Creative Schools 2025

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Welcome to Creative Schools 2025! This is a space for the Creative Practitioners and FORM staff to communicate and share key information and updates.


2025 Participating Schools
We are delighted to confirm that the following schools have been selected for the 2025 Creative Schools program. There is a smaller number of schools in the program (13 in 2025 compared to 19 in 2024):
  • Belmont City College
  • Clarkson Primary School
  • Curtin Primary School
  • Joseph Banks Secondary College
  • Kalamunda Senior High School
  • Nannup Senior High School
  • Neerigan Brook Primary School
  • Piara Waters Senior High School
  • Rosalie Primary School
  • Rostrata Primary School
  • Subiaco Primary School
  • Somerly Primary School
  • Walliston Primary School

Program Overview

The Creative Schools program provides funding for each school to work with two Creative Practitioners, who will collaborate with two classroom teachers and their students over 16 weeks (Terms 2 & 3).

Each teacher and Creative Practitioner will co-design and co-deliver a creative learning project aligned with a curriculum area of the teacher’s choice (e.g., Mathematics, HASS, Science), using an engaging, student-led, and creative approach.


Key Program Details

🔹 Classroom delivery:

  • Term 2: 8 sessions (90 minutes each)
  • Term 3: 8 sessions (90 minutes each)
  • The final session will be allocated to planning the class presentation (no student activity).
  • A showcase event will be held in the last two weeks of Term 3 to highlight the Creative Schools learning journey (details to follow).

🔹 Structure of each 90-minute session:

  • 15-minute warm-up
  • 60-minute main activity (aligned with curriculum goals)
  • 15-minute reflection on learning

🔹 Session days/times:

  • To be determined in collaboration with the teacher and Creative Practitioner.

Welcome to Creative Schools 2025! This is a space for the Creative Practitioners and FORM staff to communicate and share key information and updates.


2025 Participating Schools
We are delighted to confirm that the following schools have been selected for the 2025 Creative Schools program. There is a smaller number of schools in the program (13 in 2025 compared to 19 in 2024):
  • Belmont City College
  • Clarkson Primary School
  • Curtin Primary School
  • Joseph Banks Secondary College
  • Kalamunda Senior High School
  • Nannup Senior High School
  • Neerigan Brook Primary School
  • Piara Waters Senior High School
  • Rosalie Primary School
  • Rostrata Primary School
  • Subiaco Primary School
  • Somerly Primary School
  • Walliston Primary School

Program Overview

The Creative Schools program provides funding for each school to work with two Creative Practitioners, who will collaborate with two classroom teachers and their students over 16 weeks (Terms 2 & 3).

Each teacher and Creative Practitioner will co-design and co-deliver a creative learning project aligned with a curriculum area of the teacher’s choice (e.g., Mathematics, HASS, Science), using an engaging, student-led, and creative approach.


Key Program Details

🔹 Classroom delivery:

  • Term 2: 8 sessions (90 minutes each)
  • Term 3: 8 sessions (90 minutes each)
  • The final session will be allocated to planning the class presentation (no student activity).
  • A showcase event will be held in the last two weeks of Term 3 to highlight the Creative Schools learning journey (details to follow).

🔹 Structure of each 90-minute session:

  • 15-minute warm-up
  • 60-minute main activity (aligned with curriculum goals)
  • 15-minute reflection on learning

🔹 Session days/times:

  • To be determined in collaboration with the teacher and Creative Practitioner.
Discussions: All (52) Open (52)
  • Session 3 - Somerly Primary School Year 3 - Health and Technologies

    by Jodie Davidson, about 1 month ago
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    Warm Up 

    Find your group (outside if possible - 5 minutes)

    1. Your challenge is to line up in order of height

    2. An extra challenge is that you have to pretend that your voice was stolen by a word thief on your way to school

    3. The tallest person needs to be near the steps stretching down to the smallest closer to the brick classrooms

    4. How are you going to communicate?

    Main Activity 

    You will each be given a number. Remember your number (5 minutes)

    1. Head count 1 - 5 so that there are 5 groups in total

    2. I am going to set a timer to see how quickly you are able to do this

    3. The voice thief still has your voice so you need to find another way to communicate to find your group


    What do Creative Habits Look Like? (10 minutes)

    1. Quick recall of Creative Habits (keep the poster nearby)

    2. Because you don’t have your voice yet, you will be given a word. Your challenge is to work together to find an action to help us recognise the word. What would it look like?

