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Facts and Figures
At the AGM last week, there were a few facts and figures presented.
Our high school was fully established by 2011 but we can see that full time student numbers have steadily grown over the past 10 years. Currently we have waitlists for most classes.
Table 1: K4 - Class 12 Student numbers.
The debt per student due to bank and other loans of $1.9 million has risen due to the building works that allowed us to expand onto 2 campuses.
Table 2: Debt per student - The debt per student remains below the Independent Schools’ benchmark.
The Bibra Lake campus is close to maximum student numbers and the strategic vision will now start to concentrate on consolidating Bibra Lake campus and looking at ways to ensure we continue to provide excellent facilities for existing students.
The Parkerville Steiner College campus will dramatically grow over the next six years with enrolments growing from just under 40 in 2023 to more than 160 by the end of the decade. This approach will ensure we can properly cater for our three feeder primary schools: Silver Tree, West Coast and Perth Waldorf schools.
Naomi Halbert fare thee well
Naomi and her family were actively engaged with the Silver Tree Steiner School before moving down to Perth Waldorf School more than 10 years ago. Her two daughters have since graduated from high school and are making their way in the world. Naomi however has been a constant and very steadfast presence at our school for the last decade, working as an assistant teacher in the classroom with a huge range of children and teachers but also as a craft class assistant, working closely with Elena.
Naomi has decided it is time for her to explore new horizons and take on new challenges. She is leaving our school at the end of term. She will be very much missed by our staff and the children. We are ever so grateful that she gave us so many years of goodness, love and hard, hard work! She has been a model assistant teacher for the many who have followed her. For that quiet leadership and wisdom we thank her very much.
Read on!
This week’s Pabulum is jam packed with news of the upcoming winter festivals and what’s happening in classes. Enjoy the articles and thank you always for the wonderful community we are a part of.
With Gratitude
Bruce Lee
School Administrator
From the deepest part of my heart, I hear
The voice that must be heard,
The mighty-sounding Word:
"Let the light within you, bright and clear,
In thoughts and actions, shine.
Then will you truly be a child of mine".
by Michael Hedley Burton / verse no. 36
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Parkerville Campus (Class 7-8)
Music - Class Seven
This semester in Music, Class 7 students established their first music bands. Term 1 saw the students creating smaller band groups and recreating a performance of Bruno Mars’ ‘Count on Me’. At the beginning of the process the students were encouraged to use voice and ukulele, however, by the end of the term the performances ranged from ukulele and voice to piano, guitar and percussion. In Music lessons the students began to explore the start of music notation, looking at how and why music began to be written down during the Medieval era. This led to the class having some fun trying to decipher centuries-old music, where they saw just how tricky it is for music to endure the ages without notation.
In Term 2 the students transferred their knowledge of Medieval music to their understanding of instruments and the influence of technology in developing them. This term’s band performance piece is ’Round and Round’ for which the students were given the opportunity to decide their own level of difficulty for the performance. It is heartening to hear that all groups have chosen to extend themselves and are working towards the highest level of difficulty.
The onset of their Music studies at Parkerville Steiner College also saw students begin an exciting progression from classical to contemporary music instrument lessons, which the children have taken to with enthusiasm.
Kirsten Greenshaw
Music Teacher
Platonic Solids - Class Eight
Class 8 has just finished their Geometry Main Lesson of Platonic Solids, scrambling to finish their work to the exacting standards that Plato would expect. To work out of geometric relationships without relying upon measurement is to immerse oneself into the true nature of the forms according to Plato. It is an ancient way that retains the soul and spirit of our relationship with the world around us.
Instead of giving the students a photocopy of a net of one of the five solids, to simply cut out and assemble, the students had to grapple with experimenting, designing and creating their own net from scratch. In this process, the form comes alive from within their own beings. They learn to have confidence in their own capacity to think and create.
The class started with simple 2D forms within a circle and finished with 3D complex interrelated duals. Along the way, they designed their own tessellation posters, inspired by M.C. Escher. The students also brought their will into making and transforming clay models into their related dual shapes. They also did this with their own bodies in activities and games.
The hands-on focus of this Main Lesson met the class well. They mostly strived to do their best and often challenged one another in this regard. Yet it was their responsiveness to historical stories and the natural properties of the solids that impressed me the most.
It was a privilege to bring this to questioning and open minds.
John Bluntschli
Geometry Teacher PWS













Bibra Lake Campus (Class 9-12)
Class 9 Geography Main Lesson ‘Forces that shape the Earth’
At the beginning of the Main Lesson ‘Forces that shape the Earth’ the class 9B students discussed how we know about the interior of our planet even though the deepest human drilled hole is ‘only’ 12.3 km deep. Seismology (the study of earthquakes) gives us the answer – in 1936 the Danish seismologist and geophysicist Inge Lehmann discovered that the Earth has a solid inner core inside a molten outer core. She ascertained this by studying the paths of earthquake waves: the faster P waves can travel through the solid inner core, whereas the slower S waves get deflected at the molten outer core (see diagram).




