May 17, 2012

Parents convicted over son’s truancy

http://www.stuff.co.nz/4777135a11.html

Parents convicted over son’s truancy

By NICOLA BRENNAN – Waikato Times | Saturday, 29 November 2008

The parents of a Morrinsville College student have been prosecuted and convicted over their son’s truancy.

Kathleen Kereopa and Chris Hemara, charged under the Education Act, pleaded guilty when they appeared in the Morrinsville District Court last week for the repeat non-attendance of their 15-year-old son.

They were both convicted and discharged.

Matamata couple Belinda Witaka and Jason Aoake faced a similar charge on the same day and were convicted and discharged, but ordered to pay $130 in court costs.

Morrinsville College deputy principal Marian Fogarty welcomed the convictions, and the message they sent.

“The available penalties are fines and so it is probably more important that the parents are given a clear message that if their children truant they can be prosecuted. I am sure if the same parents were convicted again there would be a substantial financial penalty.”

A second offence carries a fine of $400.

Ms Fogarty said the college took the issue of truancy “very seriously” and monitored their students’ attendance closely.

“We have prosecuted a family once before, a number of years ago and we will certainly contemplate doing it again.

“But it is a last resort and obviously we would much rather not have to take this step.”

The parents in this case were reported to the police by the town’s ROCKON (Reduce Our Community Kids Offending Now) committee.

The attendance rate for the first three terms of this year was 63 per cent – the goal for secondary students is 92 per cent. A 60 per cent attendance rate is 76 days off a year.

ROCKON meets once a month and is made up of representatives of schools, Child Youth and Family (CYF), the police, Education Ministry and health providers. If an absentee problem arises, the first step is for the police to contact the parents. If things do not improve CYF is called in to set up a family group conference.

If all those interventions failed the next step was to prosecute the parents.

Ms Fogarty said truancy was an issue at every school – Morrinsville College was “no better or worse than others”. Year 10 students most often skipped school, although there were a small number of persistent truants at each level.

The college belonged to the Morrinsville District Truancy Service which employed two attendance officers to help track students and get them back to school. But she said funding had not increased in 11 years, and the service was struggling.

“It should be a government priority to fund all truancy services adequately and ensure that everything possible is done to keep students at school and off the streets. “

Armed robbery for lunch spurs concerns over school violence

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/nz/news/article.cfm?c_id=1&objectid=10545396

4:00AM Friday Nov 28, 2008

A 14-year-old schoolgirl who held a knife to the throat of a younger girl while demanding her lunch has heightened concern over the level of violence some Gisborne schools are having to deal with.

The incident came just days after a fight was filmed at another school and posted on a video website.

A small group of Gisborne Girls’ High School students approached another group of 13- to 14-year-old girls on the school field during lunch break last Wednesday.

Police said an altercation took place and a knife was used in a threatening manner.

The Gisborne Herald said it had been told a 13-year-old student was asked for her lunch, she refused, and her hair was grabbed and a knife held to her throat.

Details of the altercation remain unclear and investigations are continuing.

A parent of one of the girls approached said her daughter was shaken but “coping” and had returned to school.

“All of the parents, on both sides of the fence, are extremely upset at what has happened,” she said. “A knife at a high school is something you don’t want to see.”

She did not hold the school responsible.

“Something like this is out of their control. It’s not something you expect in a Gisborne high school,” she said.

The school’s board of trustees held a suspension meeting on Monday night to deal with three students.

Board chairman Ian Petty said one of the girls had since been excluded from the school, while the two others were on extended suspension pending further investigation by the school’s senior management team and police.

Exclusion applies to students under 16 years old and means the school needs to help them find another form of education.

Girls’ High principal Heather Gorrie said the situation affected a lot of people and it was important to allow due process to take its course effectively.

The school was understood to be supporting the victims.

The incident followed a fight at Gisborne Boys’ High School that was filmed and posted on a video internet site the previous week.

Principal Greg Mackle said a group of boys “wanting to set up a fight club” brought boxing gloves to school and began fighting during an interval period. It is understood camera-phones were used to film the footage.

The incident was stopped by school staff “straight away”.

Mr Mackle felt these fights were “mock-ups”. He was more concerned with the measures they might need to take to ensure general school safety.

His “real worry” was what they were going to do if situations such as the knife incident happened again.

“Put kids through metal detectors? It’s a real concern,” he said.

“We do what we can in terms of what we see and hear, but we do a hell of a lot in promoting the non-violent stuff as well.’

Mr Mackle sympathised with staff at Gisborne Girls’ High, saying he knew how hard they had worked to make their school safe.

“There is no way a school would tolerate that sort of violence. There’s no way a school would turn a blind eye.”

