Principal's Messages
As the State Government announced yesterday, we still have a way to go. Remote Learning from home will continue up until Friday 9th October. Therefore the first week of term 4, Monday 5th October to Friday 9th October will still be remote learning.
Full Time School will re-open for all students on Monday 12th October.
We will continue to be vigilant at St Ita's making sure we are adhering to all Health expectations to prevent the transmission of COVID-19 within our school community. To do this properly we need the support of all families.
This means that up until Monday 12th October, all students who can learn from home, MUST learn from home, except those:
- Whose parents, guardians or carers are unable to work from home and no other arrangements for care can be made. (If a parent is at home, even working at home, the child / ren must learn from home.)
- With additional needs who require learning adjustment and who also meet one of the criteria listed below;
- Who are deemed to be vulnerable including;
- Children in out-of-home care
- Children deemed by Child Protection and/or Family Services to be at risk of harm
- Children identified by the school as vulnerable (including via referral from a family violence agency, homelessness or youth justice service or mental health or other health service).
If you meet the above criteria and require onsite supervision, please register your intentions by completing the Online Remote Supervision form each week.
This will enable us to ensure that we have sufficient staff on duty to supervise students in attendance.
The school will continue to ensure that the health and safety of students, staff and the wider school community remains the highest priority with physical distancing measures and hand and respiratory hygiene practises remaining in place for all staff and students in attendance. In addition, all students attending on-site Remote Schooling will have their temperature taken each morning.
If you have any questions in relation to the on-site Remote Supervision arrangements, please contact the Admin office p: 5623 7222.
**URGENT IMPORTANT WARNING**
The eSafety Commissioner yesterday confirmed distressing reports about an explicit video of a suicide circulating social media platforms. eSafety has contacted social media companies about the reports and will continue working with them to monitor the situation.
Reports indicate that the video has been reshared on platforms including (but not limited to) Tik Tok, Snapchat Instagram, Twitter and Facebook. To increase the likelihood of children opening the link it has alarmingly also been edited and reshared to begin with general content (images of cats) before switching to the footage of a bearded man sitting in front of a computer.
What parents should be doing immediately?
- Increase supervision of all screen time. Strictly no devices in bedrooms. It is safest to keep devices in communal areas.
- Open up a conversation to encourage your children to come to you if they see something “disturbing” online (see link below for ideas about what to say, particularly how to prepare kids before an issue occurs).
- Remind your children that they always have 24/7 access to support via Kids Helpline (www.kidshelpline.com.au).
- Don’t hesitate to seek advice from a professional (e.g. doctor, psychologist, school counsellor) should you have any concerns about your child's mental health, particularly with regard to suicide risk issues.
- Further information: What to do when your child sees something disturbing online
We are encouraging people who encounter this content to report it to the social media platform they’ve seen it on and to eSafety at: www.esafety.gov.au/report/illegal-harmful-content.
Parents, please consider this current issue as further evidence as to why it is not appropriate or safe for primary school age children to be on social media.
- The use of computers, laptops or any internet enabled devices (iPad, phone, iPod, Xbox) should be in a common area of the house not in the bedroom!
- Parental monitoring is vital – walk past and see what your child is doing, who they are talking to and what sites they are on….be aware if their mood changes. This is NOT invading their privacy at all…it is parenting in the digital space.
- Make sure there is no response to rude or harassing emails. (Keep a record of in case of further investigation).
- Advise your student/child to immediately exit any site that makes them feel uncomfortable or worried. Basic protective behaviour principles apply.
- If the harassment continues….the current email account can be deleted and a new one started. The new email address should only be given to a selected few.
- If receiving harassing messages on social media – have the sender blocked & report to the site.
- If you have found inappropriate content about your child or one in your care on a website or are informed about this situation please contact the ISP and or Police or advise the parent to do so ASAP.
- Have a family internet contract and set house rules about what information your child can put onto websites or share with others.
- Be aware the majority of children WILL NOT tell a parent/teacher if bullied or harassed online for fear that they will lose internet access.
- Make sure that your children understand that they will not get in trouble if they tell you about a problem.
- Parents must learn about the internet with their child – get students to share their knowledge of the internet with their parents in a fun environment.
- Spend time online with children, just as you would with many other activities such as sport, board games and walking the dog – learn and explore together.
- Install filters and other monitoring/blocking software to minimise dangers. This is already done in schools but advise parents to have up to date filtering software installed at home.
- Know the sites they are accessing to ensure suitability. Filters CAN sometimes fail to protect and can be bypassed by a ‘tech savvy’ child.
- ABSOLUTELY MAKE SURE THAT NO EXCHANGE OF PERSONAL INFORMATION TAKES PLACE!
- Children Under 13 ARE NOT ALLOWED on Facebook, Instagram, Kik, SnapChat, iTunes, Tik Tok and many more. Don’t support your child to break the rules & they won’t be the only one without these accounts. Learn to say NO!
- Social Networking Profiles such as MySpace SHOULD BE SET TO PRIVATE. Use all the security settings available to make the site as safe as possible.
- Friends on MSN/email contacts and social networking sites should be people that your child knows in real life. This is one way to reduce possible risks. Anyone can be anyone online.
- Learn the lingo so that you can decipher some of the content if required. Advise parents to do the same.
- Teach children that information on the internet is not always reliable.
- Very close supervision for young children is recommended. There should be a limit to the email correspondence/msn to be a list of friends and family that has been approved.
- Whatever your children use, you must use as well. Set up accounts on the same sites to ensure that they are suitable and the interactions appropriate. Engage with them online. This also allows you to know how these applications work.
- If your child is playing online games it is YOUR responsibility to make sure that YOU know how to play the game too in case of problems. Play online games together.
- Do not let young children ‘google’ aimlessly with no supervision. Children need to be taught about search engines and how they work.
- The internet and the various applications are a lot of fun and a wonderful tool…maximize the benefits and surf safely together!
- Please note that this list is by no means exhaustive and that there is no guarantee that adherence to these tips will provide 100% protection or safety for those using the various applications of the internet.
SCHOOL UNIFORM DURING ONSITE REMOTE SUPERVISION
A reminder to all students attending On Site Supervised Learning that you are expected to be in full school uniform. No students should be attending onsite remote supervision wearing casual clothes.
SIBLING TELEPHONE INTERVIEWS FOUNDATION 2021
Sibling telephone interviews for Foundation 2021 are being conducted this week. If you haven't made an apointment time, please contact the Admin office to book an appointment time for this week. Please click here to email Admin
SCHOOL FEE CONCESSION
For any families impacted financially by the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic and have concerns about your financial situation regarding school fees, please contact myself on 5623 7222 during the hours of 9am-3pm Monday to Friday, or via email: principal@stidrouin.catholic.edu.au so that we can explore confidential financial support arrangements to enable your child(ren)’s education at our school to continue.
HEALTH CARE CONCESSION CARD
For any families that have recently received a Government means-tested health care concession card, please forward a copy of your card to the office to check your eligibility, as a fee concession may apply. The card must be in the name of the parent/fee payer for a fee concession to apply.
If your current Health Care card is due to expire this year and your card is re-issued, please send a copy of your new card details to the office as soon as possible for the concession to be checked and applied for next year's fees.