THANK-YOU! THANK-YOU! THANK-YOU! THANK-YOU! THANK-YOU!

THANKYOU… for being a part of our great school’s 40th Anniversary / Reunion celebrations. We send an enormous thankyou to our very special guest David Cohen, who, despite ill health and living in South Australia, was able to make the huge trek to Sydney to celebrate the success of his “baby”. We hope that it was evident how much we appreciate the legacy that is the school we all love and enjoy with our children today, thankyou. Thankyou so much to David Heilpern, Sarah Levett and Marc deRosnay, for sharing your inspiring stories and experiences of Currambena. It is really uplifting and we never tire of hearing these personal accounts.

Thankyou to all the kids for their great performances, clearly you all enjoyed performing as much as the audience loved watching you.

Thankyou to the staff… for all the love and creative energy you pour into the kids and the school, everyday!

Thankyou to all the parents, alumni and everyone for coming, you made the day.

Thankyou so much to all the people for bringing food. WOW! What a feast. Its just so easy to organise these things with such an enthusiast and generous bunch of families who are always willing to jump on board and contribute. It was delicious.

Thankyou to the planning team who came to meetings, and co-ordinated large chunks of the day. Thanks, Steve, Linda + Wayne for the bar, Rachel for co-ordinating the food, Tracey and Andrew for organising so much and coming in early to help set up with Steve, Rachel and David. Anne for dealing with the rubbish and recycling, Martin + Susan for the brilliant photo display, Mikey for getting the coffee cart, Ian deVulder for having all the archival footage converted to dvd so we could display it on Sunday. Kirsten Lees for the historical research, press releases and the creation of the Currambena timeline, Jason for being the sound guy, Tony for setting up the data projector, Veronica for all your support, Danni for the cake, Lynn Higgs for your compulsive raffle initiative, Olivia Higgs for accepting that there is a time and a place to put the microphone down (despite the talent), David and David – BBQ brilliance, Eduardo and Magda for all the million things you did, and thankyou to all those for hanging around to help clean it all up at the end of the day.

One thing that is abundantly clear is how much we all love Currambena.

Willem & Luuk

FANTASTIC TIME!Hello everybody, this week will be the last week that we (Willem and Luuk) are at Currambena. Reviewing back at the time at Currambena we only can say one thing: FANTASTIC. When we arrived over here, we immediately noticed the hospitality, not only from the teachers, but as well from the children and parents. We think that’s great, because you don’t see that hospitality in every school.

In the first week we had the opportunity to go with Wendy’s class to camp. That was a great chance to get to know all the children. After that we had several lessons in every class.
In the book we got from all of you, were many words of thanks for our energy and enthusiasm, but actually you have yourselves to thank for that as you gave us the energy and enthusiasm to work with.

Last Friday was our farewell party, and we really enjoyed it. The photo book we each got from all of you, were just great. This book is not just a book, but we will take it with us, as a reminder of the fantastic times we had.
What Chris wrote in our book, is definitely the truth: “Keep Currambena in your heart, we will be thinking of you”. We will really keep thinking of Currambena. Currambena made our time in Sydney from really good to the best!

It was not only an enjoyable and fun time, we really learned a lot from this internship.
In the beginning we had a view on education that actually every student in Holland has. Because of this internship our eyes were opened. We experienced an education system that is quite different to that which most people experience.
The connection/relationship what we had with the parents, teachers and children was unique. We didn’t it experienced that way before.

So we are really grateful to all of you, for having us at Currambena. Many thanks to the teachers, who helped us with all kind of stuff. Many thanks to the parents, who were really interested in us and our time in Sydney. And many many thanks to the children who made our time in Currambena Fantastic.

We would really love to keep in contact with you, and we are really are interested in how everything is going over here and with every single one of you.
So if you want to keep in contact with us, down below are our email addresses:

willemhegen@hotmail.com
horstinkluuk@hotmail.com

Hope to see and speak to you all again!

Willem and Luuk

Can you Help us with the 40th Anniversay Reunion BBQ????

In just over 2 weeks, we will all be celebrating 40 amazing years of Currumbena.
It has been such a pleasure speaking with ex-students who are all so excited to come back and
share stories from their times here, I’ve  heard some great tales.  Kirsten Lees has unearthed
some amazing archival treasures as well as years of interesting press items. One of the original
founders of the school, David Cohen, is making the trip to Sydney by car from Adelaide with his wife
to come and celebrate with us.  Thank you so much to all the people that have come together to help
to organise this so far.  We will need lots of help on the day, and in particular to pack up and clean up
afterwards (as it will be a school day the next day).

