Coffs Harbour Public School Blog

Courtesy & Honour – Principal:Leonie Buehler

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English as an additional language/dialect (EAL/D)

We are fortunate to have a number of EALD  students attend our school. These children come  with a rich cultural heritage and are from many countries including Africa, Iran, Afghanistan, Pakistan and Thailand. We are able to offer these students smaller class sizes where the children participate in intensive English activities to develop skills in spelling, writing, reading and listening. Our main focus this term has been safety and health. Our small classes foster an environment of comfortable learning and one-on one interaction and our students learn more about our local culture, values and society.
A new interactive board has engaged all students in new and exciting activities geared according to their current level of understanding. Students also
have additional bilingual SLSO support in their mainstream classes.
Mrs Newton

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Marshmallow Challenge!

The Marshmallow Challenge is a remarkably fun and instructive design exercise that encourages teams to experience simple but profound lessons in collaboration, innovation and creativity. The task is simple: in eighteen minutes, teams must build the tallest free-standing structure out of 20 sticks of spaghetti, one metre of tape, one metre of string, and one marshmallow. The marshmallow needs to be on top. Marshmallow Challenge.Com

Here is the original TED Talk video from Tom Wujec-creator of the Marshmallow Challenge

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UNICEF School Project

Students can be leaders in virtual worlds, gathering knowledge and solving authentic problems. Virtual worlds allow students to engage with the curriculum content, participate in knowledge development, and achieve learning outcomes that map to real world outcomes. More importantly, students experience how problems arise and how the solution to one problem can create other problems. Students in a virtual environment have more opportunities for authentic learning than students in a traditional classroom” Virtual Worlds by Judy O’Connell and Dean Groom

The UNICEF schools project has come to a close with all the students wanting it to continue! We just do not have enough weeks in a year. This has been a fantastic experience not only for the students but also for the teachers involved. From the beginning with the introduction of a real world issue: design and build a school for a community in Afghanistan, to an architect coming in to show us how to plan and draw to scale, meeting the criteria from the UNICEF Child-Friendly School Manual, talking to Mia Cox from UNICEF Australia via Skype and the students finally gaining permission to construct their school models using Sim-on-a-Stick or MinecraftEdu. All the students involved come from very different backgrounds with very limited English speaking skills but they have been able to engage in a rich project that challenged and allowed them to achieve very successful outcomes. The great thing with this type of technology is that it differentiates accordingly and this allows all students who use it the ability to really shine.

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