2009 School Terms and Holidays

From

http://www.minedu.govt.nz/theMinistry/EducationInNewZealand/SchoolTermsAndHolidays/2009SchoolTermsAndHolidays.aspx

2009 School Terms and Holidays

This page provides information on the 2009 School Terms and Holidays for State and State-Integrated primary, intermediate, secondary and composite schools. It also provides information for Anniversary Day Holidays for 2009.

2009 Term dates

Primary and Intermediate schools

Term Start date End date
1 Between
Tuesday 27 January (at the earliest); and

Thursday 5 February (at the latest)

Thursday 9 April (90 – 104 half-days)
2 Monday 27 April Friday 3 July (98 half-days)
3 Monday 20 July Friday 25 September (100 half-days)
4 Monday 12 October No later than Friday 18 December (98 half-days)*

* Or to a day in December which ensures that the school has been open for instruction for 386 half-days in 2009.

Secondary and Composite schools

Term Start date End date
1 Between
Tuesday 27 January (at the earliest); and

Thursday 5 February (at the latest)

Thursday 9 April (90 – 104 half-days)
2 Monday 27 April Friday 3 July (98 half-days)
3 Monday 20 July Friday 25 September (100 half-days)
4 Monday 12 October Tuesday 15 December (92 half-days)*

* Or to a day in December which ensures that the school has been open for instruction for 380 half-days in 2009.

2009 Holidays

Schools must be closed in 2009 on Saturdays and Sundays, and on the following days:

  • New Years Day – 1 January
  • Day after New Years Day – 2 January
  • Waitangi Day – 6 February (Friday)
  • Good Friday – 10 April
  • Easter Monday – 13 April
  • Day after Easter Monday – 14 April (Tuesday)
  • Anzac Day – 25 April (Saturday)
  • Queen’s Birthday – 1 June (Monday)
  • Labour Day – 26 October (Monday)
  • Christmas Day – 25 December
  • Boxing Day – 26 December

And the relevant Anniversary Day holiday as listed below:

Anniversary Day holidays 2009

Location Day and date Occurs
Auckland Monday 26 January Within school holidays
Taranaki Monday 9 March Within Term 1
Hawkes Bay Friday 23 October Within Term 4
Wellington Monday 19 January Within school holidays
Marlborough Monday 2 November Within Term 4
Nelson Monday 2 February Within school holidays
Canterbury Friday 13 November Within Term 4
Canterbury (South) Monday 28 September Within school holidays
Westland Monday 30 November Within Term 4
Otago Monday 23 March Within Term 1
Southland Monday 19 January Within school holidays
Chatham Islands Monday 30 November Within Term 4

Preschoolers and Peace

This morning I have been visiting Preschoolers and Peace (Kendra is a good friend of ours) and I would like to share some posts with you.

Just Live Your Life With Your Kids

http://www.preschoolersandpeace.com/?p=516

Teaching the Process of Writing

http://www.preschoolersandpeace.com/?p=517

What We Read Aloud in 2008

http://www.preschoolersandpeace.com/?p=519

Can We Really Discover Joy in the Journey?

http://www.preschoolersandpeace.com/?p=529

Wanganui Home Educators Workshop 21 February 2009

Wanganui Home Educators Workshop

Date: 21 February 2009

Venue: Wanganui East Baptist Church – cnr Nixon and Moana Streets

Cost: $10.00 per person or $15.00 per family or $5.00 per session

Time: 9am to 5pm

Programme:

9.00am Registration and view resource tables

9.15am    Welcome and Notices

9.30am    2 Electives

1. Erena Fussell of LearnEx – Living Room Adventures

Make history come alive in your own home! Hear how to learn history with literature and enliven your study and your children’s mind

2. Craig Smith – Getting Things Into Perspective

Including Dad’s essential role in Home Education and how we can reform the future through home education

10.30am    Morning Tea

11.00am    2 Electives

1. Barbara Smith – Avoiding Burnout

Keeping going when the going gets tough

2. Craig Smith – Changing the heart of a Rebel

For preventing rebellion and dealing with it – Christian presentation


12.30pm Lunch – bring your own, hot drinks provided

1.00pm    2 Electives

1. Craig Smith – The Importance of Reading Aloud

2. Barbara Smith – Training our Children’s Minds

Learn the tools of Learning and Motivation and how to teach using the Trivium method

