Monthly Archives: September 2022

ELC News – Week 10, Term 3 2022

Dear Families

I can’t believe we are wrapping up another term already!

Term 3 at St Peter’s Girls’ ELC has been full of wonder and excitement. We started by hosting two community events: one to welcome our new families into the Centre, and another to celebrate the fathers and treasured friends in our children’s lives. These two events created such a buzz within the ELC, and the children adored sharing their learning spaces with their families and close friends.

Our children have continued their engagement in the concept of transformation, with the children in Learning Community 1 exploring emotions and how they can feel across their day, whilst the children in Learning Community 2 have been fully immersed in their research and classifications of the fungi they have found in Ferguson Park.

We have thoroughly enjoyed sharing our transformation of learning with our wider community across the term, whether it be through newsletter articles, myLink updates, in-room documentation, or through children’s individual portfolios which were shared during our recent Parent-Teacher Conversations. We also hope you enjoyed our deeper insights into the way we value and embed literacy, numeracy, gross motor skills and mathematics into our everyday experiences here at the ELC, which were showcased as highlight videos in these fortnightly newsletters. If you want to revisit any of our previous ELC newsletters, you can view them via: www.stpetersgirls.sa.edu.au/elcnews/

This term offered us a time to reflect, as we reimagined the way we conduct our Friends of the ELC group to be a more inviting and accessible opportunity for families to get together. Our new meeting structure will follow a once-per-term morning get-together in the School Chapel on Friday of Week 2 of each term. We invite you to pop this date in your calendar and join us for our first meeting at 9am on Friday 28 October.

We look forward to our upcoming Vacation Care period (October 4 – 14) and are eager to continue the wonderful and rich learning. We appreciate those who booked their sessions as bookings have now closed.

Thank you everyone for such a great term. Have a fabulous break and we will see you all in Term 4!

Ngaitalya (Kaurna for ‘Respect’)

Henrietta Balnaves (ELC Manager) and Caterina Pennestri (ELC Educational Leader)

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Important Dates

Monday October 3: Public Holiday (ELC Closed)
October 4 – 14: Vacation Care
Monday 17 October: Term 4 Begins
Friday 28 October: Friends of the ELC Meeting, 8–9.30am
Monday 14 November: Reception Transition Visits Commence

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Vacation Care – Bookings Closed

Bookings are now closed for ELC Vacation Care. Please note Monday 3 October is a public holiday and the ELC will be closed.

Due to staffing requirements, cancellations will incur the full day’s fee.

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Introducing Our Reimagined Friends of the ELC Group

Are you a parent/family member looking to be a part of our Friends of the ELC, connecting with other families and helping organise our ELC community events?  

Our Friends of the ELC group previously held fortnightly meetings at a local coffee shop. As we juggle the reality of our busy lives, we have reimagined what this community group will look like, and how it can best support our ELC events and our wonderful community. We know there is nothing more important than building community around our children and offering a chance for families to engage, and so we have reflected upon the nature of these meetings.

Moving forward, the Friends of the ELC will hold casual get-togethers on Friday of Week 2 each term, from 8 – 9.30am, in the School Chapel. The meetings will enable families to connect while we will discuss the volunteering opportunities for the term ahead, organise helpers for our upcoming ELC events, and ensure we continue to give value and voice to our parents, families and other community members.

If you’re interested in joining our reimagined Friends of the ELC, there will be no ‘lock-in contracts’ – just an opportunity to further engage with one another and the ELC. Morning tea and coffee will be provided. We welcome all help and participation from our community however it fits into your busy schedules.

If you’re interested in coming along to our first meeting on Friday 28 October (Week 2, Term 4), please email me via hbalnaves@stpetersgirls.sa.edu.au

Henrietta Balnaves
ELC Manager

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Our Sustainability Journey

As we enjoy the season of spring, we have been keenly observing the colour changes and transformation of our natural surroundings and embracing any chance to get outdoors. This week, we held our ELC Playgroup sessions out in our neighbouring Ferguson Park, where I had the wonderful opportunity to introduce some of our youngest learners to a space they will soon frequently connect with when they begin their ELC journey.

At St Peter’s Girls’ ELC, we strive to foster in children an ecological identity by deeply connecting with our natural surroundings in the hope that a love and connection to Earth is born in a particular place, making possible this love for other places. As Ann Pelo describes, ‘An ecological identity allows us to experience Earth as our home ground, and leaves us determined to live in honourable relationship with our planet.’

Spring in Ferguson Park is a magical experience as it brings beautiful flowers into bloom, which are technically weeds in this native area. This means the children are able to pick these flowers – simultaneously caring for our surroundings and discovering beauty and joy in their environment.

Henrietta Balnaves
ELC Manager

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2023 ELC Enrolment Requirements

We are working through our intake offers for next year and need to ensure our current families have their allocated days in place.

Please notify me ASAP via selliott@stpetersgirls.sa.edu.au if you require an amendment to your days moving forward in 2023, or if you are leaving the Centre at the end of this year.

Sarah Elliott
ELC Enrolments and Finance Officer

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Staff Spotlight

Alexandra, another of our fantastically friendly faces in Learning Community 2, has recently graduated from the University of South Australia with a Master in Early Childhood Education. She is passionate about the Reggio Emilia approach to early learning and brings this dedication into her daily lessons with the children.

What is your favourite part of working in the St Peter’s Girls’ ELC?

Ferguson Park is a highlight of our beautiful ELC; having the opportunity to engage with the children in exploring local flora and fauna is a real privilege. The park is a wonderful place for the children to develop a range of learning dispositions, such as curiosity and cooperation skills, whilst also being a calming place for them to connect with nature and learn about Kaurna culture. 

Why are you passionate about working with children?
 
I believe that each child is creative, capable and resilient. I consider being an early childhood teacher one of the most rewarding jobs in the world. We have the opportunity to help children develop the foundation for learning that they will continue to use for their whole lives. Building children’s confidence and sense of self and watching them use those skills to explore the world is what makes me passionate about working with children. 
 
What makes the St Peter’s Girls’ ELC special?

The talented, diverse and dedicated staff make St Peter’s Girls a special place to both work and grow for professionals and children alike. I continue to learn daily from my accomplished and knowledgeable colleagues, as I watch them support the growth of all our students.