- NZPA

More Home Educators in the Newspaper

An article in today’s Te Awamutu paper about three home educators.

School not out Yet

http://www.flickr.com/photos/14055908@N02/3061663181/sizes/l/

Amateur Radio on the International Space Station

Wairarapa Home Schoolers Talk to International Space Station
ARISS
Amateur Radio on the International Space
Station
Wednesday 26th November 2008
This Wednesday, 11 school children from the Wairarapa Home Schooling Association will ask questions of an astronaut on the International Space Station via Amateur Radio, in what will be New Zealand’s second organised contact, though it is number 387 for the ISS. It also appears to be the 1st time a group of home-schoolers have contacted the ISS. Typically, the time allowed for questions is about 10 minutes, and in this time, up to 15 questions can be asked and replies given.
The questions are of general interest.
The astronaut the children will be speaking to is American Radio Amateur Mike Fincke (KE5AET), this is Mike’s 2nd expedition on the ISS. Mike is a very keen amateur radio operator and has operated from space before. He is one of 9 astronauts on the space station at present. The International Space station orbits the earth every 90 minutes at an altitude of 370 km at a speed of 27,000 km/hour. The Space Shuttle Endeavour docked with the ISS on Monday 17th November, and is scheduled to stay docked to the ISS for 14 days before returning to earth.
Many volunteer Radio Amateurs around the world have worked for over 12 months to make this Radio contact a success, including those in America who have the responsibility for the scheduling and timing. Other countries involved are Australia and Japan. We must recognise that Amateur Radio on the ISS is secondary to everything else, and there may be something outside of our control that may prevent this contact from taking place; it would be unusual at this late stage, but it could happen.
ARISS (Amateur Radio on the International Space Station) is a purely volunteer organisation involving people in many countries around the world. It is supported by the American Radio Relay League (ARRL), NASA (National Aeronautics and Space Administration), the Amateur Satellite Corporation (AMSAT), Japan Amateur Radio League (JARL), and many other national Amateur Radio organisations, including the Wireless Institute of Australia (WIA) and the New Zealand Association of Radio Transmitters (NZART).
ARISS is to inspire, at least in some small way, the study of space to school children from all over the world, to speak to an astronaut who is a Radio Amateur and is on the International Space Station.
The Radio Amateurs in New Zealand who are in charge of this contact belong to the South Wairarapa Amateur Radio Club based in Featherston; Peter Norden (ZL2SJ) the New Zealand Coordinator for the ARISS program in New Zealand, and Ian Miles (ZL2TZW), assisted by Graeme Nelson (ZL2GDN) of Masterton.
The Wairarapa Home School Association (WHSA) is a support group for many of the home schoolers in the Wairarapa province. WHSA provides a point of communication for events and resources that are in the Wairarapa (and surrounding areas), and for parents to plan events that will provide for educational and social activities for their families. Some families live in remote areas in the farming community and others live in the country towns; Masterton is the main town in the province. The children who will be asking the questions are schooled by their parents, and the ages of the children involved range from 5 to 14 years.
The Wairarapa province which is located about 90 km north east from the capital city, Wellington, and is a rural community consisting of dairying, cattle, sheep, timber, cropping and some fruit growing industries. Wairarapa is a Maori word meaning “sea of sparkling waters”, from Lake Wairarapa, a fresh water lake in the province.

The contact should be available live on the internet via http://www.discoveryreflector.ca/events.htm,
and on radio via various Amateur Radio frequencies around the country.

Issacharian Daughters #088 – Wedding Reception Part 1

Issacharian Daughters #088 – Wedding Reception Part 1

Dear Girls,

The next newsletter is attached. (because there are no notes this time I am adding this below instead of in a  pdf)

Warm regards,

Genevieve

ID088 – Wedding Reception – Part 1 

10 Nov 2008

In the weeks leading up to the wedding people would ask my family and I, “Are you stressed?” And in the week before the wedding people would say to us, “Now, don’t tell us that you aren’t stressed!” Days before the wedding someone bought us all little stress balls to squeeze.

And yet these comments had my family and I all flummoxed. We weren’t stressed. Rather we were really enjoying this time leading up the wedding.

We were not relieved of stress because we had handed the whole wedding over to a wedding planner and were now simply sitting back sipping pina coladas while waiting for the big day to arrive.

Place setting

No, the wedding was a project that my whole family took on and we were blessed with a great deal of help from our church and from friends. We did the wedding on a budget and tried to be resourceful and creative to keep outgoings minimal. Friends donated bunches and bunches of lavender which was made up in bundles for each table at the reception.