    (Teacher and EA to decide on best action for each word. Preferable one from each group so that we can use these repeatedly in our sessions

    1. Imaginative, Persistent, Collaborative, Disciplined, Inquisitive (questioning)

    2. The spell to unlock your voice and get it back from Voice Thief, the adults will choose which group did the best modelling of each Creative Habit. Remember your action because we will need you to show us again back in the classroom


    Back in the classroom (10 minutes)

    1. You will each be given a piece of paper

    2. Fold the paper in half and half again to make 4 rectangles

    3. Each group is going to come up to the front to model their action

    4. Just like we did in our last session, we are going to be doing drawings of eachother. Your challenge is to, without lifting up your marker, how would you draw a single line drawing of one of the actors at the front to show the action they are making with their body.


    Imaginative Creatures (15-20 minutes)

    1. You will be given another piece of paper. Fold it in half and then fold each part backwards so it looks like a zigzag (Creative to demonstrate so everyone can do it together)

    2. Put your name on the back and numbers 1 - 4 in the corner of each section (show example) and keep it folded

    3. Put your hand up if you are able to picture things in your head. Put your hand up if you don’t see pictures in your head. (This is only for my reference)

    4. Imagine a type of garden creature and what this might look like.

    5. On the bottom rectangle draw your creature’s feet and legs. How many, do they have feet, what shape are they and are there any special features? You have 90 seconds.

    6. Turn your paper over so that the feet you have drawn are on the bottom (section 4) and can’t be seen. Give it to someone who has the same colour eyes as you but don’t look at it.

    7. On the top rectangle that is facing you (section 1), draw your creature’s head and neck. Is it long, short, how many eyes does it have, does it have antennae, spots etc? You have 90 seconds.

    8. Open your paper and stretch any lines from the neck and the legs so that they just peek over onto the blank rectangles.

    9. Fold your paper so that the two blank rectangles are on the outside and the drawing part can’t be seen. Find someone who has the same size hand as you and swap with them. It must be a different person from the first swap. Don’t look

    10. On the blank rectangle (section 3), draw the bottom half of your creature’s body. You have 90 seconds.

    11. Turn the page over so that only section 4 can be seen and give this to someone who has one of the same letters in their name as you.

    12. Finally, draw the top half of your creature’s body. Does it have arms, stripes, spots, bumps, hair or anything else? You have 90 seconds.

    13. Open your paper and turn it over to see the name on the back. Can you find its owner?

    Reflection with the students 

    Group Discussion - (20 minutes)

    Decide if we want new groups or the same Creative Habit groups. Maybe groups of 3?) 

    1. What would this creature be called?

    2. If you were to become this creature, what would your Creative Habit superpower be and why? (This is the habit you think you are the best at)

    3. As your creature, what would your Creative Habit weak spot be and why? (Choose the one that you think you would find the hardest and need to get better at) 


    If there is extra time, students can choose to colour their creature and add any additional features. 

    After the session:

    Planning with the Teacher(refer back to your original Term Plan document, discuss successes, explore challenges and make changes.)

    Successes

    • They wanted to do the drawing activity from last week again

    • One of the students who was disengaged at the beginning of the session, joined in as we progressed through the activities

    • Self regulation was positive particularly with a student who would usually become frustrated with the collaborative activity, creating creatures. 

    • Demonstrated great persistence in dealing with the uncertainty of a process that was completely unfamiliar, allowing someone else to add to their drawing and then considering what they could do with it when it didn’t look how they thought it would. 

    • Demonstrating discipline by considering how they could improve their creatures and what they would like to do with them next week. 

    ‘I’ve never seen them keep trying like that before’...Teacher

    • Reading the book during crunch and sip and providing feedback about what they thought was happening and meanings behind the images. 

    ‘Just think happy again’... student

    Challenges

    • Everything took a lot longer than what we had anticipated, from getting into a line, measuring hands, changing tables and folding paper.

    • Remembering the different poses to match the creative habits was initially difficult. Taking a photo of some of the students in their pose and getting them to draw them will hopefully make them more familiar for all of us. 