2.30pm    Afternoon Tea

3.00pm 2 Electives

1. Craig Smith – Home Educating the Secondary Years

What to do in the Secondary years and preparing for Tertiary and  the Workforce




2. Erena Fussell – Early Education


Resource Stands:

Dayspring  http://www.schools.roadshow.org/dca/

Geneva Books http://www.genevabooks.org/

Home Education Foundation https://hef.org.nz

Learnex  http://www.learnex.co.nz/

Contact and please pre-register with: Lisa  neil.lisa [at] xtra.co.nz 06 345 8645

The Thinking Toolbox

The Thinking Toolbox

Thirty-Five Lessons That Will Build Your Reasoning Skills

NZ$38.50

by Nathaniel Bluedorn and Hans Bluedorn

This book is like a toolbox, full of different kinds of tools you can use for different thinking tasks. Just as you use the wrench in a regular tool box to fix the sink, so you can use the tools we give you in this book to solve thinking problems.

  • When it is dumb to argue
  • Using the scientific method
  • Five rules of brainstorming
  • Who has a reason to lie?
  • How to analyze opposing viewpoints
  • How to analyze evidence and sources
  • How to list reasons why you believe something
  • And much more

We wrote this book for children and adults who want to learn logic and critical thinking skills. The Thinking Toolbox follows the same style as The Fallacy Detective with lessons and exercises and an answer key in the back. Parents and teachers, as well as anybody who wants to learn logic, will find The Thinking Toolbox easy to use and practical.

Features:

  • Fun to use – not dry like a math textbook
  • Can be used after The Fallacy Detective
  • Introductory – teaches skills you can use right away
  • Self-teaching format
  • For ages thirteen and older
  • Over 60 cartoon illustrations by Richard LaPierre

See Also
Trivium Pursuit

To order do one of the following:

send email to sales@hef.org.nz with visa number

post cheque or visa number to PO Box 9064, Palmerston North

fax 06 357-4389

phone 06 357-4399

order here:

http://www.sella.co.nz/user/hef/

Homeschooling goes boom in America

http://www.worldnetdaily.com/index.php?pageId=85408

Homeschooling goes boom in America

74 percent increase in number of families teaching own children


Posted: January 05, 2009

By Chelsea Schilling
© 2009 WorldNetDaily

A homeschooling movement is sweeping the nation – with 1.5 million children now learning at home, an increase of 75 percent since 1999.

The Department of Education’s National Center for Education Statistics reported homeschooling has risen by 36 percent in just the last five years.

“There’s no reason to believe it would not keep going up,” NCES statistician Gail Mulligan told USA Today.

A 2007 survey asked parents why they choose to homeschool and allowed them to provide several reasons. The following are the most popular responses:

  • Concern about the school environment, including reasons such as safety, drugs or negative peer pressure – 88 percent
  • A desire to provide religious or moral instruction – 83 percent
  • A dissatisfaction with academic instruction at other schools – 73 percent
  • Nontraditional approach to children’s education – or “unschoolers” who consider typical curriculums and standardized testing as counterproductive to quality education – 65 percent
  • Other reasons, such as family time, finances, travel and distance – 32 percent
  • Child has special needs (other than physical or mental health problems) that schools cannot or will not meet – 21 percent
  • Child has a physical or mental health problem – 11 percent

(Story continues below)

Parents who report that they homeschool to provide religious or moral instruction increased from 72 percent to 83 percent from 2003 to 2007.

Above all other responses, parents cited providing religious and moral instruction as the most important factor in the decision to teach their children at home (36 percent). The second most important issue was concern about the school environment (21 percent), while the third reason was dissatisfaction with academic instruction at other schools (17 percent).

Research has shown the positive effects of homeschooling through the years. While some critics say teaching children at home may stunt their social growth, Dr. Brian D. Ray, president of National Home Education Research Institute, reveals homeschooled students fare well or better than public and private school students in terms of social, emotional and psychological development.

Additionally, homeschoolers earn higher marks than peers who attend public schools. In Academic Leadership, and online journal, Dr. Ray and Bruce K. Eagleson also cite findings from at least three nationwide studies across the United States and two nationwide studies in Canada.

“The home educated in grades K to 12 have scored, on average, at the 65th to 80th percentile on standardized academic achievement tests in the United States and Canada, compared to the public school average of the 50th percentile,” the report states.

Three studies also show that demographics, income and education level of homeschooling parents are generally irrelevant with regard to quality of education in a home setting. On average, homeschoolers in low-income families with less formal education still score higher than state-school averages.