September 13

The SAN Script – Tuesday, Sept. 13

Always do your best. What you plant now, you will harvest later.

Og Mandino
unclimbed


The peaks of Nepal are calling. An avalanche stopped Gabriel, Pasang Kaji and Elia a year before, but more determined than ever, the Himalayas are once again locked in their sights.

In partnership with Jeep® UNCLIMBED: Reaching the Summit follows the intense training and planning of: Gabriel Filippi, one of Canada’s foremost mountaineers; Elia Saikaly, Canadian high-altitude videographer; and Pasang Kaji Sherpa, Nepalese mountain guide and climbing partner, as the prepare to summit two unclimbed peaks.

Find out more about Gabriel at: http://www.gabrielfilippi.com/
Find out more about Elia at: http://www.eliasaikaly.com
Find out more about Pasang Kaji Sherpa at: http://www.pksherpa.com

 

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Live link for this Virtual Field Trip is here

St. Anthony Today

Highest Needs meeting – Geraldine and Paul 10:45-11:45

remembrance-day

Remembrance Day materials in the staffroom for all of you – if you need more, please let me know.

Paul

September 11

The SAN Script – The week of Sept. 12 – 16

A great article for all of you from this week’s Brain Pickings

The Difficult Art of Self-Compassion

“We need to re-learn the value of calculated moments of self-compassion; we need to appreciate the role of self-care in a good, ambitious and fruitful life.”

“Compassion,” wrote historian Karen Armstrong in considering the proper meaning of the Golden Rule, “asks us to look into our own hearts, discover what gives us pain, and then refuse, under any circumstance whatsoever, to inflict that pain on anybody else.” In her beautiful ode to compassion, Lucinda Williams urged: “Have compassion for everyone you meet … You do not know what wars are going on down there, where the spirit meets the bone.”

And yet even the most compassionate among us have one sizable blind spot: the self. Our culture’s epidemic of self-criticism has left us woefully unskilled at self-compassion — that essential anchor of sanity, which both grounds and elevates our spirit.

In this short, immensely helpful exercise, The School of Life offers a daily self-compassion practice so simple that cynics might mistake it for simplistic — and yet out of its simplicity arises a profound reorientation to our own selves.

To survive in this high-pressured, crazy world, most of us have to become highly adept at self-criticism. We learn how to tell ourselves off for our failures, and for not working hard or smart enough. But so good are we at this that we’re sometimes in danger of falling prey to an excessive version of self-criticism — what we might call self-flagellation: a rather dangerous state, which just ushers in depression and underperformance. We might simply lose the will to get out of bed.

For those moments, we need a corrective — we need to carve out time for an emotional state of which many of us are profoundly suspicious: self-compassion. We’re suspicious because this sounds horribly close to self-pity. But because depression and self-hatred are serious enemies of a good life, we need to appreciate the role of self-care in a good, ambitious, and fruitful life.

St. Anthony This Week

Monday, September 12

Tuesday, September 13

10:45 – Highest Needs meeting – Paul and Geraldine

Wednesday, September 14

Teresa and Paul at OECTA Ottawa Association Representative Contract Reveal and Training Day – Centurion Centre- Full Day Paul (half-day)

Salima M. Sulaiman, M.S.W., RSW Social Worker in (PM)

Paul at meeting with community group (yard) (PM)

Thursday, September 15

Math Mentors / Elem. Principals West End (OT-50) Paul, Maria, Nora (Derry Byrne) (AM)

Friday, September 16

Associate Teacher Training: Minds on Learning for a Digital Age – University of Ottawa – Nora, Chris (teacher candidate), Paul away all day

Saturday, September 17

Day of Discovery – University of Ottawa

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September 8

The SAN Script – Thursday, September 8

Tomorrow is our first jean’s day – $2.00 to wear jeans on Friday – proceeds will be going to our united Way Campaign until the end of this year’s Campaign

Thanks!!  Campaign Chair Paul

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united-way

Lets do a great job on the United Way this year – our community benefits so much from their support.  Our contributions have decreased over the past two years – let’s reverse that trend!!

This year’s Kick-off will take place after school at the Prescott – date to be determined – first refreshment on the campaign chair along with treats!!

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St. Anthony Today

Pizza forms and milk forms will go out next week – we will continue to focus on forms collection and students activity fee this week.  Assembly for Terry Fox Friday AM.  Looking for a volunteer for first St. Anthony Superstar Assembly – date to be determined.

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Great Conference coming your way next Saturday.  You can register here

A Day of Discovery is a professional learning experience brought to you by the Discovery Education Community.  It is focused on three simple but important goals: learn, share, connect. These full-day, professional learning events help teachers and administrators learn more about integrating digital content into their curriculum provide opportunities for participants to share strategies that are working, and connect attendees to their most valuable resource…each other.

The day will feature an opening general session followed by 3 breakout session rotations for attendees to select from. Be sure to bring your own device, charged and ready for the day. We will provide breakfast and lunch.

See the agenda & earn more at dayofdiscoverytour.com/ottawa-on.html

WHEN
WHERE
Lamoureux Hall, University of Ottawa – 145 Jean-Jacques-Lussier, Ottawa, ON K1N 6N5 – View Map
September 7

The SAN Script – Wednesday, Sept. 7

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The best and most beautiful things in the world cannot be seen or even touched – they must be felt with the heart. Helen Keller

Wednesday, September 8

no events planned for today – first assembly (Terry Fox) will be this Friday.

Please make sure you sign up for CGE Themes (St. Anthony Superstars)  Starts in September

Very hot day today – please make sure your students are all well hydrated.

thirsty

great teachers

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#AGreatTeacherIs…

I saw a post on Twitter talking about removing the word “teaching” and simply replacing it with “learning”. I have to admit, I cringed at the thought.  That being said, I do believe a great teacher starts from the view point of a learner, not the teacher.  This is something that is a needed shift in the traditional norm of education. Starting from the needs of the learner, not the teacher.

