From the Principal

From the Principal

Kia ora Parents and Caregivers,

The end of term is stampeding towards us with less than a week left! Our senior students are finishing their NCEA exams, and our Year 9 and 10 students are looking forward to a lot of fun next week with Y9 ‘Big Days In’ and Y10 ‘Stage Spectacular’ both taking place.

The 2023 Yearbook is here. I always love reviewing the year’s highlights and our students’ incredible achievements. Students can pick up their copy from the Payments office, which is open 8.15 – 3 p.m. daily until Thursday 7 December.

As a school, we have a deep belief in the importance of service to the community. Our students are compassionate, respectful people who care deeply about other people and the environment. They are committed to doing what they can to be of service where they can, and I am so proud of their efforts. This year, our House charity fundraising has been exceptional. Our Houses collectively raised a great deal of money for their chosen charities (The Heart Foundation, Frankie to the Rescue, Pillars, Respect, and Mobility Dogs). In addition, the Houses raised money for these causes – NZ Red Cross/Cyclone Appeal, Rising Swans/Star Jam, Pink Shirt Day and Daffodil Day.

Altogether, the students brought in a net amount of $19200.00! What a wonderful achievement and demonstration of compassion.

We look forward to our Junior Prize-giving at the Events Centre on Thursday, 7 December. A video of the prize-giving ceremony will be posted on our social media channels (Facebook and Instagram) afterwards, so keep an eye out on our Facebook and Instagram accounts.

Thursday, 7 December is the last day of school for Year 9 and 10s. They do not need to bring their bags. Students will be released after the Junior prize-giving at around 11.30 a.m. Reports will be issued at 12pm and available via the Parent Portal.

I wish you a very happy end to the year and a safe and happy holiday period. Here’s hoping it’s going to be a glorious summer.

Kindest regards

Jane Stanley

 

Notices

Uniform Shop Hours for Summer and 2024

See here for Uniform Shop hours for the summer and 2024. There are two parts to the schedule. Please note that Thursday, 14 December, is the shop’s last day of trading for 2023.

Academic

Media Studies Students Finalists in National Competition

Year 13 Media Studies students Kate Liu, Regina He and Fufa Pimolsri are delighted to be shortlisted as finalists for the New Zealand Youth Film Festival. They entered their short film ‘XO’, which they made for a media studies assessment this year, along with a poster and a trailer for their film. They were chosen as finalists in their age group category from 426 entries from all over New Zealand. The students will attend the awards ceremony in Wellington in December.

‘XO’ is a short horror film based around a bully who causes the death of another student. The dead student then returns in ghost form to seek her revenge!

Regina He said they are all very excited: “To be nominated for the New Zealand Youth Film Festival is such a big honour, and we are so happy that our hard work has paid off. Our group never expected that our media studies project would go on to achieve something of this scale. We look forward to making more films together and our work being acknowledged by more people in the future!”

The trio also won ‘Best Overall Film’ for ‘XO’ at the WGHS Media Studies Oscars Evening this year. We wish them all the very best for the awards ceremony in December.

Community

Last chance to win the $100 ‘finder’s fee’ – offer ends 18 December.

From the Board

Board Report - Meeting 14 November, 2023

The board has had another productive year. Members thanked Principal Jane Stanley, her hardworking senior leadership team, and dedicated staff and support staff for going the extra mile. The board members also congratulated Principal Stanley and her team on the students’ extensive outstanding achievements. We are very pleased to see so many students engaged in their learning and making the most of all the opportunities afforded them through our comprehensive academic programmes, sports, music, and extra-curricular activities.