    • Some of the poses they chose are very similar to each other. 

    • Because the session was so long, we didn’t get the time we wanted for our reflection activity however we were able to incorporate ongoing reflection throughout the session with each activity


    Working with students(what is emerging, what is engaging them/not, what’s making them curious.)

    Participation by all students was positive today, even those who came in at different times were able to find their place in the session. They were always curious about what we were going to be doing next. The different academic levels mean that writing is limited and so we are reliant on discussions and drawing however there are also some stronger and more outspoken students. 

    ‘I like being outside in the fresh air’... Avleen

    ‘The hardest part was making the creatures because some of the people did it wrong’ … Haneet

    ‘My least favourite activity was the creatures because people weren’t following the steps’...Avleen

    We will look at simplifying some of the activities with less instruction. 


  • Session 2 Year 8 Science @ Joseph Banks

    by AmandaKendle, about 1 month ago
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    Session 2 - 7th May 2025 

    Warm Up 

    Quick intro to me and my work, and a very brief overview of the Creative Schools program and the five habits. Students pretty quiet so went very quickly into main warm-up - see screenshot - about chocolate bars - which would be good at science and which would be a good friend - discuss with your table mates (mostly groups of three). Took some coaxing but then had some great answers - Milky Way and Mars got lots of votes as best at science “because - space!”, another said Caramello because koalas are an animal to study in biology etc. 

     

    Main Activity 

    As their current curriculum content is the respiratory system, and Tom had indicated they were weak with spelling their vocabulary, we decided to do a vocab-related respiratory system review as a kind of introduction to Creative Schools. Students had access to a bunch of different craft materials and letters, and we gave them a word list, told them to choose one word and create a creative representation of it using the materials. Assigned students to random groups of 3 or 4 after getting them to line up in birthday order without talking (lots of good creative solutions to that!).


    Some groups took a while to get started but by the end everyone had created something worthy and could give an explanation of it. Many went with the more obvious “diaphragm” (but at least they got to practice spelling it!), but my favourite outcome was the group who picked “alveoli” without really knowing what it meant, they just liked the sound of the word, and were able to link it to “ravioli” and after chatting with Tom understood that they were air sacs which they immediately linked to ravioli (and made some out of paper) - they’ll never forget this term again!

     

    Reflection with the students (one photo)

    Short session (1 hr 5 min total) and students so engaged with hands-on activity that we didn’t spend a lot of time on reflection, but looked again briefly at the wheel and focused on discussing collaboration, as they had all complained when I put them in randomised groups, but most then worked well.


     

    After the session:

     

    Planning with the Teacher
     (refer back to your original Term Plan document, discuss successes, explore challenges and make changes.)

    Happy with how it went, the students were really receptive after initially just being quiet, and we managed to meet our goal of revising a little curriculum content while also getting students used to how a Creative Schools lesson will work.


    Working with students
     (what is emerging, what is engaging them/not, what’s making them curious.)

    Happy to note they all enjoyed the hands-on activities (Tom says anything that looks different to traditional book work is always well received), and after a little prompting every group ended up having some great creative ideas. They were not happy about collaborating outside their friendship groups but generally speaking this went fine, just a couple of students less involved.


    Ideas moving forward
     (ideas for next session, future lessons, discussed with teacher, do you need the teacher to do anything before you return.)

    We plan to start on the rocks/minerals content next session which, because of assessment tasks, will be a bit over a fortnight after our first session. Amanda to consider best way to creatively introduce our FIFO ideas.


    Resources
     (do you need anything, who will source it?)

    Need to consider the tech issues a little with our podcast idea, some students have iPads and some students don’t have device at all.


    How can you share learning outcomes/stories of transformation with the wider school community (e.g. Connect newsletter, staff meeting, school newsletter, school social media platforms)

    Need to email the school coordinator and get started thinking about these possibilities.

  • Session 3 Piara Waters - Andrea and Jasmine Year 7 Maths

    by Andrea Rassell, about 1 month ago
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    Warm Up (one photo)

    Real-World Algebra - We split in two groups outside the classroom, stand in two circles and go around once. First student proposes a real-world situation (e.g., "I'm baking cookies"). The next student says "Yes, and that's like maths because you're measuring ingredients," and so on, with each student connecting everyday cooking activities to mathematical concepts.