What do you enjoy doing in your spare time?
 
I love spending time with my family and friends, exploring nature, traveling and supporting The Arts. I have a particular love of the Performing Arts, which I often share with the children during our inquiries into dance and movement. 

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Important Reminders

Please carefully read the following important reminders:

  • Please close all doors and safety gates behind you when entering and exiting the ELC. Whilst we appreciate the kind gesture, please refrain from holding open entry/exit doors or gates for other children unless they are accompanied by an adult.
  • We ask families to bring your entry key fobs to ELC each day. If you need to order a new fob and/or report a lost one, email selliott@stpetersgirls.sa.edu.au.
  • Please ensure children wear appropriate shoes and clothing for our indoor and outdoor activities; this includes no dress ups or long necklaces.
  • The School has received reports of concerning driver behaviour on Hallett Road. This includes holding up traffic while waiting for cars to leave in order to park near the ELC, performing risky u-turns and parking in bus zones. As our staff have no jurisdiction over public roads, the School will be asking the police to conduct regular patrols at peak times. We implore all of our community members to support road safety and show courtesy to others.

The welfare of all children in our community is our utmost priority and we appreciate your cooperation.

Henrietta Balnaves
ELC Manager

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COVID-19 Information

If your child tests positive to COVID-19, notify us immediately. Please also advise the type of test (RAT/PCR), the date your child’s test was taken and the date symptoms started (if no symptoms, note ‘asymptomatic’).

Please notify us via email or text:

Email: attendance@stpetersgirls.sa.edu.au

Text: 0428 601 957 (save to phone contacts as SPGS)

If you need to notify us over the phone, please call the Front Office on 8334 2200.

If children are displaying symptoms, it is mandatory that we send them home. SA Health guidelines advise that symptoms include:

  • Fever (a temperature of 37.5˚C or higher) or chills
  • Cough
  • Loss of taste or smell
  • Sore throat
  • Tiredness (fatigue)
  • Runny or blocked nose
  • Shortness of breath (difficulty breathing)
  • Nausea, vomiting or diarrhoea
  • Headache
  • Muscle or joint pain
  • Loss of appetite

Should your child develop any symptoms, even mild ones, they must not attend ELC and should be tested for COVID-19. Those with symptoms who test negative using a RAT must undertake a PCR test to confirm that result. Students who have previously tested positive and have completed isolation in the past 28 days do not need to undertake testing.

Under SA Health protocols, asymptomatic children who are close contacts can attend ELC, provided they undertake 5 Rapid Antigen Tests over 7 days and receive negative results.

Please also note that face masks are strongly recommended indoors for adults, including visitors, except if it impedes the ability to teach or interact with children.

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来自黄老师的信息

Emma Huang

亲爱的家长朋友们,

真不敢相信又迎来了这个学期的尾声!

在圣彼得女校ELC的第三学期充满了惊奇和令人激动的时刻。本学期开始,我们举办了两场社区活动;一个是欢迎我们新家庭的到来,另一个是庆祝父亲节以及与他们生活息息相关的“珍贵的朋友们“。这两件事在ELC中引起了很大的反响,孩子们很喜欢与家人和亲密朋友分享他们的学习空间。

我们的孩子们继续参与到“转变”这一概念的学习中去。学习社区1的孩子们探索情感和他们每天的感受,而学习社区2的孩子们则完全沉浸在他们在弗格森公园发现的菌类的研究和分类中。

我们非常高兴在整个学期间与更广泛的社区分享我们的学习转变。无论是通过每两周简讯的文章、myLink的更新以及教室里的学习记录,还是通过在最近的“家长-教师一对一对话”中与您分享的孩子们的个人学习文档。我们也希望大家感受到我们在ELC对孩子们学习更深入的理解,包括我们如何重视并将读写能力、算术能力、大运动技能和数学嵌入到我们的日常学习体验中去。同样地,在这些两周简讯中也有相关精彩视频的展示。如果您想重温以前的ELC简讯,您可以通过登陆www.stpetersgirls.sa.edu.au/elcnews/ 来查看内容。

这个学期为我们提供了一个反思的机会,我们重新设想了我们组织“ELC之友”小组的方式,使之成为一个更有吸引力、更容易让家庭成员聚在一起的机会。我们新的会议结构将遵循每学期第2周的周五在学校礼拜堂举行的一次晨会。我们邀请您将这一天加入我们的第一次会议,时间是10月28日(星期五)上午9点。

我们期待即将到来的假期日托班(10月4日- 10月14日),期待着继续精彩丰富的学习。我们感谢那些预订了日托班的家长们,现在预定已经结束。

谢谢大家对这个学期的积极参与。预祝大家渡过一个愉快的两周假期,我们将在第四学期再见!

Emma Huang works in Learning Community 1 on Tuesdays, Thursdays and Fridays from 9am – 5pm.

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News from Learning Community 1

In Learning Community 1, we are celebrating all feelings and emotions, and the development of children’s emotional intelligence, resilience and empathy.

As we explored a variety of picture books during this term, we started labelling a range of feelings displayed by the characters in the stories, also paying close attention to the facial expressions that would support us identifying these feelings. We talked with the children about the importance of all different emotions, acknowledging all feelings we may experience throughout our days – anger, sadness, joy, frustration and more.

An important aspect of children’s emotional intelligence – empathy – has been evident in many conversations between peers and educators. As we progressed in our unit of inquiry, children started to transfer their knowledge and use some strategies to support themselves and each other. We witnessed spontaneous moments when children would share how they were feeling, demonstrate concern for others and give support to them during transitions and rituals:

  • A girl told an educator, ‘I think she is missing her Daddy’, when she saw a friend crying quietly. She then offered her peer a drink of water as a supporting strategy to calming down – ‘Here, do you need your water?’
  • A boy saw a friend trying to open the bin lid: ‘Push the grey’ – pushing the lid and holding it open for his peer.
  • During group time, one child responded to the educator, ‘I am kuku’ai today’, showing thumbs down. Another peer turned and said, ‘It is ok, Mummy and Daddy will come soon.’

