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Tuesday, October 27, 2020

Photo Retakes

Important date to note: 

Photo retakes for anyone who chooses to have them done are scheduled for Tuesday Nov. 3rd

Tuesday, October 20, 2020

Photo orders

 Hi Families,

Just a reminder that any photo orders being sent in to the school are due in by October 23rd.


Friday, October 16, 2020

Halloween Plans

 LBS is planning low-key Halloween activities on Thursday October 29.  

If children are planning to dress up at school, please discuss plans with them for:

  • a costume that is comfortable to wear all day: able to sit down, move around easily and complete school tasks throughout the day,
  • regular sanitizing and hand-washing, as usual,
  • using an AHS face mask, costumes with attached masks or other “Halloween masks” are not to be worn and are not suitable for preventing the spread of airborne droplets,
  • school-appropriate themes (no gore, weapons and so on),
  • no shared food to be brought to school.

 

Children are not required to wear costumes and may choose to wear orange and black. If your family does not participate in Halloween, there will be alternate tasks and activities provided.

 

Students will be looking at examples/non-examples of costumes in their classrooms.  Based on the weather, we may hold a costume parade outside. Students are asked to maintain physical distancing during this outdoor event. We will send an invitation via text to families if an outdoor parade will occur. Families will be invited to view the parade from outside the edges of our school field.

 

October 30 is a CBE system-wide non-instructional day. Please mark your calendars, as this is a ‘No School’ day.

 

Tuesday, October 6, 2020

Halloween

Halloween at School:

Everyone is keenly aware of the changes we have all had to make in our lives due to COVID-19. At school, we have been discussing how celebrations and events can continue in ways that fit within our current protocols. We recognize that many children and families love to share their creative talents through costumes and make up for Halloween. This year, we will include time to recognize Halloween in a low-key way:

  • simple costumes that can be comfortably worn all day,
  • no accessories,
  • no shared food,
  • adapted ways to share/parade.

Children are not required to wear costumes or may choose to wear orange and black. If your family does not participate in Halloween, there will be alternate tasks and activities provided.

Monday, October 5, 2020

 Hi Families!

We began looking at Canadian Indiginous artist, writer and politician: "Aaron Paquette," in class today. Ask your student what they thought about his artwork. 

Along with looking at his paintings, we discussed how artists often draw from personal experiences and feelings to create symbolism and imagery. Tomorrow we will experiment with a paint technique and using a symbol chosen by each student to incorporate into their artwork.

We read the following passage written by Aaron about a painting he titled "I Failed Big Time." I am including the passage so you might talk further with you student about it's meaning and lesson.




Aaron Paquette: Somewhere along the way we were taught to pretend that if we never ever even considered the possibility of it – then bad things would never happen. Our thoughts would keep them from happening! If we only focused on the most positive of things, that’s all that would ever occur. This is obviously not true.

Every day there are good things that come into our lives, and there are challenging things. We experience moments of happiness and love, even if it’s for the smallest of joys. We also experience loss every day. This is just life.

When we prepare ourselves for a new endeavour, we encourage ourselves and others to “only focus on the positive.” Mostly this is good advice. Your attitude will for sure affect the outcome of most things in your life. But we sort of stall our development by not allowing for the fact, the simple truth, that sometimes things will not go as planned or hoped for. Sometimes we really will fail. We will make mistakes.

Things will go smash. Boom. And that is TOTALLY OKAY!

In fact, failure, making mistakes is what we NEED in order to grow. It puts our development into overdrive. But only if we view it as a helpful tool. See, a lot of people will bemoan their problems, dwell on their failures, and choose to never try again. What’s the point? They already tried, and it didn’t work. They’ve been hurt, and now they’re scared or resentful. That’s what bad experiences often do to us. When I was a starving, struggling artist, I went year after year to gallery after gallery, facing rejection after rejection. Each rejection spurred me to work harder on my art. I worked to make paintings that people would like. I tried to mimic the stuff I saw in gallery windows. I tried every style I could. And I still got rejected. But in the process I really learned to paint. I learned Art History, I received a far reaching education that went beyond the bounds of art school. All thanks to failure. One day, however, it got too much for me. I gave up.

I stopped painting. The funny thing is, it didn’t last long.

In that quiet time, something shifted inside of me. Something clicked. I woke up one morning with one thought in mind. What if I could only create one last painting? What if I painted not what I thought others wanted, but what was important to me? What if I had one last chance to say what was in my heart? And so I quit my job, pulled out the paints, bought some supplies (with what very little money I had) and got to work.

A few days later I had not one, but three new works that were unlike anything I had ever made. They were a bit raw, kind of unsophisticated, but for the first time in my life I worked from my own voice. I took a last chance. I walked into a gallery with the work. I heard the same reply I’d heard again and again over the years:

“Shows promise.” But this time there was something else. “Leave them here and we’ll see what the owner says.” By the time I got home there was a message on my answering machine to bring in more. Not long after, there was a show. Enough people loved the new work that they took into their homes every last piece. 

Thank you failure.

Thank you for knocking me down, for knocking off the edges, for polishing my skills.

Thank you for encouraging me to develop abilities I never would have explored.

Thank you for showing me new directions, new approaches.

Thank you for building strength and resilience in me I never otherwise would have had.

Thank you for humbling me through pain, heartache, sorrow and despair – the very things we strive to avoid. But there’s no avoiding them, is there? Only learning how to experience them wisely.

I wish great failure on everyone.

I wish equal and greater strength to learn from that failure.

So if you ever hear from me, “I’m not sure how it will go. Maybe I will fail!”

Don’t think I’m down on myself. Nope!

I’m simply reminding myself that there are bigger ideas ahead and it’s time to learn them. That failures are the necessary steps to triumph.

I wish that for you.

So please, as you work toward something great, embrace the failures along the way. Be grateful for them. They are the building blocks of your great accomplishments.

I failed big time. Again and again. And I still do!

From the outside, someone viewing me mid-stride would see all my stumbles, all my mistakes. And that’s very real. But inside, I was building the skills to seize opportunity, to grow in compassion, to wade through the muck.

Learn to do the same. If you’ve already been learning, transform the message. Make the experience mean something bigger than the moment.

Fail big.

Fail often.

And triumph.

Hiy hiy.

Aaron Paquette

Aaron Paquette is a First Nations Metis artist, author and speaker. Based in Edmonton, Alberta.

We played a math facts game today called "Salute!" if you have a deck of cards, ask your child to show you how to play! The rules are also posted in the Google Classroom.

Important Dates: Friday October 9th and Monday October 12th - No school for students.

Have a happy evening! 😀 Ms. M.