We are kicking off the day at 12pm with a big shared lunch and  we are asking the current Currambena community to contribute food  – just like at our socials.  The school will be putting on a bbq – sausages and bread – and we are going to be charging $5 per head or $15 per family, to cover the costs for the day. There will also be a bar running and a coffee cart.

We are hoping for around 200 people. So to cater for these numbers, we are asking the whole community to contribute to the lunch.  There will be a list up on the notice board on Monday where you can allocate what type of food you would like to bring (ie salad/ pasta/ casserole etc).  We would love it if all families could bring at least one dish ( to feed 10 people) and possibly  a dessert as well. Knowing what amazing food we get at the socials, this lunch is sure to be a fabulous community feast!!!
We need volunteers for the following things;

Someone to do sound, set up mic. and PA, and music.
Someone to organise a data projector and laptop to play the archival footage which is being converted to dvd.
Hire of tables and chairs, does anyone know where we got these from for the fair?
A few BBQ Kings or Queens to cook sausages!
Someone to clear tables and empty bins occasionally.
Someone to keep the food tables looking appetising

Please let me know if you can help, i’ll be in the office on Friday
or let me know by email karen@giveorganic.com.au
Thanks, Karen.

Currambena Research

 

Hi all! Time at Currambena is fantastic! Luuk and I are really enjoying it. Maybe some of you already heard, but Luuk & I have only 6 weeks left at Currambena. Time is flying when you are having fun!

 Part of our internship at Currambena is a research what we have to do for our university in Holland. This is a real important part of our graduation. My research is about how former Currambena-students have experienced the switch to High school regarding physical education and what they found hard in this switch. For this research I need as I mentioned before former Currambena students.

 If you are, or if you know a former Currambena student, please can you give them this URL? This URL is a questionnaire on the internet which I made. I need as many former students as possible, so it would be fantastic if you could help me with that!

 The URL is:

 http://www.thesistools.com/?qid=79674&ln=eng

 Thanks you very much,

 Willem Hegen

willemhegen@hotmail.com

 

 

 

The Dance of Learning

EDUCATION

Activity leads to learning

AMUKTA MAHAPATRA

A child needs to interact with the world around to build intellectual capacity, and personality.

The child is born with a potential but how much is realised depends on the experiences offered to her by society.

The ‘done it’ smile: Motor and psychological energies have to go together.

With learning through activity being currently discussed within the education community; with almost all the government elementary schools in Tamil Nadu following what has been named the Activity Based Learning (ABL) programme; and with the National Curriculum Framework brought out by NCERT (National Council for Education Research and Training) focusing on constructivism as a base for pedagogy in the classroom, it is time to explore what these actually mean in the context of the child and its learning.

What is clear, intuitively, to most educators and parents is that every movement is not an activity; that all activities do not necessarily lead to learning; and not every kind of ‘learning’ contributes to the construction of the child’s cognitive and affective world. So when does a movement become an activity that leads to learning that helps to build the child’s personality? Let us explore.

Need for interaction

Why can’t a child do what he is told and be quiet? Why can’t a kitten be still for a while without moving and meowing? Why do children keep ‘fidgeting’ all the time? Why do children need to do an activity for them to truly learn? Why can’t they sit behind the desk through the day as is the practice even in most of the so-called best schools of today? Why do we need all kinds of activities for children to acquire concepts?

In the last 100 years or so, educationists, psychologists, behaviour scientists have discovered (what was intrinsically understood by many tribal and agrarian societies) that we actually learn only when we act, when we engage with something, when we interact. This is the reason why serious attempts are made to make even for computer and TV programmes as interactive as possible. The learner needs to act, interact and thereby construct his own backpack of learning. For learning to happen, the child cannot merely listen, receive, repeat and copy what is said or readThe child may, in the process, pick up information, acquire some knowledge and find out some things for himself. But acquire concepts that are his or her own? Unlikely that this would happen as a normal practice in a school, as the recent study, the results of which were published in India Today showed. The report indicated that, in reproduction skills, the private schools did do better but in correlating, conceptual understanding or application, there was not much of a difference between the government and the private schools. Basic principles and ideas were not part of the child’s mental construct.