November’s board meeting covered the following matters:

  • Leisen Jobe, Fiona Wilson, Jane Donald and Rachel Bickerstaffe (SLT) presented work undertaken to date to create an aspirational growth profile for each year level.
  • Budget 2024: the Curricular & Textbook and CAPEX budgets, along with a draft Operational budget, reviewed by the Finance Committee, were approved. The final annual budget is to be approved at the first meeting of 2024
  • Principal Stanley provided a presentation on the draft Strategic Priorities for 2024 under the National Education and Learning Priorities (NELPS) and the resources required.
  • AI (Artificial Intelligence) was discussed, noting staff training progress in this area.
  • Principal Stanley shared a PowerPoint presentation compiled from NZQA and MOE data of the 2022 School Performance vs Equity Index, showing WGHS positive achievement results against retention figures.
  • A whānau liaison person, to be shared by WGHS and WBHS, to work with families to improve attendance, is to be partially funded by the MOE. The board indicated support for further funding, as required.
  • Update on property matters and the Whare wānanga project.
  • Update on the Pasifika committee review and plans for 2024.
  • Health and Safety report provided the usual monthly injury report and clinic statistics. The board noted the importance of communicating to all school parties using trailers to ensure correct safety checks are undertaken.
  • Governance standards ratified: Presiding Member’s Role description; The Relationship between Board and Principal; The Relationship between the Presiding member and Principal.
  • Annual Board Audit: self–review of NZSTA checklist assured effective governance at board level.
  • Succession planning – identified requirements for capability in specialist areas, including Māori, Korean and Chinese representation, and legal and marketing skills. If you are interested in assisting the board in these areas, please contact Board Secretary/Principal’s EA, Marie McKerrow.
  • Joy Bradfield, presiding member, is standing down as Chair after seven years. She thanked the board for their support and expressed her appreciation for the privilege of working with so many valued board members over her 10-year tenure on the board.

We hold our board meetings publicly, and all are welcome to attend. Please contact Board Secretary/Principal’s EA, Marie McKerrow, if you would like to do so.

Many hands make light work, and Carrie George and Cherie Drummond would love to have more parent representation to help raise awareness (and funding) for the dressing of the interior of the Whare Wānanga; please contact Matua Eddie Hudson or Marie McKerrow for more information.

Community

AIMES Opportunities for Students that Excel

Community

Team Woody Triumphs Again!

Kavin Vignesh, Soha Kazi and Iris Wong, in Year 9, have spent several months this year working on an electric vehicle, ‘Woody’. The students attended two workshops (CAD, Arduino Programming) at the University of Auckland and successfully implemented an electronic dashboard with a SmartPhone into the electric vehicle.

Following on from earlier successes, they entered the ‘Make Your Marque CAD Competition’ run by EVolocity and came third in October. Well done!

Dr Stephen Kavermann, Mechanical Engineering Lecturer at the University of Auckland, judged entries. He was highly impressed with the standard of their entry. He had this feedback:

Very elegant design, simple but effective, good job! Good use of Fusion 360, but next time try some more “3D” tools. Lacking a mounting feature to attach to vehicle.  

In recognition of their hard work and talent, the team won a $200 Prezzie Voucher.

Congratulations on this impressive achievement.

 

 

 

 

 

See here for more.

https://evolocity.co.nz/resources/2023-competition-results/

Notices

Locker Renewal Time

Locker renewal is now available for 2024.  The price remains the same at $60 per year.  Payments can be made through the Website Payments Page: https://www.westlakegirls.school.nz/payments/lockers/

Sports

Westlake Girls Beach Volleyball Podium Finish

Shyloh Udomsak and Katie Moors – Year 9 Bronze medallists.

Westlake Girls top four junior teams embraced the popular but unpractised sport of beach volleyball for the North Island Secondary Schools Championship on Saturday, 25 November, at the Harbour Beach Volleyball Centre in Mairangi Bay. 

With 26 teams competing in the Year 10 competition and 12 teams in the Year 9 event, the players transferred their indoor skills to the sand for the day. The Year 9 teams of Katie Moors/Shyloh Udomsak and Michelle Catterall/Rori Seymour grappled with the slightly different rules of the game, such as WHEN and HOW to set the ball on the sand. Despite the challenges, Moors and Udomsak impressed everyone by topping their Year 9 pool and winning another bronze medal to accompany the one they won the day before at the North Island Indoor Champs. Westlake’s Year 10 teams of Mari-Lyn Connelly/Leila Halaifonua and Brydie McMillan/Danni Button had a more challenging time facing experienced beach players on the court. 

