Tag: year 11

Fishy Tales from the Sea

December 7, 2017

The St Stephens SCUBA Students were amazing, conditions at Rotto were perfect, a massive pod of dolphins swam around the boat for most of the day and a massive Port Jackson shark chilling in a cave was a highlight. It was a really great day and a fantastic end to the Open Water Course.

Rebecca Hudson & Julian Boland

Science Teachers

“The sea that he made belongs to him, along with the dry land that his hands formed. Come! Let us worship and bow down; let us kneel in the presence of the Lord, who made us.” – Psalm 95:5-6

The 2017 Black Swan Prize

November 16, 2017

Year 11 &12 Visual Art Students attended an excursion to ‘The 2017 Black Swan Prize’ at the Art Gallery of West Australia last week. The Black Swan Prize is one of Australia’s Richest Portraiture Prize and promotes Australia’s Top Artists. Students got to meet and talk with Artists Guy Morgan and David Wells to learn about the story behind each piece. Well done to Winner Jana Vodesil-Baruffi who won the $50,000 Lester Group Prize with her piece ‘Black Swan’.

Black Swan Prize 2017

“Whatever your hand finds to do, do it with your might, for there is no work or thought or knowledge or wisdom in Sheol, to which you are going.” – Ecclesiastes 9:10-11

Tables as Whiteboards

November 15, 2017

Students love our whiteboard tables, and use them in all kinds of ways.  They are perfect for problem solving.  Before beginning writing tasks, students can quickly draw a mind map of ideas, then get to work.

Working on the table means it is easy to share thinking and ideas which spurs conversations. Using the whiteboard tables encourages students to be creative. Students who are reluctant to begin pen and paper tasks don’t seem to have that hesitation with the dry erase pens.

Pictured below are some Year 11 Marine and Maritime students using the table.

Writing on surfaces

September 12, 2017

Writing on surfaces is one of those effective learning practices that is spreading with a viral rapidity. Schools do it because it works, and it works well. 

Student’s love to write on desks, walls, doors, windows, etc. – not because it is naughty, but for the collaborative nature, the exchanges between writers, the rich colour, the personalisation, and more.

Working in full view immediately has a basis for conversation and discussion, offers an awareness of each other’s work, and has impact.

There is a strong cognitive reason. We’ve known for a long time that memory is aided by the cues and clues of social context.

Pedagogically, it works too.

Pictured below are Year 11 student’s doing revision for their exams.

Year 11 River Cruise

August 28, 2017

The River Cruise was well received by the students on Friday night. They came dressed in costumes for the theme “The Award Goes To…”

Prizes on the night were awarded to:
Isaac Reid for dressing as Jack Sparrow
Charlotte Deney-Johnson for dressing as Rita Skeeta from Harry Potter
Caiiln Brewer, Paige Brandwood, Caitlyn Ribbons and Brianna Glasson as Superheroes

Special mentions also went to:
Emi Rad-Mel and Jonathan Tushingham as Buttercup and Inigo Montoya from Princess Bride
Sonja Jeyabalan and Courtney Shipham as Ghostbusters
Corey Newland as Arthur from the children’s cartoon
Zoe MacAdam as Nurse Lee from Call the Midwife
Ryan Sewell as the boy from the movie UP.

Below are just a few photos from the night.

 

Biodiversity and Conservation Camp in Busselton

August 2, 2017

Mr Charles Biddle and Nicola Ross led the Year 11 students to Busselton where they performed transects and investigate the effects of monoculture, invasive species, human interference, and conservation strategies. They also visited Ngilgi Cave.

What an amazing experience for them.

 

Year 10 & Year 11 2018

July 1, 2017

Dear Parents and Students

At the moment we are building the timetable for the next academic year (October 2017 to December 2018). It has been interesting and challenging to accommodate the changing desires of students. Subjects that didn’t exist in schools several years ago, such as ATAR Marine and Maritime Studies, Cert lll and lV in Business, Psychology etc. have grown in popularity while certain more “traditional” subjects have shrunk. Changes in the workplace are strongly influencing the subject choices that students and their families make.

Many Certificate classes (e.g. Certificate ll in Hospitality; Certificate lll in Design; Certificate ll in Sport and Recreation – Fitness; Cert ll in Outdoor Education) are chosen by both Year 11 and 12 students who enrol in a particular certificate depending on their needs. This mixture of students in Certificate Courses has been common for many years.

As we endeavour to keep other subject pathways open into the future, some very small Year 11 classes which have a significant practical or oral component do lend themselves to merging with small Year 12 classes. In 2018 fewer than 4 students have chosen ATAR French and this will be run in conjunction with the Year 12 class. The same will be true for Drama and Media. Students choosing these three subjects need to understand that they will be working with older students and that they will be required to work at a high and self-disciplined level.  I am pleased that there are still bigger numbers of students choosing subjects such as Economics, Modern History and Visual Art.

Our timetable is constructed “from the top down”: we start with Year 11 and 12 simultaneously. Initially student choices give us an indication of how many classes might be possible. We use a very advanced program to satisfy the needs of as many students as possible. Some subjects exist on one grid line only and this complicates things. Subjects such as ATAR English and Mathematics Applications are spread across as many “grid lines” as possible in order to create as many choices for students as we can. Decisions around the viability of classes are based on numbers, the historical number of students who drop particular subjects in favour of a private study in Year 12 as well as whether a subject is a university pre-requisite.

Over this last week of term, almost every prospective Year 11 and 12 student will finalise their subjects for upper school. While Year 11s chose 6 subjects, by the start of next year over 60% of year 12s on an ATAR pathway, will have only 5 subjects and will have a private study as their 6th “subject”. We are in the process of constructing the Year 9 and 10 “electives” gridlines and fitting those into the complicated matrix that makes up a timetable. This timetable will be in place until December 2018. After that timetables will be constructed later in the year and run from February to December each year.

I would like to wish every family a restful time over the extended mid-year break.

 

Regards

Bruce Titlestad

Head of Secondary School

Year 11 Media

June 15, 2017

In the last fortnight, St Stephen’s Duncraig Media students have been experimenting with the characteristics of lighting and how it influences the mood of their productions.

James Hummerston

Media Teacher

In the pictures are Year 11s in action.

 

Year 11 Camp

June 12, 2017

Last week Year 11 students and staff spent three days at Fairbridge.

Fairbridge uses a holistic approach to working with young people. Services provided range from mentoring, leadership development, life skills, and adventure camps.