Jessica Guimaraes and Jess Catt
Learning Community 1

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News from Learning Community 2

As we quickly approach the end of another exciting term in Learning Community 2, we reflect as a group upon the wonderful ways in which our knowledge of the world around us has been transformed. The children in the Learning Community 2 have acquired, through our inquiry, a vast amount of new knowledge about Ferguson Park, our community garden and changes in the weather.

We began the term with the children first exploring the changes they noticed in Ferguson Park using all their senses to discover any transformation. Soon, we began to look not just ahead and up into the trees, but also down to discover the unique changes that were occurring under our feet as well. Through listening to the children and then delving deeper into what we noticed was changing to the floor of our local conservation park, we discovered a whole new world that was growing and ever-changing. It was fungi!  

In this way, the children moved from being botanists and researching native plants to becoming mycologists and discovering the important links between fungi and the wider world of nature. There was a heightened amount of daily energy as we all discovered more and more fungi, how it grows, how it germinates, naming the parts of the fungi and how we can identify different types of fungi.

Through this inquiry, educators and children worked alongside each other discovering the new information together. This approach is true to the Reggio Emilia style of learning as it is a collaborative learning process where each child is an active agent in their gaining of knowledge. This process of teaching and learning alongside the child engages all learners in a more in-depth higher-order way of thinking where authentic questions and true scientific research can occur. The teachers were just as excited as the children in their discovery of new facts about fungi and in the daily transfer of this knowledge to others such as families or friends!

We hope you are able to take a stroll through Ferguson Park someday too, and make your own discoveries along the way!

Nell Tierney, Kathy McCabe and Laura Reiters
Learning Community 2

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Find Out What Happens Throughout the Day at ELC

The ELC Learning Community Home Page is a dynamic online sharing space that invites you to participate in the communities’ learning as it happens. We use this tool to communicate important information with families and provide a window into the children’s life at the ELC, as educators share documentation of teaching, specialist lessons and spontaneous moments.

Accessing myLink for the first time:

Each parent has an individual username to access our myLink Parent Portal. Please note that the username is your ID number followed by @stpetersgirls.sa.edu.au Your ID number has been provided to you in an email from the School If you have not accessed myLink before or have forgotten your password, please follow these steps:

  • Visit https://mylink.stpetersgirls.sa.edu.au
  • Sign in with your parent username
  • Click on ‘Forgot my password’
  • Make sure the ‘email’ address is your parent username, type in the code, then click the blue ‘Next’ button
  • Enter your mobile number registered with the School, with the area code (Australia is +61), dropping the 0 at the beginning (e.g. +61 400000000). Then select ‘Text’
  • Enter the security code sent to your mobile number
  • Enter the password you would like to use and click ‘Finish’
  • Return to the login screen at https://mylink.stpetersgirls.sa.edu.au to access myLink

Accessing the Learning Community Home Page through myLink:

  • Access myLink as per the above instructions
  • Click on the ‘MYLINK HOME’ tab
  • Click on your child’s name tab
  • Under ‘Class Contacts’, click on the ELC room name (you may need to enter your user name and password again)

If you have any issues accessing or navigating myLink, please contact our IT Hub via helpdesk@stpetersgirls.sa.edu.au or 8334 2227.

ELC’s Online Etiquette Policy: please note that the ELC Learning Community Home Page and ELC News contain images and videos of other children. We therefore ask that you do not copy or share images or videos, especially on social media, if they contain other children.

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Absences in the ELC

Student Absences Please notify the School via one of the following methods for late arrivals/early departures and absences, ensuring a reason for the absence is included. The School requires a reason for the absence for government reporting purposes.

Text: 0428 601 957 (save to phone contacts as SPGS)

Email: attendance@stpetersgirls.sa.edu.au (If emailing, please ‘CC’ the teacher of the Room as well)

ELC Room Contacts:

  • Stonyfell – 8155 5778
  • Bell Yett – 8155 5777
  • Ferguson – 8155 5776
  • Hallett – 8155 5775

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ELC Immunisation Policy

Under the Government’s No Jab No Play policy, families must meet immunisation requirements to attend the ELC and receive the Child Care Subsidy. Families are required to provide all approved immunisation records to the ELC. Further information is available by clicking here.

Children who are suffering from illnesses such as those listed below must be excluded from ELC in line with our Exclusion Policy:

  • Influenza
  • Chicken Pox
  • Conjunctivitis
  • Diarrhoea
  • Hand, Foot and Mouth Disease
  • High Temperature
  • Infectious Hepatitis
  • Measles
  • Meningitis
  • Mumps
  • Rubella (German Measles)
  • Scabies
  • Scarlet Fever
  • School Sores (Impetigo)
  • Upper Respiratory Tract Infection
  • Vomiting
  • Whooping Cough

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ELC News – Week 8, Term 3 2022

Dear Families

Our young learners need to be surrounded with mathematical language and concepts in both playful and intentional ways, and demonstrating a positive attitude to mathematics is key to their learning.

Every day, we engage with the children in mathematical experiences such as:

  • Identifying a number before and after a given number
  • Recognising numbers in the environment
  • Making connections between number names, numerals, and quantities up to 10

This term, we have been especially focusing on data classification and geometry. We have provided a range of provocations within the Learning Communities for the children to explore these themes, thinking like mathematicians.

Classification is the skill of sorting or grouping items by similar characteristics, such as colours, shapes or sizes. The Learning Community 2 children have been studying and classifying fungi from their walks through Ferguson Park. By using descriptive language, they created data displays and refined their classification skills. Understanding classification is important for young children as it supports the development of scientific concepts, for example that things can belong to and be organised into different groups. Children naturally classify their knowledge to make sense of their world, and it is especially meaningful and inspiring to associate their innate need to organise things and concepts with a mathematical skill.

To share their discoveries with families and peers, we invited the children to create maps of Ferguson Park indicating where they found each type of fungi. Using positional language, the children learnt how to express where things are located or where they appear in relation to other things. Learning about directions and position is a fundamental skill to support their understanding of geometry.

As educators, we highlight when they use mathematics during their daily experiences and we provide playful experiences to explore the world around them with a mathematical lens. This will assist in building a curiosity around mathematics and encourage children to develop a stronger interest in STEM subjects as they progress through their educational journey at St Peter’s Girls’ School.

