St Michael's Primary School Traralgon
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Seymour St
Traralgon VIC 3844
Subscribe: https://www.stmtraralgon.catholic.edu.au/subscribe

Email: office@stmtraralgon.catholic.edu.au
Phone: 03 5174 3295

News from the Principal

Dear Parents, Guardians and Carers,

Our student leaders do an amazing job at modelling our school wide expectations of Honesty, Learning, Respect, Resilience and Safety in so many ways. The feedback from parents who come to St Michaels looking to enrol their child always mentions the wonderful way our leaders talk about the school and the evident pride they display.  Our student leaders are always looking for ways they can support the school and wider community and I am looking forward to meeting with representatives from the Student Leaders group about ideas they have for improving our school in the next week. We also have a very keen group of student leaders who are working closely with Mrs Rickwood to raise money for Caritas this year to support the people of East Timor.
Father, we pray that our students will become committed servant leaders.
Plant in their hearts a sense of gratitude for the many blessings
they have been given.
Grant them the joy that comes through serving others.
Help us to inspire them through the way we live our lives in the service to others.

A little note about Grandparents Day….. 

This Friday we look forward to welcoming Grandparents and other special people for our St Michael’s Grandparents Day. The children may not be in their normal classrooms, as they have been placed in multi-aged groups so they will experience an activity with different children across the room. The children will be told their group number on Thursday afternoon, this number will help Grandparents locate your child a little easier. 

Upon arrival, Grandparents and special visitors will be required to enter via the Seymour Street gate at 2:30pm (not the office). Here a QR code system will be in place for sign in. This is required of any visitor who enters the school grounds as it is needed in case of an emergency evacuation. Once signed in, visitors may then follow the signs located around the schools to help find their grandchild. Staff wearing hi vis vests, will also be present to assist in ushering towards the correct classrooms. 

From 2:30pm the children will be participating in an art activity with the help of their Grandparent or special person. We hope all our special visitors have a great day.

 

Happy Families article: Threats and rewards—or something better?

“If you don’t pack away your toys right now, I’m throwing them in the bin!”

It’s the end of the day. We’re tired, or stressed, and we’ve asked our kids a hundred times already to start packing up. Even though we might know that there is a better way, we can’t stop ourselves, and a threat slips out.

The thing is, it seems to work! Suddenly the kids are packing up their toys, fearful that if they stay out they’ll be relocated to the bin. In fact, research shows that threats, verbal reprimands, and time-outs are all effective ways of securing immediate compliance in our children. Which would be great – if our only goal was immediate compliance. The problem is that this compliance is coerced, and if we’re not there to enforce the consequences we lose our ability to influence behaviour. Our kids are more focused on avoiding the punishment than on internalising what we’re trying to teach them!

So if threats aren’t the ticket to getting our children to do something, rewards must be the right alternative, right?

“If you pack away your toys right now, you can have ice cream!” might be what we say. But we might as well say “If you don’t pack away your toys, you can’t have ice-cream”. Rewards are just threats in disguise. If our kids are still relying on us to give them ice-cream or a gold star or their pocket money in exchange for good behaviour, they’re still not intrinsically motivated to do what we’re asking them to do. Rewards, just like threats and punishments, only work if we’re there to dish out the consequences. They simply don’t promote lasting behaviour change and our kids often lose interest, so if we want to keep enforcing the behaviour we need to dish out bigger and bigger rewards, or bigger and bigger punishments.

The truth is, both threats and rewards use fear as a motivator – either fear of getting punished, or fear of missing out on the reward. Fear can be a powerful motivator. But there is another thing that motivates us. LOVE.

Love is a much stronger motivator. It drives intrinsic motivation, or motivation that isn’t reliant on external outcomes like rewards and punishments.

Here are three ways we can use love to help motivate our kids:

  1. Do it with them. Kids spell love T.I.M.E. They want to be involved in our world. So, if we’re doing something, and we invite them to join in, chances are that they’ll say yes, even for something as routine as tidying up the toys.
  2. Make it fun. Kids love to play! Maybe we can challenge them to throw all the blocks into the tub like they’re shooting basketball hoops. Or maybe the cars strewn everywhere need to be driven back to their garage on the shelf. There are so many ways to make even simple tasks fun. Not only does having fun get the job done, it also boosts learning and competence in our kids.
  3. Model love and respect for them by trusting that they’ll do it when they’re ready. Simply say “Can you pack up the toys when you’re ready?”, and then let them be. They may need a gentle reminder, but if we step back and let them know that we trust them to get the job done in their own time, there’s a good chance they’ll do it.

Sometimes they still won’t do what we’re asking. When that happens, there are two more things we can do.

  1. Just do it for them. Sometimes they’re sick, tired, or cranky. And the truth is that we’re not going to teach them to be lazy slobs as adults by tidying up their room occasionally as kids. (That’s fear speaking!).
  2. Set a boundary. Boundaries are different to punishment. A boundary is something we do to ourselves, whereas a punishment is something we do to others. A boundary could mean that our adult sized feet are unwilling to walk through a room strewn with LEGOs, so if they want a book read to them before bed, they need to clear the floor so we can safely get to the bookshelf. Set the boundary, and then let them decide how to respond to it.

Ultimately, parenting isn’t about getting our kids to do things. The only person we can truly control is ourselves. The real focus of parenting is about being the person we want to be, regardless of how our kids are behaving. When we remember that, we can move away from fear-based parenting, and parent with love.

Free Parenting webinar: What Your Child Needs from You with Dr Justin Coulson

Monday 19 June | 8pm AEST 

Link: https://schools.happyfamilies.com.au/what-your-child-needs-from-you/ 

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Parenting is one of those things we often think should just come ‘naturally’. We imagine we’ll be great at it (not like those family members who can’t seem to get it right!) and that our kids will turn out spot on. And then… we have kids.

Reality is painful for many of us. Parenting turns out to be harder than most of us imagined. We feel more tired. We have fewer answers, and the answers we thought we had don’t seem to work like we planned. We wonder if we’re too strict, too free-range, too gentle, too tiger, or too tired to care. We struggle with screens, feel burdened by boundaries, and feel like all we do is frown.

Yet parenting is also an incredible source of joy and happiness! How do we make it feel like that more often?

Join Dr Justin Coulson, the co-host and parenting expert on Channel 9s hit TV show, Parental Guidance, for some… well, extra special parental guidance! In this jam-packed, interactive, 90-minute webinar, you’ll discover:

  • What every child needs from their parents in order to flourish
  • Where parents are going wrong in their efforts to be the perfect parent
  • How to get discipline right, even when everything’s going wrong, and
  • Why joy in family life is easy to find… when you know where to look.

Please take note of these important dates: 

  • Grandparents Day - Friday 16th June at 2:30pm 
  • Student Led Conferences - Tuesday 20th and Wednesday 21st June 
  • Semester One reports released to PAM - Thursday 22nd June
  • Last Day of Term Two - Friday 23rd June 2pm finish 
  • Start of Term Three - Monday 10th July 9am

Kind Regards

Jodie