All posts by Mrs Docherty

A Blast from the Past

Many thanks to all the parents who brought along their children for the evening performance of our school concert onThursday evening.  The school community appreciates that it was a big ask and that our younger children were later getting to bed on Thursday night. We thank you for all your support.   We hope you enjoyed Thursday evenings performances, even with our now traditional technical hitch! Below is a slideshow that has captured the magic of the performances from pupils across the school.  We are very fortunate to have so many  wonderfully talented children at St.Augustine’s School.

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Fairtrade Coffee Morning

Many thanks to the pupils and staff of St.Ambrose who invited our Pr.7 pupils to a Fairtrade coffee morning on Friday.  It was a real pleasure and the entertainment provided by the wide array of talent at St.Ambrose was an added bonus.  The cupcakes, as you can see from the pictures,  were absolutely delicious !

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Blast from the Past

The school delivered a great performance yesterday afternoon at our Golden Jubilee celebratory concert.  It was a real Blast from the Past for the audience as they were taken on a nostalgic trip down memory lane and revisited the sounds of the 60’s,70’s, 80’s, 90’s and noughties. The school will perform once again to a packed house this evening.  Tickets are now sold out.  We will get pictures posted on the blog that capture the talent on display from across the school. Please remember to check the blog.  The children would love to hear your comments from the evening so please post a comment.

School Trim Trail

If you have been dropping off or collecting your child(ren) from school you will see that there are workmen hard at work putting the finishing touches to the latest new addition to our school grounds.  We have a newly installed trim trail that will challenge our younger pupils and a more challenging one for our junior and senior pupils.  We also have a teepee added to our playground area at the front of the school.  An information letter will be issued that details the benefits to health and well being of having such features in our playground.  A rota will be drawn up to ensure all classes get access at set times during the week.  Classes will also get access during P.E. blocks to develop teamwork and resilience.  Please note the information letter will request that you inform the school if you do not wish your child to use this equipment.  The equipment will be ready for use next week.

Pr.7 Transition Visits

The boys and girls of Room 7 and 8 are enjoying weekly visits by staff from St.Ambrose as part of an enhanced transition programme with a focus on literacy.  The teachers are involved in closing the attainment gap and are out to challenge our Pr.7 pupils in their ability to analyse text.

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Golden Jubilee Celebrations

The school community joined together this afternoon for a beautiful concelebrated Mass led by Father Kane and Father Travers.  It was a most fitting way to begin our festivities as we celebrate the school’s Golden Jubilee.  The children were a real credit to the school, their teachers and were a credit to all the former pupils and teachers who both attended and served the school over that last 50 years.  Many thanks to Father Kane who presented the school with a special commemorative  Chalice to mark such a momentous occasion in the school’s long history.  Father Kane’s Homily highlighted to the children the long history of the school, all of which is well chronicled in the parish archives which are also available on the Parish website.   Did you know St.Augustine’s original school opened in 1882?  The log books  provides us with some stark information about how difficult life was for children at that time.  Here are a few sad extracts

20 January 1882:   Lack of books.

24 November 1882:   Frost having set in, those who have no shoes are seldom seen.

10 April 1885:   A child died of measles

17 April 1885:   Another child died of measles.   School closed because of epidemic.

20 November 1885:   Weather fearfully cold.   Attendance poor.   As so many of the children are bare-footed this cannot be wondered at.   Indeed I feel very sorry to see them at all in school in such a state.

24 December 1886:   Children with bare feet who came in the snow were unfit to work in class.   I kept them round the fire at intervals in batches.

Such sad entries tell us in only a few sentences how poor the children of that time were and how fortunate we are today.  We celebrate the Golden Jubilee of our school building  but we also recognise the long history of which we are a part.