Caterina Pennestri
ELC Educational Leader
 

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Important Dates

September 19, 20, 26: Parent-Teacher Conversations
Thursday September 22: Public Holiday (ELC Closed)
Monday October 3: Public Holiday (ELC Closed)
October 4 – 14: Vacation Care
Monday 17 October: Term 4 Begins

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Vacation Care – Bookings Closing Soon

Vacation Care will run from Tuesday 4 to Friday 14 October. Please note Monday 3 October is a public holiday and the ELC will be closed.

Bookings close next Wednesday 21 September at 5pm.

Book your spot via www.trybooking.com/CCNLQ

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Introducing Our Reimagined Friends of the ELC Group

Are you a parent/family member looking to be a part of our Friends of the ELC, connecting with other families and helping organise our ELC community events?  

Our Friends of the ELC group previously held fortnightly meetings at a local coffee shop. As we juggle the reality of our busy lives, we have reimagined what this community group will look like, and how it can best support our ELC events and our wonderful community. We know there is nothing more important than building community around our children and offering a chance for families to engage, and so we have reflected upon the nature of these meetings. 

Moving forward, the Friends of the ELC will hold casual get-togethers on Friday of Week 2 each term, from 8 – 9.30am, in the School’s Chapel. The meetings will enable families to connect while we will discuss the volunteering opportunities for the term ahead, organise helpers for our upcoming ELC events, and ensure we continue to give value and voice to our parents, families and other community members.

If you’re interested in joining our reimagined Friends of the ELC, there will be no ‘lock-in contracts’ – just an opportunity to further engage with one another and the ELC. Morning tea and coffee will be provided. We welcome all help and participation from our community however it fits into your busy schedules.

If you’re interested in coming along to our first meeting on Friday 28 October (Week 2, Term 4), please email me via hbalnaves@stpetersgirls.sa.edu.au

Henrietta Balnaves
ELC Manager

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Our Sustainability Journey

Spring has sprung and our ELC Community Garden is ready for replanting! The children have shared a very keen interest in gardening, with Learning Community 1 exploring fresh produce and the possibilities within the kitchen, and Learning Community 2 investigating the lifecycle of seeds and growing their own broad beans. They have also spent time with their hands in the dirt ripping out all our old winter vegetable plants to make way for the new.

As educators, we have a responsibility to ensure children are learning 21st century skills. Our ELC Community Garden is a fantastic environment where children can build innovation and collaboration, develop their social skills through democratic practices and group decisions, and learn to become responsible global citizens.

We are hoping to fill each of our garden beds with fresh spring produce, whether it be from seeds, seedlings or established plants. We are extending this opportunity to all of our families and community to share any ideas, seeds and/or gardening tips so we can begin planting in Week 10.

We invite you to share your suggestions with us on the board in the ELC Foyer over the next week.

By gathering this data from our families and our wider community, the children can collate the suggestions and engage in creative ways of voting, enabling them to feel connected to the process and have a say in what they care for. This process acts as a magnet of connection and responsibility to our ELC Community Garden.

Henrietta Balnaves
ELC Manager

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2023 ELC Enrolment Requirements

We are working through our intake offers for next year and need to ensure our current families have their allocated days in place.

Please notify me ASAP via selliott@stpetersgirls.sa.edu.au if you require an amendment to your days moving forward in 2023, or if you are leaving the Centre at the end of this year.

Sarah Elliott
ELC Enrolments and Finance Officer

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Staff Spotlight

Saints Girls’ Old Scholar Juliana (Selwyn 2000) holds a Bachelor of Education (Early Years) and has a breadth of early years teaching experience, having taught in London, Singapore, Vietnam and Italy, as well as here in Adelaide. She has a passion for working with the youngest members of our School community, helping them to feel that sense of belonging which is so important in the early years.

Why are you passionate about working with children?

Young children are such open-minded and creative thinkers. They always have their eyes and hearts open to the wonder of the world. I hope that through my practice with young children, this natural instinct of children is nurtured. As an early childhood teacher, it is my responsibility to guide, encourage and support students to develop a love of learning and to help them to feel the success that ultimately leads to further success. I believe that the experiences of an individual’s early education set the foundation for later academic and social-emotional development. 

What makes St Peter’s Girls’ ELC special?

The opportunities available to the children are what make our ELC special. There is something for every child to feel success in and to explore their ‘Hundred Languages’. The children have opportunities to explore the great outdoors in Ferguson Park or the grounds of the School, Visual Arts with Ms Caterina, music, languages and gross motor sessions. There is something available for every child to feel successful and find their voice. 

What does a typical day look like in Learning Community 2?

Plenty of self-directed play in spaces that are focused on our current area of inquiry. Indoor and outdoor play is a must for helping develop strong relationships between the children as they negotiate, share and co-construct their play. There is always a lot of busy noise and chat in the LC2 spaces as the children explore in beautiful language-rich environments. We also have lots of small group learning experiences where we are able to delve more deeply into our inquiries with teacher-led learning. Groups may go off to the Library, gross motor activities, music sessions or explore Ferguson Park. Some of our older girls may also go and visit the Reception classes to help ensure a smooth transition to school.

What is your favourite memory from the St Peter’s Girls’ ELC?

The joy the children have shown when discovering the fungi in Ferguson Park and learning the funny names they have such as Green skinhead and Jelly babies. This joy and amusement is why I am so passionate about working with young children.

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Important Reminders

Please carefully read the following important reminders:

  • Please close all doors and safety gates behind you when entering and exiting the ELC. Whilst we appreciate the kind gesture, please refrain from holding open entry/exit doors or gates for other children unless they are accompanied by an adult.
  • We ask families to bring your entry key fobs to ELC each day. If you need to order a new fob and/or report a lost one, email selliott@stpetersgirls.sa.edu.au.
  • Please ensure children wear appropriate shoes and clothing for our indoor and outdoor activities; this includes no dress ups or long necklaces.
  • The School has received reports of concerning driver behaviour on Hallett Road. This includes holding up traffic while waiting for cars to leave in order to park near the ELC, performing risky u-turns and parking in bus zones. As our staff have no jurisdiction over public roads, the School will be asking the police to conduct regular patrols at peak times. We implore all of our community members to support road safety and show courtesy to others.

