22

Feb

Bailey and Meg Print E-mail
Written by Bailey and Meg, Snowy Students, Term 1, 2011   

Yesterday on the 21 of February, Meg and I were the student leaders. We both found it fun that we could put up our hand to make everyone stop talking and hosting the meeting on the HDTV was AWESOME. Our community goal was to say our head count backwards because people didn’t concentrate when we did it the normal way; we both think that it was achieved.

My personal goal was to keep everyone busy in my CLP class and I did achieve that goal and enjoyed doing so. Meg’s personal goal was to talk to 5 people she didn’t think she had spoke to yet and she most certainly archived her goal, by speaking and bonding with heaps more than 5 people. 

My highlight since I have been here would need to be the bridge building as it was fun exciting and needed a lot of co-operation from our group. As Meg is on expo I am doing this for her but I do recall in our meeting yesterday that her highlight was that morning and it was doing yoga with Miss Beck. So in summation we both had a really great and challenging time as student leaders.

By Bailey and Meg

 

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School For Student Leadership

School for Student Leadership is a Victorian Department of Education and Training (DET) initiative offering a unique residential education experience for year nine students. The curriculum focuses on personal development and team learning projects sourced from students' home regions. There are four campuses in iconic locations across Victoria. The Alpine School Campus is located at Dinner Plain in the Victorian Alps. Snowy River Campus is near the mouth of the Snowy River at Marlo in east Gippsland. The third site is adjacent to Mount Noorat near Camperdown in Victoria’s Western District, and is called Gnurad-Gundidj. After consultation with the local aboriginal community, this name represents both the indigenous name of the local area and an interpretation of the statement "belonging to this place". Our fourth and newest campus, currently known as the Don Valley Campus is located at Don Valley, Yarra Ranges.
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Our school community acknowledges the Gunaikurnai and Monero-Ngarigo people as the traditional custodians of the land upon which our school campus is built. We pay our respects to all Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people, their Elders past and present, and especially whose children attend our school.