    Two circles of students so couldn’t photograph without faces.

     

    Main Activity (one photo)

    World Hunger Comparison Activity

    • Concept: each grain of rice or lentil represents 10 calories of daily food availability

    • Form 7 groups of 4 students each 

    1. Each group receives:

      • Country cards with calorie information and context

      • Rice and lentil supply

      • Paper for visualisation

      • Markers

    2. Groups calculate how many grains of rice represent their assigned country's daily calorie availability 

    3. Students count and separate rice grains to create visual representations 

    4. Groups design a creative way to display their findings on paper… e.g.

      • Draw country outlines and place rice within

      • Create comparative charts

    Each group briefly presents their visualisation 


    Reflection with the students (one photo)

    They identified collaboration, persistence and disciplined this week, we started using the sand jar and students came up to add to the layers. They identified they would like to work with imagination more. 


    After the session:

    Planning with the Teacher
     (refer back to your original Term Plan document, discuss successes, explore challenges and make changes.)

    Discussed possibility of an outing, they have a lot on this term already so will leave that for term 3. Because their class is directly before lunch it means we could go out and come back half way through the lunch period to have 30 min more time which is good.


    Discussed the possibility for creating some meals for the final session and giving them away to a charity, we could also video document this and possibly use the currently empty canteen. (The canteen was a matter of concern in the second session… Piara Waters is a new school still in development so the canteen lease isn’t held by anyone at the moment). Possible site for a performative intervention!


    Working with students
     (what is emerging, what is engaging them/not, what’s making them curious.)

    Don’t get to use manipulatives a lot so that was good to have tangible activity. Splitting up in small groups is an effective behaviour strategy. The 7 groups of 4 meant we could both go around and give lots of attention. But loss of structure to the class continues to be a challenge. 


    Ideas moving forward
     (ideas for next session, future lessons, discussed with teacher, do you need the teacher to do anything before you return.)

    Ensure time for reporting back to the class. 


    When doing reflection at the end of the lesson choose non-volunteers. Do a think, pair, share. Then they can practice with others, safety and accountability. Gets them talking and paying attention. 



    Resources
     (do you need anything, who will source it?)

    Students are bringing recipes we will work with. Felt tips from school and Andrea to bring paper.  

    Food - students & Jasmine offered rice, basics from Tesco


    How can you share learning outcomes/stories of transformation with the wider school community (e.g. Connect newsletter, staff meeting, school newsletter, school social media platforms)

    School facebook 

    Compass (intranet) to raise awareness with families 

    Andrea and Jasmine to share photos with each other via google drive 


     


  • Session 4 - Somerly Primary School Year 3 - Health and Technologies

    by Jodie Davidson, about 1 month ago
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    Warm Up 

    Practicing Creative Habits - body movement, collaboration, discipline, persistence, imagination, inquisitive

    1. You will each be given a bug - beetle, spider, butterfly, ant, centipede, cockroach, moth

    2. Bugs don’t have voices. How can find your bug group?

    3. The timer is on. Last week it took us nearly 5 minutes. How quickly can you form a circle in your bug groups?

    4. Your group challenge is to join hands and see how far you can lean out without falling or moving your feet. How much trust do you have? Which group can do it for the longest amount of time?

    Main Activity (one photo)

    Creating Creatures - imagination, 

    1. Working in pairs, can you gather a small selection of objects (set a limit on the number) in, inside 30 seconds or outside 60 seconds? Set a timer.

    2. Using the seeds, nuts and objects (can be from outside or personal collection), how can your pair create a creature in 30/60 seconds? (grown ups to photograph)

    3. Can you keep it only on the inside of the black board?

    Creature building

    1. Reflect on your creature from last week. In your groups, take turns to discuss what you would like to keep and what would you like to change. 

    2. Do you want to redraw your creature?

    3. Using the different body parts on the desk can you build your creature?

    4. Do you need extra parts? If so, how can you use the foam to create them?

    5. How could you add movable parts? Can you use the split pins to join your body parts together?

    6. Join up with another group. What could you do now with your creatures? 

    7. Groups take it in turns to give their suggestions (write these on the board).

    Reflection with the students (one photo)

    Which creative habit did you use today?