The welfare of all children in our community is our utmost priority and we appreciate your cooperation.

Henrietta Balnaves
ELC Manager

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COVID-19 Information

If your child tests positive to COVID-19, notify us immediately. Please also advise the type of test (RAT/PCR), the date your child’s test was taken and the date symptoms started (if no symptoms, note ‘asymptomatic’).

Please notify us via email or text:

Email: attendance@stpetersgirls.sa.edu.au

Text: 0428 601 957 (save to phone contacts as SPGS)

If you need to notify us over the phone, please call the Front Office on 8334 2200.

If children are displaying symptoms, it is mandatory that we send them home. SA Health guidelines advise that symptoms include:

  • Fever (a temperature of 37.5˚C or higher) or chills
  • Cough
  • Loss of taste or smell
  • Sore throat
  • Tiredness (fatigue)
  • Runny or blocked nose
  • Shortness of breath (difficulty breathing)
  • Nausea, vomiting or diarrhoea
  • Headache
  • Muscle or joint pain
  • Loss of appetite

Should your child develop any symptoms, even mild ones, they must not attend ELC and should be tested for COVID-19. Those with symptoms who test negative using a RAT must undertake a PCR test to confirm that result. Students who have previously tested positive and have completed isolation in the past 28 days do not need to undertake testing. Under SA Health protocols, asymptomatic children who are close contacts can attend ELC, provided they undertake 5 Rapid Antigen Tests over 7 days and receive negative results. Please also note that face masks are strongly recommended indoors for adults, including visitors, except if it impedes the ability to teach or interact with children.

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来自黄老师的信息

Emma Huang

亲爱的家长朋友们,

我们年轻的学习者们需要被既好玩又有意义的数学语言和概念包围着,同样展示积极的态度是他们学习的关键所在。

每一天我们鼓励孩子们参与到各种数学活动中去,比如:

  • 在给出一个数字的前一个和后一个数字下,标识出这个数字
  • 在环境中辨别数字
  • 在十以内的数字中以数字的名字,数字和数量之间建立联接

在这个学期里我们特别关注数据的分类和几何。在学习社区中,我们提供给孩子们一系列的挑战去探索这些主题,如同数学家一样思考。

分类是把事物按照不同的相似的特征(比如按照颜色、形状以及尺寸大小)进行分类分组的技巧。学习二社区的孩子们通过弗格森公园的探索之路,对菌类进行学习和分类。通过描述性的语言,他们创作的数据展示了他们对分类技能更好的完善。理解如何分类对幼儿学习是十分重要的。它帮助了对于科学概念的形成发展,比如事物属于并可以被分为不同的的类别。孩子们自然地将他们的知识分类,对此来理解世界。这是特别有意义和鼓舞人心的,以他们内在的学习需要,并通过数学的技能来联系他们对组织事物以及事物的概念。

为了与家人和小伙伴们分享他们的发现,我们邀请孩子们来制作弗格森公园的地图,指出他们在哪里发现的每一种菌类。通过使用地理位置的语言,孩子们学会了如何表达事物的位置或在那个地方与它相关的其他事物。学习方向和位置是帮助他们理解几何的基本技能。

作为教育工作者,我们希望提高他们在日常生活中对数学的运用。我们提供有趣的体验,让他们有机会用数学的视角探索周围的世界。这将有助于建立对数学的好奇心,并鼓励孩子们在圣彼得女校的教育旅程中对STEM学科产生更强烈的兴趣。

Emma Huang works in Learning Community 1 on Tuesdays, Thursdays and Fridays from 9am – 5pm.

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News from Learning Community 1

An ability to recognise feelings and emotions in ourselves and others, known as emotional awareness, is important for the development of children’s wellbeing. In order to develop their emotional awareness, children need to experience the range of emotions in a safe and supportive environment. They need to feel connected to others to nurture their emotional wellbeing and be able to explore ways to express how they are feeling. 

We embrace opportunities to name emotions and support the development of strategies children can use to recognise, manage and express different feelings in appropriate ways. Through this term’s unit of inquiry, ‘Welcoming transformation can support wellbeing’, we have been exploring the concept of transformation of our emotions. Children have been supported to develop their understanding of their feelings and those of others.

We have provided opportunities for children to explore how emotions can be represented through different facial expressions and body language, and to recognise how emotions feel in their bodies. We have begun discussions around how feelings and emotions are natural reactions to different situations and that there are appropriate ways to express all emotions. We have also been exploring strategies we can use to make ourselves feel better if we are feeling sad or angry. 

The children have begun spontaneously recognising and naming their own feelings and those of others in social play and interactions. They have been supporting each other through connection and comfort to work through the range of emotions. 

Jessica Guimaraes and Jess Catt
Learning Community 1

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News from Learning Community 2

In recent weeks, the children and educators of Learning Community 2 have been exploring, investigating, classifying and documenting the fungi in Ferguson Park. We have become mycologists, or fungi experts! We wanted to find out more and were able to reach out to an old friend. Professor Geoffrey Bishop runs the Friends of Ferguson Park, a volunteer group that looks after and cares for the park. He has supported us in the past to identify various plants that can be found in the park, and along with his knowledge of Botany, he is also a mycologist.  

Professor Bishop visited us in the Centre and shared that there are over 50 different species of fungi that can be found in Ferguson Park. He showed us photos that he has taken of various fungi from both the park and around his home in the Adelaide Hills. We then went into the park to see if we could find and share some of the fungi we have been noticing.  

Along with our scientific focus, Miss Caterina has been supporting the children in the Atelier to explore creative ways we can document and represent fungi. The children have been introduced to Yayoi Kusama, a Japanese artist who makes different types of art – paintings, sculptures, performances and installations – they have one thing in common, DOTS!

She produced a series of colourful paintings of mushrooms covered in dots, illustrating fungi in different shapes, sizes and colours. We invited the children to use their imagination to create their own mushroom artworks inspired by Yayoi’s experience, harnessing a variety of graphic materials and paper.