Learning for any child or adult implies that there is assimilation that leads to some change. The child, by interacting with the world around her, builds her intellectual capacities, her emotional and social persona and her personality. The child is born with a potential but how much is realised depends on the experiences offered to her by society, the most critical elements of it being the family and the school. If one asks a child to sit quietly for five hours a day, during the most crucial years of his life, he will surely be a diminished, diminutive dwarf, not actualising his full potential.

The value of movement is not merely to learn, to acquire knowledge but it is the basis for the child to construct his or her personhood. Movement takes place not only when a child does something external but also when s/he sees or thinks or reasons or understands. Don’t we nod, make gestures, change facial expressions, speak when we share, learn or discover something? Did Archimedes continue having a bath calmly when he made a discovery? Can one be still, when elated? Cannot a person who has completed a task successfully be immediately identified? This idea of linking movement and action to learning is a key to unlock the secret of the child’s development. If the child has to be given a means to develop, it has to be offered in such a way that the child can and must move. It is not enough for the child to see and hear. Movement cannot be replaced by anything else at the same level of intensity. If a person is deprived of one of the senses, another sense may take over and become the dominant one. For example for a blind person, the sense of hearing or touch may become more heightened. But for movement there is no other substitute.

Creative movement

Even so, all forms of movement may not be considered to be educational. Just jumping around, however beneficial it may be for the child who spends many hours within the four walls of the home or school that has become the man-made environment of today, does not make it a learning activity, leave alone a developmental one. The value of movement for education depends on the purpose behind it. Any movement, to be considered educational should help to build the personality, give the child new powers or strengthen existing ones, but not leave the child where he was earlier. This does not imply that every time a child moves there has to be a serious purpose behind it. You may have seen a one or two-year-old child, who, even with a piece of thread, how absorbed they can get and when they are done, their expression or smile. A movement that unites the motor and psychological forces of the child, a “synthetic”, creative movement focuses the intelligence on the purpose behind the movement and not on the movement itself. For this synthesised movement to be effective there needs to be an effort – a “stretching of the mind” – not too difficult that it makes the objective out of reach and not too easy either.

It is important that the motor and the psychological energies go together. But often in schools we see children put in situations where ‘thought without movement’ (class work) is offered and then ‘movement without thought’ (a break, PT) are given as a compensation. This, Dr Montessori said is like “hopping on one foot and then on the other”, which creates an artificial dichotomy. And more so, we can’t go too far, can we? Why not use both legs and walk naturally and continue for longer periods? Then there would be no fatigue from an assumed mind-tiring class or a rest required from a mindless exercise session. Games, sports, eurhythmics, dance would be better options, where there is analysis within, along with a corresponding external activity. But one cannot live by these alone.

For movement and thought to be synchronised for the young child; for the head, heart and hand to work together; these experiences need to be built into the daily practice and life at home or school. They cannot be special classes taken once or twice a week, or even daily, after a full day of doing things disjointedly.

Movement needs to be also chosen by the learner, to make it a part of her personality. When a child does activities according to her volition and not because somebody (however many good intentions they may have) has instructed her to do so, then her whole ego is active and the personality functions as a unit. Her actions will follow the rhythm of her own life. This can then be considered as an activity, a task, a work, where all the faculties of the child act in unison, enabling another layer to be drawn into the personality.

The writer is the Director of SchoolScape-Centre for Educators

Date:11/01/2009 URL: http://www.thehindu.com/thehindu/mag/2009/01/11/stories/2009011150180500.htm