    1. Which coloured paper corresponds to the creative habit you feel you used most today?

    2. Discuss with a partner why you chose that colour

    3. How can you attach this to your flower to begin your Creative Habits flower garden. Will you stick it flat, roll it up, overlap it or do you have another idea?

    4. Attach your paper to your flower, cut it out and have it ready to add to the garden.

    After the session:

    Planning with the Teacher(refer back to your original Term Plan document, discuss successes, explore challenges and make changes.)

    Successes

    • They loved the warm up and were very imaginative in demonstrating which bug group they belonged to including climbing up the trees

    • Great at remembering and implementing the Creative Habit poses when called to attention

    • Linking of ‘Monkey Mind’ by Rebecca Palmer to their Zones of Regulation. They were able to determine which zone the little girl was in

    • Mat work was really positive and taking one thing at a time worked well with maintaining enthusiasm and engagement

    • Following instruction much better and a quicker response time that last session

    • Creativity but with limitations is working well with the level of the students in this class

    • Lots of ongoing recognition of creative habit skills. In one case, a very quiet student was able to use the action for the creative habit to signify what she had used rather than verbalising the word. Having the option to use both in their responses is beneficial for students who have less verbal skills that others. 

    Challenges

    • Remember to add a time limit when giving instructions for warm ups


    Working with students(what is emerging, what is engaging them/not, what’s making them curious.)

    Although initially the foraging for seeds was only a 60 second time limit, they were so engaged that we let it go much longer. One of the students who will often move in and out of activities and was initially not participating in the warm up, ended up taking part in the entire session, particularly the making of their creatures. He also incorporated sand into his small, quick creations on the board and then was able to share it with the others in his group. The book reading during Crunch and Sip is engaging them and means we are not losing time either. This also led in well to the making of their creatures by discussing what their own monkey mind creatures might look like and the comment that in order to tame the monkey mind ‘all you have to do is be kind’ (student). They were all curious about what they were going to make and engaged in the making process and solving problems of how to connect their various parts together. 



  • Session 3 - Belmont City College Year 9 HASS - Civics and Citizenship

    by Jodie Davidson, about 1 month ago
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    Warm Up

    1. Find a partner whose place of birth is closest to where you were born 

    2. How can you do this without words?

    3. For any solo students, find the person whose place of birth is closest to yours


    Main Activity 

    Speed Debating

    1. Sit opposite your partner on each side of the desk

    2. Each pair will have a statement taken from the 2025 Vote Compass questionnaire

    3. Each station will have 60 seconds to debate your POV - for or against, regardless of your personal belief

    4. One side will rotate left, the other will rotate right

    Results

    1. What was the strongest ‘for’ argument you heard?

    2. What was the strongest ‘against’ argument you heard and why?

    3. What was the weakest ‘for’ argument you heard?

    4. What was the weakest ‘against’ argument you heard and why?

    5. Discuss your views

    6. Have they changed regarding any of the statements?

    7. If so, why?

     Reflection with the students 

    Reflective Questions

    1. Create a question relating to something you heard today but don’t understand

    2. Write it on a post it note and stick to the white board 

    3. What is something that you discovered today that you didn't already know?

     

    After the session:

    Planning with the Teacher

    Successes

    • Engagement!!!

    • They were all interested in what their next topic was

    • Loud and passionate debating

    • One particular student who is usually less engaged was one of the most animated and engaged

    • Adding components to the session based on student response. We decided to get them to add their strongest and weakest arguments onto post it notes rather than just discuss

    • Moving between stations was quick and efficient

    • Getting students to put their name on the back which meant that they were then accountable for what was written.

    Challenges

    • 60 seconds was almost too quick. They all had so much to say

    • Some students found it difficult to disagree with some of the statements

    • Obvious white male privilege evident in some of the answers and debates, along with elements of racism and inequality. Although a challenge, it also helps with deciding how to structure future sessions

    • Natural formation of groups into boys and girls


    Working with students

    I’m not sure who is enjoying this more, us or the students. We purposefully used the warm up because we knew students would gravitate to those they were familiar with however we were curious to see how they would then manage to present opposing points of view. It was like watching a session of parliament. They were all so animated and got louder and louder, even those who were very quiet to begin with. Using post it notes to gather feedback, pose questions and share findings enabled us to further understand the students who were participating properly amongst the noise and those who could do better. Being able to write down that they wanted to understand tax breaks, subsidies and the difference between income tax and property tax helps us to plan sessions while their ideas on what they felt was the strongest and weakest argument for and against a topic indicates that the students definitely encompass different parts of the political axis. Many of their views appear to be influenced by social media, parents and possibly what they heard during the political campaign so it will be interesting for all of us to see where this leads as they begin to set up their political parties and decide on policies.

