Principal's Messages

MESSAGES FROM THE PRINCIPAL
- having respect for someone because of how their actions impact others and
- showing respect by changing your actions to be sure you don't have a negative impact.
What is having respect?
Having respect means you feel positively toward a person because of how they affect others. For example, you may have respect for
- a person that treats other people kindly
- someone who worked hard to achieve something
- someone who overcame a challenge
- You can have respect for others, and you can have respect for yourself. Self-respect means you feel good about who you are, the types of choices you make, and the impact you have on others.
What is showing respect?
Being respectful means you act in a way that shows care for how your actions may impact others. We can show respect for people, places, and things.
For example:
- Using kind or polite words even when you're upset
- Using manners like sharing, waiting your turn, saying please and thank you
- Accepting difference or at least disagreeing with kind words
- Being careful not to damage places or things
- Using a quiet voice or calm behavior in public places
- Sharing resources, only taking what you really need
Examples of what respect is
- You admire (respect) a historical figure who stood up for what she believed in, even when it was hard.
- You are quiet in a library to show that you care about (respect) others' need to read without interruption.
- You follow your parents' rules to show them you care (respect) how they feel about the situation.
- You don't call people names because you care about (respect) their feelings.
- You don't damage public places because you care about (respect) preserving the quality of the place and other people's right to enjoy it.
- You don't hit or otherwise hurt people because you care about (respect) their well-being.
- You use other people's toys with care (respect) so you don't break them.
- You dress, speak, and act in a way that shows you care about what you know is right and safe, because you care about (respect) yourself and your well-being.
- You don't interfere with other people's right to look, think, or act differently than you because you care about (respect) their feelings and well-being.
Why respect is important?
To understand why respect is important, think about what life would be like if we didn’t treat each other with respect. Since respect is about caring whether our words and actions have a hurtful affect on other people, in a world without respect, no one would care whether they were hurting other people. They might do things that are dangerous or mean and not care if other people were harmed.
All of us in society need to treat each other with respect if we want to feel safe and live peacefully together. Respect is important because it means we treat others the way we want to be treated. So if we don't treat others kindly, how can we expect them to be kind in return?
PARENT HELPERS IN THE CLASSROOM
We’ve had a tremendous response from parents wanting to become classroom helpers at St Ita’s. Parent Induction courses which will be running on;
- Thursday 1st September at 2.45pm, and
- Monday 5th September at 9.10am.
All parent helpers are required to sign in at the School Admin Office, and will need a current Working With Children Check (WWCC).
To register for the above session please CLICK HERE
PARENTS DROPPING CHILDREN OFF AND PICKING UP AT SCHOOL
A reminder to all parents that school drop off at St Ita’s is between 8.30am and 8.50am, and school pick up is between 3.20pm and 3.40pm.
We have noticed that an increasing number of students are being dropped at school around 8.00am, and similarly collected after 3.40pm during which times they are being left unsupervised.
To support our child safety practices at St Ita’s could we ask all parents to refrain from early drop off’s and late pickups on school days.