The dance of learning

The dance of learning
AMUKTA MAHAPATRA
The process has to move to self-learning practices, with the teacher creating the right environment for each child to light up with his own energy. The last of a two-part article on the importance of activity-based learning.
At school: Help the child construct its own personality.
For any learning to become an intrinsic part of the child’s mental make-up, the child needs to be interested, involved and it has to be a proactive choosing. The question of choice, of spontaneity goes to the core of the pedagogy, where the child constructs her own personality, which nobody else can do for her. It may not be difficult to get a child do a set task or substitute the adult’s will for his/her own, but then, we are robbing the child of his most fundamental right – the right to construct his/her own unique personality.
If the child is continuously acted upon and acts according to the wishes of the adult, his or her own psychological activity may fade away under the stronger will of the adult. The child may, ignoring his own self, look around for direction from without, from external sources and authority figures. Gradually his self-hood may disappear altogether and abnormal developments will begin to appear. It is crucial to realise that the psychological future of the individual depends on whether as a child, he has been able to unite his motor, cognitive and affective powers – his actions, will and emotions – because a childhood, good or bad, lasts a lifetime.
Change the format
If it is required that all this is to happen for a child in school – move around as is normal for any animal or human being; interact with his fellow human beings and learn, which is again a natural process in any civilisation; act with the motor and mental forces in unison; be able to choose her work; make an effort and use his faculties to learn; create her own web of knowledge; build a conceptual structure; develop his personality – one cannot continue with the teacher at the head of the class and children sitting in rows, in a dictatorial, military or feudal format. Teacher-directed classes have to be examined for their efficacy and the learning process has to move to self-learning practices, with the teacher presenting, guiding, and creating the right learning environment for each child to light up with his own energy. The geography of the classroom has to change; so also the chemistry between the adult and the child, which requires a turnabout.
If the teacher is no longer orchestrating from the front, how would the children learn? One could imagine a teacher holding the reins of 30-40 horses. What would happen if she lets go? What would horses and foals do? They would only graze and caper about a bit. What will children do? Any functional group or collective has its own evolved ground rules and so also a class. The ground rules could be discussed with the whole community, teachers and the children. Young people too, appreciate knowing their boundaries and will, by and large, follow the norms, if they are shared in a positive way.
If the opportunity is offered within the classroom and school, children would continue with their life and will go about learning if we allow them to. One has to only give them the tools for learning, with the teacher being another source of learning and not the only one, as is usually the case in a conventional classroom.
Learning tools and materials that are planned systematically, that are generic and still have the flexibility for the teacher and the child to adapt are required, if one wants to move from a teacher-driven class to a learner- directed environment. For any pedagogy where one aims for the learner to become an independent learner, materials are required. Each material acts as a teacher and there will be as many ‘teachers’ as there are sets of material. The power and the burden arising from an assumption that all knowledge and resources are being embodied in the teacher will not come into play, giving an opportunity to the teacher, to work and interact with the children as a normal human being in the classroom.
Significant role
The learning materials are not picked up randomly like toys but are chosen or designed carefully. They play a significant role in the curriculum. Frequently one hears adults say that children like only to play. But for the child, what one considers patronisingly as play is work – where their faculties are being used continuously and constantly.
The teaching-learning materials, TLM as they are termed by the acronym-loving education community, require to be sequenced, which is also apparent to the child, so that s/he has the choice to go back and forth. The TLM needs to also have built into it, the possibility for the child to work with it repeatedly. It cannot be a one-off activity most of the time, like a crossword or a page to colour. The idea is for the child and the material to be friends, so that the concept embedded in the material gets transferred to the child, when he works with it.
For the child to establish a relationship with the material, or with the concept, or with the idea that he is learning, it has to be introduced in a way that allows a long term relationship to develop. It is not just for this lesson or for the coming exam or for the semester or even for the project alone. It has to be for life. As the child interacts with it, s/he discovers more and more aspects of this companion. For this long term friendship to happen, the concept or the material has to be presented so that the child is eager to grab, keen to make it his or her own. And then the child is set on a path of enquiry, of learning. Sometime during this journey, either at the introduction or more commonly as the child works with the idea individually or in a small group, a ‘point of contact’ is established between the material/concept/idea and the child. With this, the friendship deepens and the concept becomes one with the learner. It is very much a part of the tissues and the muscles and the whole physical and psychological system. It is not like as it happens in conventional teaching, where once you ‘learn’, it is over and you can and want to forget about it. It is learnt with the heart and not ‘by-heart’.
The point of contact is similar to dancing when at one juncture suddenly the music touches you and your movements then flow with the music. Or at times when you are cooking and your actions seem to have a rhythm of their own, or you are doing a presentation and you are in tune with the audience. Once this point of contact is established, one does not stop – isn’t it difficult to stop dancing when the music is in our hearts? The dance of learning is not over. But this is the time when a new journey begins – of exploring further, discovering, and understanding, ordering and creating anew. This is what one would look out for, where the child instead of being a ‘consumer’ becomes truly a constructor of his or her own person.
© Copyright 2000 – 2008 The Hindu

Wearing socks can wear you out

My daughter had a reunion recently with a Currambena friend, who moved on to one of the other local schools at the end of last year. It was a beautiful sunny day and ever fearful of any juvenile disturbance to my pristine domestic environment (you know what it is like with three young
children in the house – all vaccumed carpets, well-made beds and healthy snacks lined up along the kitchen bench) we decided to make this an outside play and took the dog for a long walk around Blackman Park. I followed the two girls as they walked, half listening to their chatter as they renewed their acquaintance. I was fascinated as they began to compare their respective school days. Like any normal parent, I am always looking for clues that my decisions for my children are the right ones. Like any realistic parent, I kind of secretly know that I won’t get an answer until they are about 40 years old and have finished their therapy.

