Filter Content
Term 4
Tuesday 8th October to Friday 6th December (Half day)
Pupil Free Day: Friday 8th November
October | |
Monday 14th - Friday 18th | C9 Camp - Margaret River |
Friday 18th | Maths (& Muffins!) Club @8am |
Tuesday 22nd | C8 Parent Evening @6.30pm |
Thursday 24th | C7 Parent Evening @6.30pm |
Friday 25th | C8 Phys Ed - Basketball |
Friday 25th | Maths (& Muffins!) Club @8am |
Monday 28th | C7 Phys Ed - Swimming |
Tuesday 29th | C9 Parent Evening @6.30pm |
Thursday 31st | School Tour @9am |
November | |
Friday 1st | Music Night @6.30pm |
Friday 1st | Maths (& Muffins!) Club @8am |
Friday 1st | C8 Phys Ed - Basketball |
Monday 4th | C7 Phys Ed - Swimming |
Friday 8th | Pupil Free Day |
Monday 11th | C7 Sailing Excursion |
Friday 15th | Maths (& Muffins!) Club @8am |
Friday 15th | C9 Phys Ed - Swimming |
Sunday 17th - Friday 22nd | C7 Camp - Albany |
Friday 22nd | Maths (& Muffins!) Club @8am |
Friday 22nd | School Tour @9am |
Friday 29th | Maths (& Muffins!) Club @8am |
Friday 29th | C8 Phys Ed - Basketball |
Friday 29th | C9 Phys Ed - Swimming |
December | |
Thursday 5th | Adventure World Water Fun Day |
Friday 6th | Maths (& Muffins!) Club @8am |
Friday 6th | Early Close, Half Day |
The Value of Art
Children’s development naturally grows through different stages. New abilities and interests seemingly emerge from nowhere. Where do they come from? How do they suddenly appear? Through the attentive study of children over many years we can know their path of development; we can predict what new possibilities are available to them. And from this deep understanding, hard-won from our conscientious observations and study over many years, as well as the incredibly profound insights of Rudolf Steiner, we’re enabled to provide the right environment and the most helpful experiences to support them to develop as well as possible.
One of the many gifts that Rudolf Steiner’s insights have given us is the acknowledgement of the inner life we all experience and which is also in transformation. Naturally, children’s inner life goes through a particular path of growth; a trajectory that is common to us all. Just as a flowering plant develops from seed to seedling to budding, blossoming and fruiting, our life path goes through such sequential stages. We can see from our study of children (and indeed adults) that their outer life is a reflection, an expression of their inner consciousness, their soul life. And we can “see” their consciousness changing over time. With a developing inner life new abilities and interests appear.
Insight into our soul lives reveals three forces in development: thinking, feeling and willing. Our inner (soul) life is always involved in one or more of these three activities. Developmental study shows us that in children, the focus of growth of these soul forces occurs at different times. In the kindergarten years, willing is the focus. The children learn to move and through movement and imaginative play, develop their organs through a period of tremendous bodily growth. In the Primary School, added to movement, is the focus on imagination and the development of the realm of feeling. In High School the children are now ready for making judgements and abstract thinking. In addition to willing and feeling, it is the time to explore the realm of thought.
It is in the realm of feeling that the Arts play such an important role. While it is a crucial part of development in Primary School its value is immense for the rest of our lives. Art calls for skill, form and style. Its practice educates right feeling and right judgement. Apart from the sense of beauty and aesthetics which immediately effect and develop our feelings, exploration of the Arts enables us to develop deeper insights into the world around us.
To educate through art is to awaken humanity to our nobler attributes, to quicken our faculties for a higher perception of the world we live in, so that we may come to know ourselves as the beings who give meaning to creation.
Francis Edmunds, founder of Emerson College, U.K.
It is through Art that we’re able to discern the wholeness of things. A Greek temple or a Gothic cathedral is more than a pile of masonry organised for a specific purpose. A piece of music is more than a collection of notes. Indeed, a seed is far more than just what we see with our senses. It contains within it the future plant. The practice of Art enables us to be aware much more than what we are given with our senses. Through Art we can develop new ways of perceiving ourselves and the world. Practice of the Arts leads humans to self-discovery – make us something more than we were.
In Steiner Schools we see the Arts as an essential part of being human. All the Arts are cultivated. All the students become artists, sculptors, musicians, woodworkers, textile workers, craftspeople and aesthetically developed individuals whose feeling lives are powerfully enriched with carefully chosen experiences through their schooling. And none of this development diminishes the value of the Sciences. In fact, their scientific studies are deepened and enriched by their artistic and creative insights.
Bruce is on planned leave and back in at school from 11th November.
With gratitude
Mark Phillips
Acting School Administrator
Bright the sun's gold rays are streaming;
Streaming fills my soul with light.
Light becomes a sword of radiance,
Radiance, flashing in dark night.
Night is banished. See Love's sun-rise,
Love's Sun rising, warm and bright.
by Michael Hedley Burton / verse no. 48
Class 9 - The Mathematics of Chance and Choice
Dice rolls, hope ignites,
Shadows of loss loom closer,
House wins, hearts grow cold.
In the Choice and Chance Main Lesson with Class 9, we are having a blast exploring and practising how to describe and predict different events and outcomes. We are learning about the chances of things happening and are discovering great ways to organise information. We are finding out about the puzzles of permutations and combinations, diving into the fascinating patterns in Pascal’s Triangle and are seeing how we could use those patterns in real life. At the end of this Choice and Chance Main Lesson, we will have collected, presented, and interpreted probability data to make sense of different situations.