Through the lens of our inquiry, these are just two examples of how our learning is transdisciplinary. Our curriculum areas are merged through creativity, wonder and curiosity. For children, learning isn’t compartmentalised, it is holistic, and this is why it is important that we offer our children multiple and varied opportunities for exploring and investigating the world around them.

Nell Tierney, Kathy McCabe and Laura Reiters
Learning Community 2

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Find Out What Happens Throughout the Day at ELC

The ELC Learning Community Home Page is a dynamic online sharing space that invites you to participate in the communities’ learning as it happens. We use this tool to communicate important information with families and provide a window into the children’s life at the ELC, as educators share documentation of teaching, specialist lessons and spontaneous moments.

Accessing myLink for the first time:

Each parent has an individual username to access our myLink Parent Portal. Please note that the username is your ID number followed by @stpetersgirls.sa.edu.au Your ID number has been provided to you in an email from the School If you have not accessed myLink before or have forgotten your password, please follow these steps:

  • Visit https://mylink.stpetersgirls.sa.edu.au
  • Sign in with your parent username
  • Click on ‘Forgot my password’
  • Make sure the ‘email’ address is your parent username, type in the code, then click the blue ‘Next’ button
  • Enter your mobile number registered with the School, with the area code (Australia is +61), dropping the 0 at the beginning (e.g. +61 400000000). Then select ‘Text’
  • Enter the security code sent to your mobile number
  • Enter the password you would like to use and click ‘Finish’
  • Return to the login screen at https://mylink.stpetersgirls.sa.edu.au to access myLink

Accessing the Learning Community Home Page through myLink:

  • Access myLink as per the above instructions
  • Click on the ‘MYLINK HOME’ tab
  • Click on your child’s name tab
  • Under ‘Class Contacts’, click on the ELC room name (you may need to enter your user name and password again)

If you have any issues accessing or navigating myLink, please contact our IT Hub via helpdesk@stpetersgirls.sa.edu.au or 8334 2227.

ELC’s Online Etiquette Policy: please note that the ELC Learning Community Home Page and ELC News contain images and videos of other children. We therefore ask that you do not copy or share images or videos, especially on social media, if they contain other children.

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Absences in the ELC

Student Absences Please notify the School via one of the following methods for late arrivals/early departures and absences, ensuring a reason for the absence is included. The School requires a reason for the absence for government reporting purposes.

Text: 0428 601 957 (save to phone contacts as SPGS)

Email: attendance@stpetersgirls.sa.edu.au (If emailing, please ‘CC’ the teacher of the Room as well)

ELC Room Contacts:

  • Stonyfell – 8155 5778
  • Bell Yett – 8155 5777
  • Ferguson – 8155 5776
  • Hallett – 8155 5775

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ELC Immunisation Policy

Under the Government’s No Jab No Play policy, families must meet immunisation requirements to attend the ELC and receive the Child Care Subsidy. Families are required to provide all approved immunisation records to the ELC. Further information is available by clicking here.

Children who are suffering from illnesses such as those listed below must be excluded from ELC in line with our Exclusion Policy:

  • Influenza
  • Chicken Pox
  • Conjunctivitis
  • Diarrhoea
  • Hand, Foot and Mouth Disease
  • High Temperature
  • Infectious Hepatitis
  • Measles
  • Meningitis
  • Mumps
  • Rubella (German Measles)
  • Scabies
  • Scarlet Fever
  • School Sores (Impetigo)
  • Upper Respiratory Tract Infection
  • Vomiting
  • Whooping Cough

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ELC News – Week 6, Term 3 2022

Dear Families

At St Peter’s Girls’ ELC, we place a huge emphasis on the continuous wellbeing of our children. As we navigate the cold weather, it is vital that we optimise any opportunity children have to use our spaces creatively and to play and learn outside.

We recognise that gross motor skills such as walking, running and climbing not only support the physical development of a child, but their overall health and wellbeing. Whilst some may think these basic skills are quickly surpassed, these skills are actually the building blocks for children’s further physical skill development, including independent self-care such as toileting and getting dressed, and posture as they progress into their school years. We ensure children have access to a range of opportunities across the Centre where we focus on the importance of developing these skills so children can extend their capabilities in all areas of life.

Across a week at ELC, we offer children a range of different specialist lessons where they learn to challenge and refine their physical abilities. They explore throwing and catching small and large objects with greater accuracy, balancing on their toes and on objects to strengthen inner core muscles, dancing and skipping to music to define coordination, and much more. This is all supported by our professionally tailored age-appropriate programs directed specifically for each of our Learning Communities.

The use of Ferguson Park becomes another fantastic opportunity where children’s gross motor skills are encouraged, supported and challenged as we encounter logs, stones, creeks and other natural obstacles.

When we nurture these skills throughout each child’s day at ELC, we are promoting a lifelong health mindset, encouraging physical literacy, developing a love for natural and outdoor environments, boosting children’s confidence and self-esteem, relieving stress and frustration, assisting in school-readiness through improved core strength, and building children’s ability to assess risk in the world around them.

We hope that by highlighting our extended curriculum, our families have a greater understanding around the importance, value and emphasis we place in our physical education each day.

Henrietta Balnaves
ELC Manager

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Important Dates

September 19, 20, 26: Parent-Teacher Conversations
Monday October 3: Public Holiday (ELC Closed)
October 4 – 14: Vacation Care
Monday 17 October: Term 4 begins

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Parent-Teacher Conversations

ELC Parent-Teacher Conversations will take place on Monday 19, Tuesday 20 and Monday 26 September. There are designated 15-minute time slots for families to meet with your child’s teacher.

We strongly encourage you to book a meeting with your child’s teacher. From these discussions, future goals for your child may be created to ensure they reflect the perspectives of parents and educators.

Bookings can be made via myLink from Monday 22 August:

  • Log in to the myLink Parent Portal with your username and password. The username is your ID number followed by @stpetersgirls.sa.edu.au
  • If you don’t know your password, use the link provided on the login page to reset it.
  • Once you have logged in and arrive on the Welcome page, click the ‘Community Portal’ tab in the top menu, then click the ‘Interviews’ tab and select the required cycle. You can log in and change your booking any time up to 5pm Wednesday 14 September.

If you require myLink assistance, please contact the IT Helpdesk via 08 8334 2227 or helpdesk@stpetersgirls.sa.edu.au.