Wedding Food

More lavender and help was given to make wedding favour lavender bottles as well. And a friend also helped us to make chocolate cameos which were put at each place at the reception. We fashioned the reception meal after a very successful Reformation Day party dinner our church had put on. The dinner was fresh breads and buns, cold meats, cheeses and soup-very simple, but hearty, and much talked about. We figured it was the perfect menu for our reception since we would be self-catering and needed to keep preparation as simple as a meal like this allowed. Dessert was wedding cake, fresh fruit, fruit kebabs and after dinner mints. A baker at our church made all the fresh bread for us and women from church and other places made the soups-big jobs considering we were catering for 350.

One of Dad’s friends heads up a church youth group which is very service-oriented. He said that under the oversight of a talented woman he knew, the young folks could prepare and serve the food at the reception-that it would be a great service activity for the group. We gladly accepted this offer of help. It was a real blessing.


Our church loaned us lots of tables, chairs, plates and cutlery for the reception dinner and a friend with a flat-bed truck along with a crew of others helped us to transport it all to the reception venue the day before the wedding. Another friend was just closing up a portable and homebased cafe and catering business. She loaned us screeds of equipment to make life easier for the folks who were preparing and serving the food at the reception.

Our family was ever so grateful for all this help. And delighted because it made the wedding so much more of a community affair. It was very significant to me that the community I had grown up in and been influenced and nurtured by would take part in so important a step in my life.

The Wedding Cake
Apart from all this help-and we couldn’t have pulled off the wedding without it-my family and I believe the occasion was so pleasant and stress-free because of:

A. Dad’s leadership. He initiated all the strategy meetings and kept things underway.

B. The way my family embraced the wedding as a family project. We had worked together on things before and enjoyed working together. It was natural to now work on the wedding together.

C. The way my sister, Charmagne, and I were at home. We weren’t having to juggle outside work. We could dedicate a lot of time and energy to the wedding in the relaxed atmosphere of our home. This was pretty key. Charmagne did a lot towards the wedding. She made and decorated the wedding cake, designed and made my wedding dress, her bridesmaid dress, the flower girl’s dress, my sister Gracie’s dress, the 14 maiden daughters dresses (drafted and cut out all though only sewed up two), cravats/European ties for Pete and his groomsman, boutonnieres for these two and Pete’s and my mothers, Mum’s outfit and she put together a feather basket for the flower girl and with the help of another friend assembled all the flower bouquets for herself, myself and the maiden daughters. And this is just the beginning! If either of us had been out working 9-5 then I think the time before the wedding would have been stressful. But it wasn’t and this was a wonderful and unanticipated blessing of being daughters at home.

Friends and enthusiastic supporters of Pete’s and my
courtship, the Schultz family, wrote and recorded a
blessing song for us. They couldn’t attend the wedding but
we played the DVD of the song at the reception.

May the Lord be Glorified
(Pete’s and Genevieve’s Song)
Groom (imagine a male voice singing):
From this moment till I die, I will love you as my life
(Ephesians 5v28, 33)
I will leave my family, and will cleave only to thee
(Genesis 2v24, Ephesians 6v31)
With God’s Word I will wash you, I will lead and protect you
(Ephesians 5v26)
As God’s faithfulness is true, with His strength I will be too
(Lamentations 3v22, 23; Psalm 119v90)
Bride (imagine a female voice singing):
From this moment till I die, I will be your chosen bride
(Romans 7v2-3; Proverbs 18v22)
And these vows that I will say, bind our hearts in Christ
always
(Ephesians 5v31, 1 Peter 3v7)
I will love and reverence you, and I will submit to you
(Ephesians 5v22, 33; 1 Peter 3v1)
As God’s faithfulness is true, with His strength I will be too
(Lamentations 3v22-23; Psalm 119v90)
Together:
Now our hearts are one in Christ, and heirs of the grace of
life
(Malachi 2v15; 1 Peter 3v7)
What God has joined together, let no man put asunder
(Matthew 19v6)
With God’s blessing we will seek, to raise Godly offspring
(Genesis 1v28; Malachi 2v15)
Now as we live man and wife, may the Lord be glorified
(1 Peter 5v10-11)
May the Lord be glorified

Pete and I treasure this blessing song, particularly the
prayer it contains that the Lord would be glorified by our
marriage.

Toasts
During the reception my brother, Zach, initiated toasts to Mr and Mrs de Deugd and to my parents as well-honouring and thanking them. My brother, Alanson, toasted Pete and I. We also had speeches by Mr de Deugd, Dad, the best man and Pete. And Dad read out some blessings from people who had played a significant part in my life and who were unable to attend the wedding. I hope, Lord willing, to share these in future newsletters.

For the Greater Glory of God through our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ,

Genevieve de Deugd

Issacharian Wife