In the meantime, I piece together what scraps I can find. The girls compared notes on friends, on start times, on pick up routines, then moved on to the nitty gritty of the eternal education debate: school uniforms versus wear-what-you-like; school meetings as opposed to school assemblies, merit badges and point systems, compared to – ummm, well – no merit badges or points systems.

At the end of our second circling of the park, the dog was done in, but they were still chatting away, debating in a friendly and exploratory manner, until that is, they reached an enormous, incredibly muddy puddle.

Both girls knew what to do. They removed their shoes and socks and waded into the dark, murky water that even the Labrador had turned his nose up at. It was cold and wet, but helped settled the matter at least in my daughter’s mind. ‘Do you know?’ asked her friend, ‘at my school you have to wear socks all day’. ‘Wow’ said Chloe, ‘that must be exhausting!’. ‘Yes’, came the reply, ‘Yes, it is.’

The matter was settled. Chloe is happy where she is and she won’t move for anyone, not if it means wearing socks all day.

Currambena Chatter

Jamie , Tilly and Oliver’ s Dad, has volunteered to coach his son’ s soccer team as part of the Lane Cove Football Club.
It’s his second week into the season, and according to our correspondent on the ground, like a true Currambena Dad, Jamie has so far focused on sitting in a circle,  building team spirit and reminding the players (aged 3 - 5yrs)  that it is, after all, only a game.    Most of the other coaches have their charges tearing up and down the ground, working on ball skills and practicing their ‘dives in the penalty area’ .
Could the Currambena approach eventually revolutionise the World Game?
We’ d have fewer red cards and a lot more discussion of how it makes you feel when someone goes for your legs,  not the ball and gets away with it.   Or how threatening it can be for the poor goal keeper forced to face a penalty shoot out,  all alone in the huge goal and everyone cheering for the other lot.
Australia’ s  bidding to host the World Cup in 2018 . Is this a business opportunity for Currambena and Fran and Chris’s conflict resolution course?

I think someone should make a submission?

Currambena Chatter

Easter this week – what a clever idea – two weeks before the end of
term, we have a little ‘practice’ holiday so that we can find out how
we will manage with the full time care of our children, without the
support and distraction of their teachers, and the endless resources
of the craft room.
To spice up the challenge,  we get to fire the little darlings up with
chocolate.  Should be a laugh!
As a mother who is still on detention at parenting school for letting
down the side during the summer holidays and resorting to sports camp
and cocktails to get the family through the last couple of weeks, I,
for one, appreciate this trial run.
Here’s hoping – and if it all goes horribly wrong, we know we can
bring them back to school on Tuesday.

Never patronise a six (-and-a-half) year old

The other morning in Fran’s class, I was having one of those over-enthusiastic, extra-friendly, welcome-to-our-community chats with one of this term’s new children, who quite frankly wanted to ditch me to build a cubby/play football/do some handwriting practice but who was clearly too well brought up to make his break for freedom.

Luke has lived most of his life in San Francisco and was telling me how his parents have decided that it’s time to settle back in their native Australia. ‘Oh how lovely, Luke’, I cooed welcomingly, ‘does this mean that you’ll live forever in Australia?’

His frustration was palpable. What kind of sheltered life had this woman been living? Was he going to have to teach her everything?

‘Well,’ he said with as much patience as a six-year-old can muster ‘I don’t think I can live forever. There are things that I can’t control.’ He paused. ‘I hope we will be living in Sydney for a long time, though, yes.’

Never patronise a six year old.

When I mentioned to Luke that I was going to quote him in this week’s blog, he wanted to share two pieces of information about himself that he says are actually more interesting. ‘I like kumquat. I really like it. I have lots and lots of it for treats. And chlorine doesn’t hurt my bruises when I put my legs in the water.

Thank you Luke. And welcome to Currambena.