the Mathematics, English and Science competitions. Please refer to the Operoo for further details, and if you’re interested in your child taking part it’s not too late. Sitting dates are as follows: English – Tuesday, 16 August (Week 6) Science – Tuesday, 23 August (Week 7) Maths – Tuesday, 30 August (Week 8) Newcastle Permanent Mathematics Competition The Newcastle Permanent Mathematics Competition gives Year 5 and 6 students from across regional NSW the opportunity to test their numeracy and problem solving skills. The competition has been running for over 40 years across more than 350 schools and each year we nominate some of Stage 3 students who achieve at a high academic level and demonstrate an ability to solve problems requiring higher order thinking skills to take part. Nominated students will sit the test on Friday, 29 July.
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Senior School Mr Justin Adams Acting Deputy Head P-12/ Head of Senior School
Welcome Back We welcome everyone back to the second semester, Term 3 of 2022. We hope that students and families were able to spend some quality time relaxing and together. The weather in Bathurst has certainly been quite cool but not unexpected for the region. During the first week of the holidays, parents should have received via email a copy of the Semester 1 reports for Years 7 to 10. Any parents who have not have received the student report are encouraged to contact Mrs Norris Rebecca.Norris@scotsallsaints.nsw. edu.au to update the email address that the report is sent to. Term 3 Student Behaviour Focus/ Expectations - Mobile Phones, Chewing Gum & Preparedness for Classes In Term 3, we expect the students to be more settled and focused on their learning. It is the best term to get some great quality work done. To support all students, do their very best, we expect our students to behave accordingly. Similarly to Term 2, we will continue to focus ‘no unauthorised use of mobile phones (including Airpods and smart watches)’ in class. Students in Years 7 and 8 are to keep their devices secured in their lockers throughout the day. Older year groups are encouraged to minimize the use of their technology and are not allowed to use them in classrooms. Some senior students may use them to support their learning, but only with authorization from the classroom teacher. Chewing gum is banned at the College. Students caught chewing gum will be asked to remove it (put it in the bin) and will be given an OP2 (Organisation & Presentation recording) demerit. An additional focus for Term 3 will be preparedness for class, including students having the required change of uniform (PE lessons), classroom equipment (books, texts), required technology (including being properly charged), etc. and having completed required homework. Students not living up to the expectations will be given an OP2 or an AW2 (Academic Work). If a parent/guardian needs to give an explanation for any issues (e.g. correct uniform not clean, homework not done due to a particular circumstance), then a note can be sent with the student, either in the student diary, an email or a note to the teacher.
Junior School Campus Preparatory School, Junior (Years K–6) 70 Eglinton Road BATHURST NSW 2795
Senior School Campus Senior, Boarding (Years 7-12) 4173 O’Connell Road BATHURST NSW 2795
We look forward to having very few of the sanctions above and hope to be giving more of the positives as below. Café Vouchers for Weeks 8/9 We will be continuing our Café Vouchers for students who are working and achieving above expectations. Our team leaders will collate all the merits (AW1 or OP1). The merits achieved in Term 2 will continue to be included. When a student receives a voucher, they start their tally again. We look forward to giving out plenty of vouchers to the students commencing next Tuesday at or assemblies. Reminder about Signing in and out – Extended leave applications Again, we remind our students, parents/guardians of the procedure for coming late or leaving school early. We need to have written permission for students to leave. This is best done by email. seniorabsences@scotsallsaints.nsw. edu.au Mr Stocks or Mrs Norris can quickly check this for the written parental approval. Phone calls or text messages are not the best way. For students or families needing extended leave (over a few days of known leave, not due to illness), we ask that an application for this leave to be completed. The correct procedure and form for this can be found on our College website in the parent portal. https://scotsallsaints.nsw. edu.au/parent-portal/ Year 12 – Trials Timetable and Final Term Our Year 12 will be given their HSC Trial exam timetable this week. We have tried to balance the examinations for the students across a two-week period. These will take place between 15 and 26 August. We strongly encourage our Year 12 students to be thoroughly prepared and to be working at their capacity for the remaining weeks. It is a very important time for them to prioritize their study and to get the work/social life balance sorted. Having a good diet, getting proper sleep each night and doing a little bit of exercise or relaxation will be important for Year 12. Masks As advised by Mr Weeks in an email to the school community (Monday, 18 July), our students, staff and visitors are asked to wear masks to reduce the spread of COVID-19. Whilst it is not mandatory, it is a sensible and reasonable request, particularly when in confined spaces with other people (transport, classrooms, assemblies, chapels, etc.). Please be aware that masks are required on all public transport. Specific details for NSW can be found at https:// www.nsw.gov.au/covid-19/stay-safe/rules/face-mask-rules
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All Things Sport Mr Mark Wilkinson Sports Administrator
School Sports kicks off again this weekend We’re back at it this Saturday in all sports after our Winter break. Make sure you check the draw for playing times, and let me know if you’re unable to play this weekend. Junior Sports Photos On Friday, 29 July, we will be taking our Junior Sports (K – 6) Winter team photos during Active Afternoons. These photos will appear in our annual Scots All Saints College Yearbook.