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Fathers and Special Friends’ Breakfast

Thank you to everyone who attended our Fathers and Special Friends’ Breakfast yesterday morning. The children cherish any opportunity to show off their treasured ELC spaces, and it’s always so wonderful to share our ELC with our community.

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Vacation Care – Bookings Opening Soon

Vacation Care will run from Tuesday 4 to Friday 14 October, with bookings opening next week on Wednesday 7 September. Please note Monday 3 October is a public holiday and the ELC will be closed.

The booking link will be distributed to families next week via email.

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2023 ELC Enrolment Requirements

We are currently preparing our 2023 intake offers and need to ensure our current families have their allocated days in place.

Please notify me via selliott@stpetersgirls.sa.edu.au if you require an amendment to your days moving forward in 2023, or if you are leaving the Centre at the end of this year.

Sarah Elliott
ELC Enrolments and Finance Officer

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Staff Spotlight

Monique began her career as a Psychologist, working with children and families in both the mental health and disability sectors. After having children of her own, she transitioned into teaching and will soon complete a Graduate Diploma in Early Childhood Education to complement her Master of Psychology.

Why are you passionate about working with children?

Supporting children on their learning journey in their formative years is extremely rewarding. It is a privilege to encourage and nurture positive outcomes in children’s wellbeing and learning. 

What makes St Peter’s Girls’ ELC special?

The warm and welcoming community, as well as the genuine commitment to offer children an inspiring place of holistic learning that values connection, sustainability and reconciliation.  

What does a typical day look like in Learning Community 2?

I’m not sure that a ‘typical day’ exists in an ELC, but there’s always laughter, growth, creativity, movement and collaboration. The rhythm of our day is guided by intentional learning experiences, eating together, times of rest and play, specialist lessons and excursions to the ‘big school’.

What is your favourite memory from the St Peter’s Girls’ ELC?

All three of my children have attended the ELC, beginning with Playgroup. It is therefore a place that holds a lifetime of special memories for me, both as a parent and an educator. 

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Important Reminders

Please carefully read the following important reminders:

  • Please close all doors and safety gates behind you when entering and exiting the ELC. Whilst we appreciate the kind gesture, please refrain from holding open entry/exit doors or gates for other children unless they are accompanied by an adult.
  • We ask families to bring your entry key fobs to ELC each day. If you need to order a new fob and/or report a lost one, email selliott@stpetersgirls.sa.edu.au.
  • Please ensure children wear appropriate shoes and clothing for our indoor and outdoor activities; this includes no dress ups or long necklaces.
  • The School has received reports of concerning driver behaviour on Hallett Road. This includes holding up traffic while waiting for cars to leave in order to park near the ELC, performing risky u-turns and parking in bus zones. As our staff have no jurisdiction over public roads, the School will be asking the police to conduct regular patrols at peak times. We implore all of our community members to support road safety and show courtesy to others.

The welfare of all children in our community is our utmost priority and we appreciate your cooperation.

Henrietta Balnaves
ELC Manager

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COVID-19 Information

If your child tests positive to COVID-19, notify us immediately. Please also advise the type of test (RAT/PCR), the date your child’s test was taken and the date symptoms started (if no symptoms, note ‘asymptomatic’).

Please notify us via email or text:

Email: attendance@stpetersgirls.sa.edu.au

Text: 0428 601 957 (save to phone contacts as SPGS)

If you need to notify us over the phone, please call the Front Office on 8334 2200.

If children are displaying symptoms, it is mandatory that we send them home. SA Health guidelines advise that symptoms include:

  • Fever (a temperature of 37.5˚C or higher) or chills
  • Cough
  • Loss of taste or smell
  • Sore throat
  • Tiredness (fatigue)
  • Runny or blocked nose
  • Shortness of breath (difficulty breathing)
  • Nausea, vomiting or diarrhoea
  • Headache
  • Muscle or joint pain
  • Loss of appetite

Should your child develop any symptoms, even mild ones, they must not attend ELC and should be tested for COVID-19. Those with symptoms who test negative using a RAT must undertake a PCR test to confirm that result. Students who have previously tested positive and have completed isolation in the past 28 days do not need to undertake testing.

Under SA Health protocols, asymptomatic children who are close contacts can attend ELC, provided they undertake 5 Rapid Antigen Tests over 7 days and receive negative results.

Please also note that face masks are strongly recommended indoors for adults, including visitors, except if it impedes the ability to teach or interact with children.

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来自黄老师的信息

Emma Huang

亲爱的家长朋友们,

在圣彼得女校早教中心,我们非常重视孩子们的身心健康。在这个冬季里,我们让孩子们有机会创造性地使用我们的空间,在户外玩耍和学习,这一点至关重要。

我们认识到,像走路、跑步和攀爬这样的大动作技能不仅有利于孩子的身体发育,而且有利于他们的整体身心健康。虽然有些人可能认为这些基本技能很快就会被超越,但这些技能实际上是孩子进一步身体技能发展的基石,包括独立的自我照顾,如上厕所、穿衣,以及在他们在以后上学所要运用到的动作姿势技能。我们确保孩子们在中心获得一系列的机会,我们专注于发展这些技能的重要性,这样孩子们就可以扩展他们在生活的各个领域的能力。

在ELC一周的时间里,我们为孩子们提供一系列不同的专业课程,让他们学习挑战和完善自己的身体能力。他们探索投掷和捕捉大小物体的能力变得更加准确。通过使用他们的脚趾在物体上保持平衡,来加强内部核心肌肉。随着音乐跳舞和跳跃来协调身体。这一切是由我们的专业定制适合各年龄的项目,专门针对我们每个学习社区的孩子。

同样的是,在弗格森公园里的学习体验成为另一个极好的机会去鼓励、发展以及挑战孩子们的大动作技能。在这里,孩子们在圆木、石头、小溪和其他自然障碍中去指引他们的学习。

通过与专业教育工作者互动合作,利用学校的场地和自然环境,我们培养孩子的身体天赋,促进他们大动作能力,来支持孩子们在此技能的成长和发展。

在ELC的每一天,我们的孩子们都在培养这些技能。我们希望孩子们在他们的人生生涯中养成良好的身心健康心态,同时鼓励锻炼自身的身体素质;培养对自然和户外环境的热爱;提高孩子的信心和自尊,缓解压力和克服挫折的能力。通过提高核心力量来帮助孩子们日后进入小学学习做准备,并建立孩子评估周围世界风险的能力。

我们希望通过强调我们的扩展课程,让我们的家庭更了解体育教育在每一天学习的重要性和它的价值。

Emma Huang works in Learning Community 1 on Tuesdays, Thursdays and Fridays from 9am – 5pm.

