10.18.2013

SHES Principal Mr. Tugwell's Message to Elementary Parents

Dear Families,

Judge kindly; that is the heart of everything.

Mother Janet Erskine Stuart is one of the great educational leaders and writers in Sacred Heart history.  Her influence stretches around the world through her essays and poetry.  Mother Janet Stuart died on October 21st, 1914, and the Network of Sacred Heart Schools will gather together next week, through the power of modern technology, to open a year of celebration of her life. 

Our students in grades three to twelve will join together in mixed age-level groups throughout the school to participate via webcast in the opening ceremony of this Centenary Preparation on Monday, October 21st at 3:00 p.m.  This is sure to be a memorable webcast.  The ceremony is taking place at Stuart Hall in San Francisco, and our own Headmistress, Sr. Wachter, will be there!

If you would like to experience this very special event, just stay tuned.  Pauline Scott, Principal of Sacred Heart High School, is our Janet Stuart webcast coordinator, and she will be sending instructions to all of us before Monday.

Late Dismissal Monday
Due to the timing of the Janet Stuart webcast on Monday, October 21st, students in grades 3 to 6 may not be back in the classrooms by 3:30.  We appreciate your patience, as they may be dismissed closer to 3:45 on that day.  Thank you.

Feast of Mater Admirabilis
Our grade six students, led by Mrs. MacDougall, treated us all to a very special presentation in honour of the Feast of Mater AdmirabilisThey retold the famous story of the painting by Pauline Perdrau at the Trinita dei Monti, a Sacred Heart school in Rome.  We have our own Mater painting in the Little Theatre.  You can view Robert Marchand’s rendering of this famous painting in the Fountain Academy lobby.
Click here to see photos of today’s special assembly presentation.  

Lockers and Independence
Of course, you are welcome to assist your child settling into school in the morning and heading out after school.  However, please keep in mind that the more you do for your child, the less he will learn to do on his own.  Certainly, the way we help our preschooler is different than how we guide our grade sixer.  And yet, with patience, children are usually capable of a lot more than we think.  We have students as young as six who know how to start their day after being dropped off at the curb.  That’s personal growth in an atmosphere of wise freedom!

Here’s Janet Stuart’s take on educating to independence:
There are two ways of educating: one, to give heart, mind, energy, everything to working for the children - doing things for them. The other, to try to teach the children to work for themselves. And this is the higher of the two. It requires more prudence, more foresight and there is less immediate return. We ought not to do things for the children which they ought to learn to do for themselves. We want to make them independent of us.

Field Trips this Week
The Preschoolers walked to the Spring Garden Road Library for Musical Munchkins, a presentation by two members of Symphony Nova Scotia. The children were introduced to a viola and a bass. They learned about the similarities and differences between the two instruments and participated in a variety of movement songs. It was a great morning!

Our grade fours ventured up to the Citadel on Tuesday to learn all about Halifax’s famous historical landmark.  Check out some photos of the excursion at Mrs. Chipman’s class webpage.

Our grade fives headed over to Sir Sandford Fleming Park for some mysterious encounters at the Adventure Earth Center.  

Cards by Me
By now you should have received your child’s Cards by Me artwork and order form.  This is a great chance to load up on note cards with your child’s beautiful artwork professionally printed on them.  And at the same time, funds raised by this project go directly into supporting our elementary school art program.  The deadline for Cards by Me orders is Tuesday, October 22nd.  Thank you for helping us keep art alive for our children!

Book Fair
Our annual Scholastic Book Fair is next week!  Please drop by the Large Parlour (by Main Reception) on Tuesday, Wednesday, or Thursday to find some great books for your children. Your child's class will be visiting the fair during school next week, and you can either send money in with your child or have him make a wishlist during his visit so you can follow up afterwards.  Either way works for us.
We have an extra special family night planned to kick off this year’s book fair on Monday, October 21st from 6:30 until 8:30 p.m.  From 7 until 8, guest readers will read Not-So-Spooky Stories with the lights dimmed; while kids sip hot cocoa and their parents get first dibs on this year's books.  We hope to see you there!

Two Parent Education Opportunities
Our Parents’ Guild is sponsoring a special presentation concerning what parents should know about social media (Tech Savvy Kids = Learning Curve for Adults) by Matt Corkum on Tuesday, October 29th at 7:30 p.m.  There is a free lecture about what parents can do to help their children with general anxiety at home by Dr. Daniel Chorney at Armbrae Academy on Tuesday, October 22nd at 6:00 p.m.

ASC News
Tomorrow, Friday October 18th, is the deadline for registering for our PD day camp on October 25th.  The Preschool to Grade 2 children will be attending a Halloween-themed puppet show at the Spring Garden Road Library. Children in Grades 3 to 6 will be planting fall bulbs on our school grounds and participating in a school-wide scavenger hunt!  Should be fun!

Basketball will go ahead on Monday, October 21st following the webcast prayer service.

Looking forward,
Stephen Tugwell
Principal, Sacred Heart Elementary School
When you know even for a moment that it’s your time
Then you can walk with the power of a thousand generations.
When you’ve got a dream like mine, nobody can take you down.
When you’ve got a dream like mine, nobody can push you around.

- Bruce Cockburn