In our practical activity students tried to simulate the two different earthquake waves with the help of a slinky.
The group was very successful in simulating the two different waves and so developed a deeper understanding of the Earth’s interior.
Jo Doernberg
Humanities & German teacher








Class 10 Chemistry Main Lesson
The students of Class 10 have embarked on an exploration of salts, delving into their significance throughout human civilization, their impact on geology, the environment, and vital biological processes such as osmosis. We have thoroughly examined the properties of salts and investigated related phenomena like solutions, freezing point depression, and crystallization. Furthermore, our study has encompassed acids and bases, unravelling how salts serve as both the origin and outcome that reconcile these opposing elements. By observing the interplay of polarity, and the emergence of new outcomes, as well as the vibrant variations within the chemistry of salts, we aim to foster thinking that unconsciously forges connections with the world.
Olivia Burgio
High School Chemistry and Mathematics Teacher











Class 11/12 Textiles
In Class 11 & 12 Textiles students direct their own projects and are prodded to explore different influences AND learn new skills or extend their existing skills. Here are some of this semester's achievements.
Sharon Clifford
High School Craft & Textiles Teacher








Class 12 Poetry
Class 12 Projects
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Adeline Crowther
My childhood home I see again,
And sadden with the view;
And still, as memory crowds my brain,
There's pleasure in it too.
-Abraham Lincoln
As the beginning of year 12 approached I started to try to come up with an idea for my project topic. I couldn’t believe how quickly the years had come and gone, and now I was about to begin my final year of school. Looking back at my school journey and revisiting my old primary school gave me a sense of nostalgia as I reminisced about that part of my childhood. After changing ideas and creating many mind-maps (with various words likes “cats?”, “language?”, and “Baking?” as ideas) I finally began to form an idea. It was the feeling of bittersweet affection for the past that inspired my final topic question:
Nostalgia is a feeling that is both universal and important to humans. How does this deep reminiscing of the past impact our wellbeing?
Nostalgia was something I had heard of and knew the feeling, but I hadn’t ever thought twice about. When I began to research this topic, I was fascinated to learn more about it . Nostalgia is a deep longing and reminiscence of the past. The word “nostalgia” is derived from the Greek word “nostos”, which means “homecoming”, and the word “algos”, which translates to “pain” or “longing”. As I researched more, I was interested in the history of nostalgia, and the way the understanding of it has developed into the nostalgia we know today. Our view of nostalgia has changed and evolved over the past few centuries, with the term “nostalgia” first being used in the late 17th Century. Scholars speculated various ideas about nostalgia, many doctors thought nostalgia might be caused by the inability to move on from childhood and a dissatisfaction with the present. By the mid-20th Century, nostalgia was seen as a mental illness, rather than a neurological disease. The understanding of the feeling itself evolved into nostalgia being a bittersweet emotion, not just a melancholic one. The emotion could be pleasurable and created a positive feeling when reminiscing fondly on the past. The understanding of nostalgia continued to evolve from that over many years, and now nostalgia is considered a general longing or reminiscence of the past, as opposed to a homesickness induced mental illness. I was surprised at the evolution of nostalgia, and how powerful the effects of nostalgia could be.
Nostalgia can be triggered by many different things, often sensory cues like smells or sound. I myself feel nostalgic when I smell one of my mum’s perfumes that she used to wear when going out, and when I hear a song that used to play on the radio when I was in primary school. Whenever I get a whiff of the perfume or hear that particular song, I am taken back to those days and am flooded with a sense of nostalgia.
As nostalgia is connected to memory, I discovered that nostalgia can be used as an aid for people with dementia. Dementia is a chronic or progressive syndrome that is characterised by the decline in cognitive functions such as language and memory. Nostalgia has been shown to be an effective resource to aid in cognitive decline, and to bring meaning and optimism into their lives.
I found that nostalgia can have a really positive impact on people, bringing a sense of meaning, optimism, and social connection into people’s lives. It can promote a sense of self-continuity, which is the feeling of connection that ties our past self to our current self.
The Class 12 project has been quite an enjoyable process for me so far. It has taken a while for me to get used to researching properly, as well as learning how to reference things in my essay. This experience has made me learn lots of new things, not only about my topic but about essay writing, planning, and time management. It has been interesting to research and learn about an entirely new topic, one which I barely knew of before. I shall leave you with a poem that I felt reflected the feeling of nostalgia written by Philip Vincent Sanders.
Last night, your long-lost memory came
Back to me as though
Spring stealthily should come to a
Forsaken wilderness
A gentle breeze it’s fragrance over burning
Deserts blow
Or, all at once be soothed somehow the
Sick soul’ distress.
-Philip Vincent Sanders
Lucia Papiccio
Hi, my name is Lucia, and for my Class 12 project, I want to know why sensory play is so important for a growing child’s development. My focus within this topic is specifically on children aged from newborn up to five years old.
I remember scrolling on a social media app one day and coming across this video of a mother putting her baby (who I think was around six months) in a jolly jumper. Underneath the baby’s feet, the mother had put water in a wide tray with stones so that the baby could put her feet in and feel around. The first thing I thought was, what an interesting thing to do. This sparked my interest, and once I started looking, I found more videos that showed similar play activities to do that would be fun for the baby. Aside from being fun, I also learned that play like this was very important for developing many other fundamental skills in young children such as cognitive, fine motor and gross motor skills. Once I learned about the value of this type of play, I came across the foundations of sensory play, and I realised that this would be a topic I’d like to do for my project this year.