School holiday Hockey success It was a busy school holidays for Lydia Allcorn, Zoe Banning and Emily Tallentire. All three girls competed at the NSW State Hockey Championships, and all picked up selections in the NSW State Hockey squad. Well done legends! Lily shines bright in the European Summer While we’ve been shivering away here in Bathurst, Lily Kable has been living it up in the European Summer with her Australian Hockey teammates. Team Australia picked up a silver medal, with Lily scoring the Coaches Award for her troubles. Next stop is Tasmania for the National All Schools tournament!
If your child is playing either Netball or Soccer for the College this season, could you please make sure to pack their playing uniform for the photos. Students are required to wear their Winter sports uniform to school. Baggett books her place in AICES Netball team A massive congratulations to Mia Baggett, who has been selected in the AICES Open Girls Netball team. Mia will now go on to represent AICES at the upcoming CIS Netball Challenge.
Senior School Athletics Carnival After rain washed out our scheduled date in Term 2, we’ve set our sights on Tuesday, August 30, for our Senior School Athletics Carnival. This will be held on McKibbin Oval at our Senior Campus.
Junior School Campus Preparatory School, Junior (Years K–6) 70 Eglinton Road BATHURST NSW 2795
Senior School Campus Senior, Boarding (Years 7-12) 4173 O’Connell Road BATHURST NSW 2795
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Ella's Medical Internship in Nepal During this school holiday, I was granted the opportunity to visit Nepal on a medical internship in order to gain insight into the skills and knowledge necessary to be in the medical profession. It provided a fantastic opportunity to explore the potential specialties within the wide umbrella of medicine I may choose to explore in my future studies. I found myself especially drawn towards the coronary care unit and operating theatre and spent a large majority of my time learning from the medical staff there. When I wasn’t in those departments, I could often be found in the emergency and trauma ward identifying interesting cases through the nurses there or buried within the library’s impressive array of medical textbooks or even escaping the heat in the radiology ward’s air-conditioned facilities. The program soon became quite hands-on as the opportunity arose to dissect a cadaver. Some of my peers were more willing than others. As the cadaver was previously presumed to be a smoker, we were able to cut into blackened lungs to see the effects of smoking first-hand, as well as analysing the human heart and other vital organs. I am extremely grateful to have been able to partake in this program and cannot wait to share more of my experiences. Ella Kay (Year 11)
Junior School Campus Preparatory School, Junior (Years K–6) 70 Eglinton Road BATHURST NSW 2795
Senior School Campus Senior, Boarding (Years 7-12) 4173 O’Connell Road BATHURST NSW 2795
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The Western Line Landslip The “rain bomb”, as it has been called, hit eastern New South Wales early in the school holidays and led to a large landslip under the Western railway line near Blackheath. As a result, the line is closed to all passenger and freight services. Boarders who need to use public transport will be affected until the line can be repaired. Sydney travellers are the worst affected. Our recommendation for boarders to travel to and from Sydney is to use the coach services that are replacing the XPT from stations in Sydney. These services do not involve any change of vehicle. They leave Bathurst at 5:05 pm in the evenings and take just over three and a half hours to reach Central Station. The return trip departs Central Station at 7:19 am, arriving in Bathurst at 10:52 am. Other services to Sydney during the day are running. A travel alert for one service Sydney boarders like to use to Bathurst advises: “… train services are running to an altered timetable with some bus replacements. Please board a train service to Katoomba and transfer to a bus replacement between Katoomba and Mount Victoria on arrival. A shuttle train service will run between Mount Victoria and Lithgow on a changed timetable. Please allow additional travel time.” For the coming weekend, there could be further changes as there is scheduled trackwork near Blacktown. “Extra time” could be five to six hours to complete the journey. Travel westward appears to be much less severely affected. Some of our boarders have reported that there have been some delays to the 4:25 pm service from Bathurst to Dubbo. When a service from Bathurst is a guaranteed connection, it cannot leave until the service meeting it has arrived. In some cases where a service originating in Sydney has been delayed, so will the departure from Bathurst. However, these delays are not on the scale experienced back in March when the railway line and highway were affected by landslides.