  • FOOD FUSION - Year 5 Rostrata Primary with Claire Davenhall

    by Claire, about 1 month ago
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    Session 4

    DATE 15.5.25

    90-minute session in the classroom: 

    Warm Up (one photo)

    We played called “Webs” — it’s all about connection, creativity, and of course... food!
    Using a ball of golden wool (because why not make it fabulous?), we stood together in a circle.
    1. The first person holds onto the end of the wool and says a food they love.
    2. If anyone else in the group also loves that food, they call out:
      “I LOVE that too!”
    3. The person who shared then chooses someone else to throw the wool to (gently!) — but they must remember to keep hold of their piece of the string.
    4. The next person catches it, says a food they love, and the process continues.
    As we go, we created a physical web of shared tastes and ideas, all linked by golden threads of common ground.By the end, we’ll have a literal web of delicious inspiration that we can refer back to for their final designs.

     Main Activity (one photo)

    Student created their final food fusion - choosing if it is a basic item (need for the community) or a luxurious item (want for the community).
    They needed to think about who is their target audience, advertising methods, and pricing strategies. (We can introduce the end project to them here)
    • Students design posters, flyers, or digital ads for their food creations
    • Encourage creativity and use of persuasive language.
    They thought about how are they going to sell their product…will it be on a small plate like a market food truck or will it be in a packet?

     Reflection with the students (one photo)

    Give out 2 coins?  They write what 2 habits they used the most in class. Imaginative and persistent I think, were the ones used the most today.

     After the session: Planning with the Teacher

    (refer back to your original Term Plan document, discuss successes, explore challenges and make changes.)

    Next week, I think they need to make it clay - it will need to dry before they can paint
    Kmart clay
    I can also check out other material from Remida

    Working with students

    (what is emerging, what is engaging them/not, what’s making them curious.)

    They are very good at sharing the products. Their ideas.. We used lots of brain breaks help them focus during explicit teaching of the Why and How aspects of the curriculum. 

    Ideas moving forward

    (ideas for next session, future lessons, discussed with teacher, do you need the teacher to do anything before you return.)

    Warm up.. We can play the tea bag game… i bring in a tea bag and they have to think of exciting ways to sell me a tea bag!
    We can sit in circle and pass it round or we can split them into smaller groups so its goes a bit quicker.

    Resources

    (do you need anything, who will source it?)

    Materials…. Clay etc.. maybe paper cuts and plates?
  • Life on Land - Year 5 Walliston Primary with Claire Davenhall

    by Claire, about 1 month ago
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    Session 3 

    DATE 14.5.25

    90-minute session in the classroom:

     

    Warm Up (one photo)

    Time to introduce William Dampier, the English explorer, pirate, and naturalist, who was the first Englishman to chart part of the Australian coastline and the first European to study its landscape, flora, and fauna scientifically.  


    We started the lesson by showing examples from his field book. The warm-up was whittling our drawing stick and making ink from rocks/leaves.


    As they are whittling, I read the dream time story of how the birds go there colours.


     Main Activity (one photo)

    Field Book Pages - Birds


    Looking at feathers, habitats


    Work Stations: Geli prints/Rubbings/Drawing

    .

     

    Reflection with the students (one photo)

    Cut out a native birds and add it to the collage.

     

    After the session:

     

    Planning with the Teacher
     (refer back to your original Term Plan document, discuss successes, explore challenges and make changes.)

    We had half the books which we have the year 6’s and the year 5’s had books Nathan had printed. They both worked out fine and they enjoyed whittling the sticks, but we didn't see any birds today!


    Next week we can look at plants… with more experimenting making inks, rubbings and prints


    Working with students
     (what is emerging, what is engaging them/not, what’s making them curious.)

    They can talk about the habits and how they have used them very well already!