One thing I was surprised about when researching the senses is that babies see all in black and white for the first three months of their life. It is important to know because you can buy baby toys that are black and white which send stronger signals to the brain and build their visual development. This is interesting because when I look around at the toys which are in shops for babies, many of them are brightly coloured.
For my practical, I am going to playgroup at PWS, to share a story I'm creating by including sensory play. I’m thinking of using some of the natural things that are found in the playgroup garden to tell the story. Maybe something like a gumnut, where a little fairy lives. That’s where the story is developing at the moment.
I am also planning on spending some time in Kindy 4 and Playgroup to see how early childhood in our school incorporates sensory play for the kindy kids.
One of the most difficult parts so far has been the research, but it has helped me get a better understanding of my topic, especially in terms of child development in children aged 0-5. This information is also helping me think about what I might like to pursue after PWS and the more I learn, the more interested I am in working with kids in the future.
Poppy Ritchie
“I looked around for the new age and saw the old faces once more.” – Heinz Kamnitzer.
Reading has always been an interest of mine since I was first able to read and even before. I can remember at the age of four or five, picking up the books lying around the house and pretending to read them. It was a favoured pastime of mine. When it came time to choose a project topic, I was entirely unsure of what I wanted to do until I kept coming across the term ‘modern classic’. This term was intriguing to me as it seemed to be an oxymoron. From this curiosity, the idea that would become my project was formed.
“Does such a thing as a contemporary classic novel exist?”.
By this I mean, can a contemporary book hold the same esteem as a socially agreed upon classic? I began to do some rudimentary research and found that there was a lot of underground talk about ‘modern classics’ but not so much in the academic sphere. This was a red flag I should have picked up on but decided to persevere.
What surprised me most about the research aspect of this project was the fact that there was little or no understanding of how a book becomes a classic or a way in which to predict this. With this knowledge on board, I decided to create a series of criteria based upon books that have extensive reputations as classics and use that to see if a book that has not claimed this status yet can fit into these criteria. I acknowledge that this angle is perhaps somewhat surgical and direct and that is contradictory to the artform I am attempting to understand, but that seemed the only way to achieve my desired outcome. The main ideas I decided that could lead to a book becoming a classic were:
1) The book must contain archetypal themes, the kinds that we can find in any piece of literature.
2) The book is deemed good enough to be taught in schools.
3) The book has won a prize, therefore has been elected by a panel of experts.
4) An element of difference must be present, for if it weren’t, we would be reading the same stories over and over again.
What I found throughout the application of this rubric was that it all boiled down to one idea, that being the human condition. This seems to be the main link between all great works of literature; how a book is relatable to the reader. I have found that this idea is also very heavily linked to the definition of literature, that being any piece of writing that a person chooses to place their high regard.
This process so far has been a somewhat frustrating and challenging one but that is not to say that it does not hold reward for its participants also. I have not fully completed any aspect of the project, yet I am truly surprised that I have been able to achieve what I have. Back in year 8 when this project seemed to be a whole lifetime away, I never would have thought myself capable of writing a four-thousand-word essay or remaining interested in one topic for so long.
The aspect of the project for which I hold the most concern is the practical. Originally, I was feeling rather helpless as I believed I had chosen a topic which held no practical potential. This was until one sunny day my wonderful supervisor stopped me on the veranda to tell me that she had thought of the perfect practical for me to do. The idea was to create reviews of classic books that children may read. Whether these reviews were for the children themselves or their parents was debated, and I decided to do both. The idea is to have classic literature integrated into contemporary learning. Or to inspire something to that effect. From some conversations I’ve had with a relative who works as a teaching assistant and from my own experience growing up as an avid reader, I know that there comes a time in a young person’s life where they feel there are no more good books out there, that they’ve read them all and I hope that my practical will aid someone who feels this way. Studies have shown that reading is an important, some would say vital, participant in empathetic development in people of all ages. Bearing this in mind I hope that the underlying message of my entire years work will be shown in my practical, that being: read good literature. Or perhaps Sylvia Plath said it better, “Read a thousand books and your word will flow like a river”.
Payments of School Fees in 2023
Parents who would like to claim the hours they have participation in the life of the School during Semester 1, are reminded to submit a Family Participation Scheme form by Friday 21st June. A $100 charge is made to the family account if a form is not submitted by the due date.
There have been nine wonderful Class Camps during Terms 1 and 2. The cost of these Class Camps will be charged when we issue Term 3 Invoices. Please note, all exceptions for student's non attendance should have been arranged with the class teacher or class Coordinator prior to the camp and usually require a valid Medical certificate.
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