That being said, with all of the change that is being thrust upon us so quickly in the world, great teachers are needed more than ever.  I asked the following question on Twitter:

When you think of the word “teacher”, what do you see in your mind?

 Here are my thoughts:

A Great Teacher Is…

 

Someone who is a relationships builder.

Someone who shapes minds.

Someone who empowers learners.

Someone who cares about their learners.

Someone who inspires.

Someone who is a leader AND a follower, and knows when to go into each role.

Someone who knows when to stand in front and then knows when to gets out of the way.

Someone who is wise and shares their wisdom with others.

Someone who listens.

Someone who is continuously learning and growing.

Someone who shares what was, but inspires dreams of what could be.

Someone who both embraces and creates change.

Someone who is a constant innovator.

Someone who impacts people long after their time with them.

A great teacher is often all of these things and so much more.

P.S. Nothing here about test scores…

September 5

The first Glorious Week of School!!

An illustration by W. W. Denslow from The Wond...

An illustration by W. W. Denslow from The Wonderful Wizard of Oz, also known as The Wizard of Oz, a 1900 children’s novel by L. Frank Baum. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Rising Strong: Brené Brown on the Physics of Vulnerability and What Resilient People Have in Common 

To start the year I have chosen a recent article from Brain Pickings, one of my favourite blogs.  This is all about Brené Brown who writes and talks about vulnerability.  She has a TED Talk on the subject.  I think this is a great topic to help us prepare for the new year.  I am including the links her, but not the full article – it’s a short one and well worth the read.

Good luck everyone on our first day.  I know this is going to be an amazing year and I am so excited to get started!

Away we GO!!

brene Brown Art by Lisbeth Zwerger for a rare edition of The Wonderful Wizard of Oz

The most transformative and resilient leaders that I’ve worked with over the course of my career have three things in common: First, they recognize the central role that relationships and story play in culture and strategy, and they stay curious about their own emotions, thoughts, and behaviors. Second, they understand and stay curious about how emotions, thoughts, and behaviors are connected in the people they lead, and how those factors affect relationships and perception. And, third, they have the ability and willingness to lean in to discomfort and vulnerability.

Brené Brown — The Courage to Be Vulnerable quoted in Brain Pickings

Tuesday, September 6

Meet the Teacher Day

  • Students and parents enter the school at 8:30 bell (message to parents)
  • short introduction and welcoming in the gym
  • students form up with their teachers and go to class – parents follow
  • coffee and snacks in the hallway right outside the office
  • teachers intro to parents and teachers – hope to get as many forms signed as possible – non-homeroom teachers assist with in-class sessions
  • emphasis on media form – looking for 100% ‘YES’
  • Meet the teacher done by recess – National Anthem and announcements to be done just before recess to set up the ground rules for the new yard (ie. no jumping off the rocks in the outdoor classroom etc)
  • Tweets today #ocsbfirstday

Wednesday, September 7

No events are on the calendar for the remainder of the week – we will use this time to distribute computers and forms that need to be returned and to collect the student fee.

If there are events that should be on the calendar, please let me know so I can inform the parents.  Opening assembly for the students will be early next week once forms and money have been collected and computers have been distributed.  Very important for me to know if you are short computers so I can order additional machines.  All students, grades 3-6 should have their own computer.  Grade 4-6 students can bring their computers home as soon as the Acceptable Use forms are returned.

Forms:

  • media form
  • Acceptable Use
  • Student Verification and CASL form
  • Walking Letter
  • Student Activity Fee letter
  • Pizza and Milk forms will be distributed later in the month – Pizza will be once per week this year.

There is no letter going home from me, I have sent out my message to parents (above).

Thursday, September 8

Friday, September 9

Maureen Devlin

What Is Teaching Well?

After teaching for many years, it can still be challenging to speak up for what you believe in and have learned to be true about teaching and learning. No one educator knows it all, but teachers who have dedicated decades to the profession have certainly gained some knowledge about what works and what doesn’t work.

Generally an experienced teacher understands that good teaching is a combination of tried-and-true traditional work plus new researched-based efforts. It’s not one or the other, but both.

Good teaching also depends on a level of spontaneity and responsiveness. This means knowing your students well and then choreographing and leading the learning in ways that matter to your students. Good teachers are very observant. They have a stack of great lessons and learning materials, and they employ that collection at the most advantageous times.

Good teachers know that teaching is an organic task–not a static effort. Good teaching is always changing to meet the needs of context, students, new research, and timely materials.

Good teaching is well planned with room for flexibility and response–the kind of “loose-tight” planning that’s advantageous to most tasks and efforts that involve people.

Good teaching reaches in and reaches out. We reach in to care for and teach our students well, and we reach out to gain more insight, knowledge, and ideas to do the job well.

Good teaching is a collaborative endeavour that utilizes state-of-the-art effort to learn and employ the best possible teaching/learning plans and effort.

As educators we have to stand up for what we need to teach well including the following:

  • timely, inclusive, transparent communication
  • worthy, collective, collaborative problem analysis
  • good structure, research, and process with regard to decision-making
  • substantial time-on-task with students in responsive, sensitive ways
  • significant lead time and value related to planning and preparation
  • educator/student voice and choice
  • up to date materials, tools, furniture, and learning/teaching spaces
  • time for worthwhile, targeted, differentiated, and useful professional learning
  • honest, direct dialogue and debate focused on what students need and why they need it
  • honest, worthy rationale for efforts imposed and directed
As an educator, my focus this year is a focus on good teaching and service to students and families. I will look for honest, worthwhile, and useful ways to build my craft and practice with this in mind in the days to come.