Two days later, the teams returned for the Auckland Secondary Junior Championship. The Year 10 combination of Aaliyah Sina’au and Brydie McMillan made it into the semifinals, where they met Kerikeri High School, who beat them 2-0. An hour later, they met Long Bay in the bronze medal playoff and won in three sets, 2-1.

Brydie McMillan and Aaliyah Sina’au

 

Sports

Auckland College Young Sports Person of the Year Finalists

After enjoying a successful 2023 Sports season, Westlake Girls was well represented at Eden Park’s Auckland College Sports Young Sports Person of the Year awards with nine finalists on 23 November. 

Kalei Morgan-Tafea was recognised as one of the most Outstanding All-Round Athletes, representing the school in Premier Basketball, Rugby, Touch Rugby, Tag and Ki o Rahi. Ariana Hebden won the Girl’s prize for Ki o Rahi and Pupuke Sports Prefect, Madisyn Yee-Joy won the Girl’s Prize for Touch Rugby.

The Westlake Girls Premier Basketball, Ki o Rahi and Sailing Teams were all recognised as National Champions on the College Sport Roll of Honour. 

Finalists: 

Kalei Morgan-Tafea – All-Rounder

Rebecca Moors – Basketball

Amy Pateman – Basketball

Ariana Hebden – Ki o Rahi

Tessa Guthrie – Rowing

Charlotte Graham – Softball

Harriet Gowing – Snow sports

Lucy Cadness-Aspinall – Squash

Madisyn Yee-Joy – Touch Rugby 

Sports

Year 9A Volleyball Team Wins Bronze at the North Island Secondary Schools Championship

Starting in Division One with the top 32 schools in the North Island, including Westlake Girls Junior A, the Year 9A team recorded a historical feat for the school by winning bronze in Division 2 this week. After the initial pool play games separated the top 32 into two groups, 1-16 (Division One) and 17-32 ( Division Two), the young side, coached by Haymon Keeler, moved into the quarterfinals of Division 2 and beat Hamilton Girls to qualify for the semi-finals. In their top four game, they faced a determined Otumoetai B, who beat Westlake in straight sets, 2-0. Still hopeful of a medal, the young side, captained by Katie Moors, met Mangere College A, who had finished third in the Junior A Auckland League and whom Westlake had lost to in the earlier round of the North Island Champs. Focused and determined, Year 9A beat the South Auckland team 25-18, 25 -22 to win the bronze medal.

Westlake Girls Junior A started the event strongly, finishing at the top of their pool in Division One before doing what no other team had been able to achieve this season: beating Rangitoto A in straight sets during cross-over pool play. This gave Westlake the advantage going into the quarterfinals as the #1 seed, where they met Ormiston Junior College but lost 2-0, meaning they were out of the semi-finals. The Junior A team beat Bethlehem College to finish fifth overall.

Congratulations to Year 10 student Aaliyah Sina’au, (above) who was selected for the North Island Secondary Schools Junior Volleyball Tournament Team.

 

Community

Inspirational Speaker at WGHS Next Tuesday

Don’t forget to book for this extremely exciting speaker coming to Westlake Girls next Tuesday, 5 December.

It’s free!

Jake Bailey is a renowned educator on resilience, the youngest #1 bestselling author in New Zealand history, and a distinguished alumnus of the Commonwealth Study Conference. He gained global recognition at 18 with a powerful speech despite a dire cancer diagnosis. His experiences sparked a passion for understanding resilience, leading him to educate over 85,000 individuals worldwide from diverse backgrounds on evidence-based strategies to triumph over life’s challenges. With a firsthand understanding of the transformative power of resilience, Jake’s mission is to share these attainable skills to improve others’ lives.

Jake will speak to students during the day on 5 December and parents and caregivers on the same evening. Click here to reserve your FREE tickets.