    Ideas moving forward
     (ideas for next session, future lessons, discussed with teacher, do you need the teacher to do anything before you return.)

    I need to get some better printing ink for the geli plates. I only have 2 plates, but I think it will be fine.. And we need some paper.


    Resources
     (do you need anything, who will source it?)

    I need to think of warm up activity that we play. Maybe we give them all a plant to go find


    How can you share learning outcomes/stories of transformation with the wider school community (e.g. Connect newsletter, staff meeting, school newsletter, school social media platforms)

  • Superpowers and Kryptonite - Subi Yr 4/5 Anne & Gemma

    by Anne Gee, 29 days ago
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    Session 4 Subi Primary School 

    Warm up - Superpowers & Kryptonite 

    We discussed our own Learning Habit Superpowers and Kryptonite.

    Students then moved around room till music stopped and then found a classmate who:

    • Shared a superpower

    • Shared a kryptonite 

    • Shares same Superpower & Kryptonite 

    On final round they told their buddy how they worked on their kryptonite to improve. 

    Main Activity - On my way to school 

    I showed a strip story that showed what I drive past on my way to Subiaco Primary School. 

    These are things kids drive past everyday - we asked: what do you see?/what do you notice?/what stays the same?/what changes and why? Are you usually on a screen on the way to school?

    Students then created their own story strip and then shared these with each other where we discussed differing and similar paths - things we didn’t notice that others did. Students were charged to take another look tomorrow with new eyes for things they may have missed. These concertina ‘story strips’ will form part of their new journals.


    Reflection Superpowers & Kryptonite  -  following on from our warm up session students created their own personal superhero filling the body with percentage colours that related to their own profile of Habit Strengths. Cape colours were their best superpower and kryptonite in hand was also coloured to align with their habit to work on.


  • Session 4 Piara Waters - Andrea and Jasmine Year 7 Maths

    by Andrea Rassell, 27 days ago
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    Warm Up (one photo)

    Because our challenge is stillness and quietness, we adopted the Breath Marks exercise.


    Materials: A sheet of paper for each student - any size, loose leaf

    or in a journal/workbook, preferably blank but it can be

    lined. Texta or marker pens and a timer.


    Set Up: Each student needs a space where they can sit or lie

    comfortably, on their own for 5 minutes and have the

    materials close to hand.


    Rules: Ask students to breathe in and out, making a mark on

    the paper each time they breathe. Special breathing is

    not required, no deep breaths or holding of breath, just

    normal breathing. Any kind of mark can be made – a

    dot, a line, a shape, a squiggle. During the activity the

    only sounds made by the participants are the sounds of

    the pens making marks on the paper and the sounds of

    Breathing.


     

    Main Activity (one photo)

    Today's activity connected recipe scaling with understanding food needs in communities.

    Divides students into 7 groups of 4

    Recipe Analysis & Scaling (15 minutes)

    1. Collaborative Work: Students share their family recipes with their group

      • Which is the most cost effective recipe? Vegetarian?

      • Which has the easiest storage or longest shelf life?

      • Which is the most nutritious?

    2. Inquisitive Task: Groups select one recipe then answer:

      • How many servings does the original recipe make?

      • What are the key ingredients and their quantities?

      • If we needed to feed 100 people, how would we scale this recipe?

    Reflection & Sharing (10 minutes)

    1. Each group briefly shares their recipe, scaling calculations, and one insight about hunger in Australia

    2. Groups summarise the mathematical principles they applied (ratios, proportions, unit conversion)

     

    Reflection with the students (one photo)

    Added sand from today’s creative habits 5 min

     

    After the session:

    Planning with the Teacher
     (refer back to your original Term Plan document, discuss successes, explore challenges and make changes.)

    We found out in the last week that the principal has said only food tec classes can be in the food tech room so we have had to think about how to change our plans a little, especially for week 6 and 8. We are now thinking abou thawing a session where we will start to digitally document our ingredients and then the final session 8 we are still wanting to have a session in the currently empty canteen, culminating in donating our food to a charity. 


    If any new skills introduced they need an explicit demo in person rather than in any worksheet type documentation. Jasmine can help identify if they are new by checking hte weekly planned activity when Andrea sends it through.