You may want to ask your Class 9 student:
- How likely are you to flip 8 heads in a row?
- What is the Gambler’s Fallacy?
- Out of 8 students how many ways can you award first, second or third?
- How many outfits can you make out of 3 sets of footwear, 2 pairs of pants and 5 pairs of tops?




Choice and Chance Main Lesson is an exciting journey into the world of probability and statistics!
Bill Bennett
Mathematics & Science Teacher
In Class 7, we have just finished a unit on one and two-point perspective. Students explored how the early Renaissance introduced perspective as a way to accurately represent space and depth in art. They applied this knowledge in drawing one-point perspective cityscapes, and creating two-point perspective interior drawings of their own bedrooms. Our next focus will be expressing nature through clay tiles, where students will create their own bas-relief designs inspired by the natural world.
In Class 8, students have completed a fascinating unit on human anatomy, where they honed their skills in drawing detailed and realistic skulls and full skeletons. This term, we will move on to working with clay by exploring cultural expressions of coil pots. Students will learn about the significance of these vessels in various cultures and create their own clay pots using different coiling techniques.
In Class 9, students have been deeply engaged in sculpting clay heads, which has been a challenging project that they are now close to completing. Following this, we will dive into exploring our connection with nature, by focusing on how to interpret and represent these ideas visually in a collaborative mural project. This will allow students to creatively express their personal and collective experiences with the natural world.




Diana Harnett
Art Teacher
Class 10 - 12 (Bibra Lake Campus)
Class 11/12 Physics Elective Projects
During the first three terms of this year, the Class 11 and 12 Physics elective students have engaged in small group and independent projects. The aim of the Physics Project is to give students a chance to explore an individual interest on a deeper level, through applying learned knowledge and skills, in physics to a real-world endeavour. This process normally culminates with a presentation of their work at Open Day.




Students were given the briefing to use as many reused, recycled, and repurposed materials as possible. Students were encouraged to explore topics that resonated with their own interests but were given the freedom to explore their ideas. With ideas in hand, students had to plan and budget for this project, including completing a thorough risk assessment. Early Term Two, students began sourcing and collecting their materials, then adjusted once they realised, they didn’t have all the parts and/or skills they needed to complete the project. This year, with the addition of the 3D printer to the science department, students also had the option of designing custom parts for the projects.




Across the whole process, this project has required problem solving skills, resourcefulness, resilience, and skill and knowledge acquisition – some required some very strict safety protocols. It was unfortunate that students were not able to present their projects at Open Day. As with each year, this year had a wide range of ideas: an ionic thruster, a chemical rocket, an open-air nitrogen laser, and an exploration of acoustic. The photos show some of the triumph (and a failure) from their work this year.