Notices

Textbook Bonds

Textbook Bonds

Textbook bonds paid for students who started in 2019 can now be refunded.  Please email our accounts team to check on this:  [email protected]

Academic

Environmental Warriors

This past term, one of our school’s Year 10 Science Extension classes has been working on action plans to raise awareness and help the health of Wairau Creek. One of the groups decided that as their action, they would send an email to Simon Watts, the MP of the North Shore, to raise awareness about the health of the water and how it affects the local community (which can be read below). Another part of this group’s action plan was to create posters, which you may have seen around the school grounds. Other actions have included bake sales to raise money for tree planting projects near the creek, creating informative posters, and writing articles in local newspapers such as the Rangitoto Observer. It has been incredible to see the tenacity and mahi of these groups as they learn how to make meaningful contributions to the local community while learning important skills such as collaboration and cooperation.

To whom it will concern,

“Ko au te awa, ko te awa ko au.”

I am the river, and the river is me.

It’s a simple truth, yet we ignore it at our own peril. Without water, there is no life. There is no us.

Wairau Creek is a body of water that drains the Wairau area and flows into Milford Beach where, from an estuary at the northern end, it discharges into the Hauraki Gulf. Locals and tourists alike enjoy the beach all year round, with it being a popular location for swimming during the summer seasons. This means that the health of the Wairau Creek can, and does, directly impact the health of the water on the beach. As well as affecting the water on this beach, it can also affect the organisms that interact with it, including the people who go to Milford Beach, their safety, and their wellbeing. The continuity of the community’s interest in connecting with the area and the water is not the problem; the problem is the inaction that continues to force the community into a state of ignorance. It is unfair that such a tight-knit community takes pride in contaminated water—water they let their children play in and that they walk along in the summer.

We are a group of students who attend Westlake Girls’ High School and are writing to express our dissatisfaction with the inaction that is being taken towards restoring Wairau Creek and preserving it for future generations. In our science class, we have been investigating the health of Wairau Creek, and the results are concerning. Results from a test conducted using a Watercare guideline on a water sample from near the beach revealed that there are approximately 50–90 milligrammes per litre of nitrates in the water, indicating that there is a high amount of pollution in the water. Our tests on turbidity confirmed this, with the current turbidity of the area revealing that large amounts of pollution are present. What was most distressing was what we found in our Water Life Lab. Tests conducted found a singular rat-tailed maggot, a species with a sensitivity score of one. The sensitivity score of a species helps us determine its sensitivity to negatively altered conditions and polluted waters. The higher the sensitivity score, the more sensitive the species is, and the lower the score, the less sensitive it is. As no other species were found and the sensitivity of this species was incredibly unique, it is more than safe to assume that species adapted to withstanding clean, green, and serene waters are unable to withstand conditions that human activity has forced upon the creek. When considering that many interact with this water, it is unacceptable that no efforts are being made to change the hydrology and the state of the water in this area. However, we need to do something about it. We are here to say that the state of the water must change, and we must take action now for the rangatahi and future generations.

And so we have. As a science class, we have split into groups to take a plethora of actions to initiate the restoration and preservation of what was once a haven for some of the most unique life in Aotearoa. Our actions are mighty, but mighty is not enough. We need your help. The incredible species that call this creek home need your help. The elders who walk along the shore need your help. The children who play and laugh in this contaminated water need your help. The next generation, whose lives are already being threatened by the continuous degradation of natural resources as a result of global warming and human activity, needs your help. The truth is simple: if you want to play the waiting game, you’ve already lost.

We urge you to take action to start the process of helping to restore Wairau Creek, taking further tests to determine the level of pollution and health risks in this water, and informing the local community of this.

Your help would not only mean empowerment of Wairau Creek and the biodiversity of the area, but for all of the incredible native species across Te Motu and communities that have created significant connections to the water. Change will not come if no effort is made to begin. Change begins here.

Kind Regards,

Westlake Girls’ High School students.

Notices

Important dates for 2024 are now on our website

Are you the type of person who likes to get organised early? Good news! Our key dates for next year are now on our website.

Check them out here.