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News from Learning Community 1

‘Good nutrition is essential to healthy living and enables children to be active participants in play.’ – Early Years Learning Framework 2009, p. 33.

As we continue to investigate the central idea of ‘Welcoming transformation can support wellbeing’, the friends in Learning Community 1 have been looking at healthy eating habits and good nutrition as one aspect of our unit of inquiry.

Since last term, we have been inspired to explore the ELC Community Garden with the children. We started by looking at the lifecycle of plants and how they grow depending on the season and weather conditions. Then, we started to develop a project called ‘from garden to plate’, where we could share conversations about sustainability and community.

This term, children are fascinated by the way the ELC Community Garden is changing with the new seedlings and vegetables that are growing now: strawberries, broccoli, snow peas, brown onions and carrots. We have been extending children’s interest into cooking with the fresh produce, talking about wellbeing and healthy eating habits.

Jessica Guimaraes and Jess Catt
Learning Community 1

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News from Learning Community 2

Discovery of Fungi – The Child as a Researcher

Through our daily investigations in Ferguson Park, the children have made a new discovery. It was with great joy and enthusiasm that they noticed ‘mushrooms’ growing on dead wood, under weeds and on the Kaurna Yarta (land). This is now the root of our inquiry as we unpack our central idea, ‘Welcoming transformation can develop knowledge’.

What are these new discoveries? Are they mushrooms?

These questions began our learning opportunity, to research alongside each other, gaining new knowledge and understandings about fungi and to think like a ‘mycologist’ – someone who studies with fungi.

On discovering these transformations, it has enabled the children to refine their observation skills, to classify the different fungi and use descriptive language. Through these investigations, children have been gaining scientific knowledge, understanding the research cycle of observation, interpreting data, and creating and testing theories.

In our inquiry groups, we have been classifying the different species of fungi. As a reference, we have used an identification chart created by Natural Resources Adelaide and Mt Lofty Ranges and the Adelaide Fungal Studies Group. The children have been invited to identify, observe and describe the variety of fungi we found in Ferguson Park. These inquiry processes have developed and enabled children to compare and sort by shape and size, refining and inspiring their mathematical thinking.

To further our reference, we contacted Friends of Ferguson Park, inviting them to share their understandings of fungi. This opportunity will give children the experience to interact with experts, to form and ask questions to test their theories, and to create new connections.

We invite you to visit Ferguson Park or your local conservation park with your children who are all now budding mycologists with plenty of knowledge and understandings to share.

Nell Tierney, Kathy McCabe and Laura Reiters
Learning Community 2

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Find Out What Happens Throughout the Day at ELC

The ELC Learning Community Home Page is a dynamic online sharing space that invites you to participate in the communities’ learning as it happens. We use this tool to communicate important information with families and provide a window into the children’s life at the ELC, as educators share documentation of teaching, specialist lessons and spontaneous moments.

Accessing myLink for the first time:

Each parent has an individual username to access our myLink Parent Portal.
Please note that the username is your ID number followed by @stpetersgirls.sa.edu.au
Your ID number has been provided to you in an email from the School

If you have not accessed myLink before or have forgotten your password, please follow these steps:

  • Visit https://mylink.stpetersgirls.sa.edu.au
  • Sign in with your parent username
  • Click on ‘Forgot my password’
  • Make sure the ‘email’ address is your parent username, type in the code, then click the blue ‘Next’ button
  • Enter your mobile number registered with the School, with the area code (Australia is +61), dropping the 0 at the beginning (e.g. +61 400000000). Then select ‘Text’
  • Enter the security code sent to your mobile number
  • Enter the password you would like to use and click ‘Finish’
  • Return to the login screen at https://mylink.stpetersgirls.sa.edu.au to access myLink

Accessing the Learning Community Home Page through myLink:

  • Access myLink as per the above instructions
  • Click on the ‘MYLINK HOME’ tab
  • Click on your child’s name tab
  • Under ‘Class Contacts’, click on the ELC room name (you may need to enter your user name and password again)

If you have any issues accessing or navigating myLink, please contact our IT Hub via helpdesk@stpetersgirls.sa.edu.au or 8334 2227.

ELC’s Online Etiquette Policy: please note that the ELC Learning Community Home Page and ELC News contain images and videos of other children. We therefore ask that you do not copy or share images or videos, especially on social media, if they contain other children.

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Absences in the ELC

Student Absences Please notify the School via one of the following methods for late arrivals/early departures and absences, ensuring a reason for the absence is included.

Text: 0428 601 957 (save to phone contacts as SPGS)

Email: attendance@stpetersgirls.sa.edu.au

Phone: 8334 2200 or phone the relevant room as per the contact list below.

Please include the relevant room teacher when sending via email.

ELC Room Contacts: Bell Yett – 8155 5777 Ferguson – 8155 5776 Hallett – 8155 5775 Stonyfell – 8155 5778

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ELC Immunisation Policy

Under the Government’s No Jab No Play policy, families must meet immunisation requirements to attend the ELC and receive the Child Care Subsidy. Families are required to provide all approved immunisation records to the ELC. Further information is available by clicking here.

Children who are suffering from illnesses such as those listed below must be excluded from ELC in line with our Exclusion Policy:

  • Influenza
  • Chicken Pox
  • Conjunctivitis
  • Diarrhoea
  • Hand, Foot and Mouth Disease
  • High Temperature
  • Infectious Hepatitis
  • Measles
  • Meningitis
  • Mumps
  • Rubella (German Measles)
  • Scabies
  • Scarlet Fever
  • School Sores (Impetigo)
  • Upper Respiratory Tract Infection
  • Vomiting
  • Whooping Cough

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