    Inquisitive, disciplined, persistent


    Working with students
     (what is emerging, what is engaging them/not, what’s making them curious.)

    Today’s main activity was a bit too simple an activity for the size of the group.

    They seem into food and are looking forward to eating! They are very fond of sweet things.


    Ideas moving forward
     (ideas for next session, future lessons, discussed with teacher, do you need the teacher to do anything before you return.)

    Jasmine to share documents with students via onedrive going forward.

    Jasmine to comment on appropriateness of activities if they are too small for suggested groups. 



    Resources
     (do you need anything, who will source it?)

    Jasmine to get the fried rice recipe from the student and we will share the making of this. 


    How can you share learning outcomes/stories of transformation with the wider school community (e.g. Connect newsletter, staff meeting, school newsletter, school social media platforms)

    School facebook 

    Compass (intranet) to raise awareness with families 

    Andrea and Jasmine to share photos with each other via google drive 



  • Session 5 - Somerly Primary School Year 3 - Health and Technologies

    by Jodie Davidson, 27 days ago
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    Warm Up 

    Sourcing Materials - inquisitive, collaboration, persistence, discipline

    1. Find a collection of five sticks

    2. They must be shorter than your arm

    3. They must be longer that your hand

    4. You must stay within the grassed area

    5. How quickly can you do it?

    Jodie Says - Creative Habit Warm Up

    1. Just like ‘Simon Says’, use your body actions to show the correct Creative Habit

    2. You must only move when ‘Jodie says’

    3. Once someone is out, they become a spotter.

     

    Main Activity 

    Making 3D Creatures

    1. What is the difference between 3 dimensional and 2 dimensional?

    2. Create a 3 dimensional creature using your found objects and others that are in the boxes

    3. You can gather extra materials if you need them

    4. How can you do this without staples or glue?

    5. What tools can you use?

    6. What do you need to remember regarding your safety and that of those around you?

    7. Go…

     

    Reflection with the students

    Which creative habit did you use today?

    1. Which coloured paper corresponds to the creative habit you feel you used most today?

    2. Discuss with a partner why you chose that colour

    3. How can you attach this to your flower to begin your Creative Habits flower garden. Will you stick it flat, roll it up, overlap it or do you have another idea?

    4. Attach your paper to your flower, cut it out and have it ready to add to the garden.

    Paste your photo here.

     

    After the session:

     

    Planning with the Teacher
     (refer back to your original Term Plan document, discuss successes, explore challenges and make changes.)

    Successes

    • Complete engagement with everything today by all students

    • Higher number of green ‘happy’ zones today that prior to previous sessions

    • Problem solving because adults were only able to answer a question with a question

    • Imagination was awesome!

    • Collaboration, particularly when students didn’t know how to do something. Other students would come and offer to show them and help

    • Working independently 

    • Remembering their creative habits and being able to reflect on which creative habit they were using and why or determining which creative habit they might need to use and how

    • Ongoing reflection of Creative Habits throughout the session

    Challenges

    • We had to do a quick modification and move the activities which were initially planned for outside, inside due to complications with one of the students. This also meant that we changed the warm up so that it was suitable for inside but still contained body movement

    • We weren’t able to do our Reflection at the end of the session because of National Simultaneous Storytime however, Katy will do it with them after recess. 


    Working with students
     (what is emerging, what is engaging them/not, what’s making them curious.)

    The working with tools today definitely engaged the entire class, even those who are usually more withdrawn. Unfortunately one student who would have enjoyed this activity, is having some difficulties with school so wasn’t in class today however the class decided that they needed additional time to work on their creatures so we are going to continue the activity next week. I’m hopeful she will see the creatures during the week and want to participate in the next session. They were curious about how to join pieces together without glue and were engaged in working out solutions. Even though they were working independently, they were also quick to help each other and share their projects. They also came up with great suggestions for which creative habit their creature had and why. 

    ‘My creature’s superpower habit is imaginative because it imagines what it can create in its head’ … student

    One student also suggested that he wanted to draw his creature when it was finished but thought we could do it like we had in one of the earlier sessions so they could each draw their creature with a partner and then swap the drawings and add to them. We will incorporate this into their next session. They are curious about what we are doing each week but also able to come up with suggestions for driving the project forward. 

Page last updated: 17 Jun 2025, 01:29 PM