Brett Kranz-Little
Physics Teacher
In collaboration with Red Tails Coffee Shack, we are working to support our busy families by providing a wholesome school lunch service to PSC families on Wednesdays and Fridays from week 2.
All orders will need to be placed through the below site preferably the night before or by 8am on lunch order days.
Please take time to peruse the site below: Canteen-Parkerville Steiner College (square.site)
Password: steiner
Please make sure you put your childs name, class and order day/date in the 'Add a note for the seller' section of the website at the checkout.
We are very excited to be providing this service to our families.
A big thank you to Scarlett and the Class 9 students and families who donated to the CARAD Pantry.
CARAD is a not-for-profit organisation enabling refugees and people seeking asylum to live with dignity. They provide essential needs, advocacy and welfare support services to people seeking humanitarian protection in Western Australia.
All presentations will be in Williams Hall
(No late entry into sessions)
Monday 21 October 2024
5.15pm Welcome, Acknowledgement to Country and Introduction to program
5.30pm Monet Larson: Are humans still evolving?
6.10pm Issa Beck: How do our misconceptions about daydreaming affect our
understanding of its potential benefits?
6.50pm Break for tea and coffee (hot food available for purchase)
7.30pm Aleksandr van der Merwe: Are we born to run?
8.10pm Soraia Aisenson-Humphries: Why, in the 21st century, is it so difficult to protect human
rights?
Tuesday 22 October 2024
11.30am Jemima Bot: How does Ultra Processed Food impact the human body, the
environment, and society?
12.10pm Lasair Reynolds: What is Synaesthesia and how does it impact those living with this
condition?
12.50pm Lunch
1.40pm Dash Dosualdo: Why do we romanticise mental illness/sadness in art, film, and social media and what are the impacts of this?
5.20pm Evening session – Doors open
5.30pm Matilda McCraies: What recruitment methods are used by mainstream religions, highcontrol, religions, and cults, and what are their psychological impacts on members/believers?
6.10pm Taban Woodley-Smith: How has Brazil pursued a multipolar world order, and in what ways has this foreign policy objective been shaped by its relationship with the United States?
6.50pm Break for tea and coffee (hot food available for purchase)
7.30pm Kaan Kombak: What influences motivation, and can motivation levels be changed?
Wednesday 23 October 2024
11.30am Celeste Bastian: How can Architectural Psychology benefit schools, hospitals and prisons?
12.10pm Amber Hinsman: How does music therapy impact the development of a premature infant in the NICU?
12.50pm Lunch
1.40pm Lloyd Hinsman: How do the different types of stage design in theatre impact the audience?
2.20pm Kaliyah Lochrie: What is required to sustainably renovate or build a tiny house within an affordable budget?
5.20pm Evening session – Doors open
5.30pm Abril Ayora Molano: How does embracing an optimistic attitude lead to an improvement in our quality of life?
6.10pm Elka Dyson: What is the influence of media on individuals’ conceptions of romantic love?
6.50pm Break for tea and coffee (hot food available for purchase)
7.30pm Oliver Smith Tan: How does Nietzsche explore the concepts of will, Free Will and freedom in relation to Nihilism?
Thursday 24 October 2024
10.50am Jade Janneson-Bense: How does cognitive dissonance impact the way we consume fast fashion and animal products?
11.30am Améry Matthys: How can we improve the Western traditional schooling system to meet the diverse needs of current learners: considering levels of flexibility across all aspects of education, individualised learning, and preparing individuals for the real world?
12.10pm Lunch
12.55pm Amelia Jordan: What is the history of the evolution of rally cars, and what is required to ensure the long-term continuation and relevance of the sport?
1.35pm Ignacio Espinosa: Is it possible to achieve financial freedom?
5.20pm Evening session – Doors open
5.30pm Angelina Aung Than: How do languages shape thought, and how can this bring people together?
6.10pm Georgia Vassila: What are the limitations within the Australian legal process in relation to domestic violence, and how do they influence court proceedings and the aggrieved?
6.50pm Break for tea and coffee (hot food available for purchase)
7.30pm Etienne Dawson: How does the modern launch industry negatively impact our environment, and what current or developing means of pollution mitigation are there?
Friday 25 October 2024
11.30am Alex Toogood: What is the ADHD diagnosis path/ experience for females and what are the limitations that hinder a correct/ timely diagnosis?
11.30am Miela Grubinic: What literary pieces have influenced history, and do they still have the same literary influence today?
12.50pm Lunch
1.40pm Kiara Holland: How do our childhood experiences affect our adult relationships?
5.20pm Evening session – Doors open
5.30pm Fraya Ritchie: What is memory and is it reliable?
6.10pm Grace Portwood: How are humanitarian narratives employed and to what extent do they influence perceptions of conflict?
6.50pm Break for tea and coffee (hot food available for purchase)
7.30pm Juniper Boultbee: How has our understanding of gender evolved, and is it still relevant today?
ROAR Afterschool Program
Resiliance, Optimism, Altruism, Respect
“The after-school version of the ROAR Program commenced in October 2020 as an elite program for 12 specially selected athletes. We now have over 100 young people enrolled in after-school programs which have become less about elitism and more about mindset-focused fitness adventures”
If you would like more information on the ROAR Afterschool Program including any associated costs, please follow the link below:
https://www.roar.org.au/contact-us
Park Run:
https://www.parkrun.com.au/register/
Parkrun is a free, community event where you can walk, jog, run, volunteer, or spectate. Parkrun is 5km and takes place every Saturday morning. Parkrun is positive, welcoming, and inclusive, there is no time limit, and no one finishes last. Everyone is welcome to come along.
Our local Parkrun:
- Mount Helena
- 8am Saturday Mornings