Junior School Campus Preparatory School, Junior (Years K–6) 70 Eglinton Road BATHURST NSW 2795
Senior School Campus Senior, Boarding (Years 7-12) 4173 O’Connell Road BATHURST NSW 2795
Local media reports quoting the Minister for Regional Transport, Sam Farraway, are suggesting it could be another month before passenger services on the line are restored. Between 70 -100 people are employed in the repair work. It will require 40,000 tonnes of rock to replace the slip. Mr Andrew Maher (Boarders’ Travel)
EMAIL US YOUR SPORT PHOTOS Calling all keen sporting parents if you have a photo of students in action we’d love to add them to our photo library please email: photos@ scotsallsaints.nsw.edu.au
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From the Scots School archives
MRS DOUGAN
There were two Mrs Dougans in the history of The Scots School. One was Mrs Elsie Dougan, the wife of one of the founders of the school, the Rev. Alan Dougan. The other one was altogether different. The story of the other Mrs Dougan began at the end of the January holidays in 1987 when the school In charge of Mrs Dougan’s human staff returned to find that for many years was Head Cleaner a stray cat, barely Rhonda Theobald, who fed her on out of kittenhood, arrival at school every morning. Mrs had moved in under Dougan knew the sound of Rhonda’s the now demolished car. old Dougan House at the back of what has since become The Scots Museum. She was quickly adopted by the cleaning ladies who fed her and was very soon friends with a number of people in the school. This did not necessarily include boys, some of whom were not very nice to her. She did approve of the schoolgoing co-educational and responded to the attention of some of the girls. One morning our furry lady turned up in Mrs Betty Ives’ office (now Mrs Ellery’s office), said “Meow,” and gave birth to five kittens under Betty’s bookshelf. By the end of the day, a box had been found, lined with an old bedspread and placed next to the water heater in the staff toilet, where she looked after the kittens until they could be rehomed. From there, it was a short path to becoming a school cat. A local vet donated his services to ensure that there would be no more kittens. The Bursar at the time, Brian Atkinson, included an item in the budget under “Vermin Control” from which Mrs Dougan continued to be fed by the cleaning ladies in return for her services as Chief Mouser. The ladies in the Bursar’s office decided she needed a name that made her respectable after all of those kittens and came up with Mrs Dougan because she lived under Dougan house. There was one episode of confusion. Mr Renney, the Headmaster in 1996, claimed that when it was announced that Mrs Dougan would open the new Dougan House (now incorporated into Ives House), he had expected the cat to show up. In the event, the human Mrs Dougan was unable to attend the opening, and her son Richard officiated. On the morning of the 1998 flood, Mr Maher came up to
Junior School Campus Preparatory School, Junior (Years K–6) 70 Eglinton Road BATHURST NSW 2795
Senior School Campus Senior, Boarding (Years 7-12) 4173 O’Connell Road BATHURST NSW 2795
Mrs Dougan was a cat who had staff, including the Staff Secretary Mary Mackenzie.Mrs Dougan had a chair in Mary’s office that she preferred. the Quad to find Mrs Dougan on the roof of the Aluminium Block. He hoped that she was not making a prediction about the level of the flood peak! Adrian Lamrock got a severe meowing in the morning after a school social. There was also one occasion when the School Council arrived for their meeting in the Library and were greeted with a great deal of meowing. Her breakfast was late! Karralee and the areas that Mrs Dougan patrolled remained mouse free for several years. She also saw off Adolf the ginger tom. He was named Adolf because he kept making territorial demands. Like many elderly cats, she eventually succumbed to liver failure. Brian Atkinson, having retired, a new, less catfriendly regime was in place. It was announced that there would be no more cats. Within a week of our losing her, the person responsible for this decision complained about a mouse in their office. The response was, “Mrs Dougan would never have allowed that!” Mrs Dougan and her kittens on 13 May 1987. Mrs Ives found homes for all of the kitties.
When assembly was on, Mrs Dougan would come out and make sure that everybody’s school bags were guarded (from 2000).
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SPORTS DRAW
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Losing her locks for Wigs4kids
CALENDAR DATES
After two years of growing her beautiful auburn locks, Georgina Culley (Year 7) was finally able to cut it off for a great cause. Georgina has donated her hair to Wigs4kids, which will make some awesome wigs for kids with cancer who are undergoing chemotherapy. She has returned to school with much shorter hair! Well done Georgina.
Saturday 23 July 2022 ISA Rugby - Round 8 Monday 25 July 2022 Year 10 History - Vietnam Dusted Off 9:15 am Junior School - Parent Teacher Interviews Year 12 Geography Lectures Zoom Discord HSC PDHPE 7:30-8:30 pm Tuesday 26 July 2022 Junior School - Parent Teacher Interviews Year 10 Student Led Conferences 3:45-8:30 Saturday 30 July 2022 ISA Rugby - Round 9 Monday 1 August 2022 Year 12 Geography Lectures Zoom Discord HSC PDHPE 7:30-8:30 pm Tuesday 2 August 2022 Year 11 2023 Subject Information Wednesday 3 August 2022 Australian Maths Competition Yrs 7 - 11 Thursday 4 August 2022 Australian Maths Competition Yrs 7 - 11 Canberra Exucrsion Friday 5 August 2022 Australian Maths Competition Yrs 7 - 11 Canberra Exucrsion
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Junior School Campus Preparatory School, Junior (Years K–6) 70 Eglinton Road BATHURST NSW 2795
Senior School Campus Senior, Boarding (Years 7-12) 4173 O’Connell Road BATHURST NSW 2795
scotsallsaints.nsw.edu.au 02 6331 3911
connect@scotsallsaints.nsw.edu.au