Principals Message

Dear Parents and Guardians,

What a pleasure the last month has been at Sirius College. We were lucky to have events such as the Qurban Campaign, Science Fair, Literacy Week and Inter School Debating Competition which have brought much joy and learning opportunities to our school. A big thank you goes out to all students, staff and parents involved in making it all possible.

These events are examples of the many different ways we can strengthen our students’ learning experience as teachers and parents. Now I would like to share with you an article about several other ways we can achieve this.

BRINGING OUT THE INNER GENIUS

What support do children need from teachers and parents to develop the cognitive skills, values, attitudes and attributes needed for lifetime ¬success? Here are some ideas to help your child become a high performer.

THINK RIGHT

Ask “How could you do this?” “Have you done anything similar before?” “What did you do then?” This helps them develop their own learning ideas and makes them much less likely to say they can’t do things.

Ask “What would happen if … it never got dark/the rivers ran dry/ everyone ignored the law?” A key characteristic of students labelled as gifted is their ability to see how learning connects to the wider world.

Ask “How would you weigh a giraffe/rhinoceros/bridge/house/star?” Creativity builds learning capability and is vital for high performance.

Ask ‘Why do you think … bread goes mouldy if you don’t freeze it/babies cry/ leaves fall when autumn comes?” The ability to deduct, hypothesise, reason and seek evidence is probably the characteristic most -associated with academic success.

BEHAVE RIGHT

This is a “can do” approach to learning, even when it’s hard. If a child says they are no good at something, say: “I know you can learn how to do this if you work at it.”

Being open to new ideas is the hallmark of an advanced learner. Start with being open-minded yourself so you model what it’s like to be receptive to ideas that differ from your own.

Children ask lots of questions if you answer them. The desire to know more – curiosity – is at the heart of all learning. The more curious children are, the better they do at school and in life.

It’s the only way to get good at something. Make sure it is regular, deliberate and planned, working towards achievable incremental goals. Practise what you can’t do well.

(Acknowledgement: Great Minds and How to Grow Them, by Wendy Berliner & Deborah Eyre)

I wish you and your family a restful holiday and look forward to welcoming you all back on the 9th October, 2017.

Deniz Yildirim
Principal