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Wednesday, 5 December 2018

Eat a Rainbow- Try a new fruit or vegetable this week!

 Year 1 & 2 have been investigating how to grow amd eat healthy food. We need at least 3 serves of veges and two of fruit a day to be healthy. A serve is a handful. Eating all the colours of the rainbow means we'll get all the vitamins, fibre & minerals we need to grow and learn.

Your homework assignment- Find and eat a vege or fruit you've never tried before. Comment below!



Wednesday, 28 November 2018

Sharing & Collaborating Beyond GreenGold

It's been another exciting week in The Green Room. On Wednesday morning,our visiting teachers from Singapore watched Room 10 in action, learning about growing food with Mrs Daniel in The Green Room and Edible Gardens.  I think they liked the strawberry picking and eating best.



Later that day two teachers from Papatoetoe East Primary were shown around by Doreen, Holly, Joseph and Danya.  Later they met with Mrs Daniel to discuss implementing their own Enviro CRT programme.  We decided to keep in touch and perhaps organise trips to each other's schools next year.  We'll share more ideas in the months to come.  It'd be great to have another collaborator on our journey towards sustainability!

Lastly two teachers from Maungawhau Primary visited today to investigate ways in which our whole school use Education for Sustainability and the Enviroschools programme across the curriculum.  They met with Mrs Venville and Mrs Daniel, before Danya and Amy did an amazing job of showing them around too. 

We love sharing our ideas and building relationships with other enviro communities!

Friday, 23 November 2018

Marine Metre Squared - Citizen Science

On Thursday, 28 learners and seven parent volunteers joined Mrs Daniel, Mrs Venville, environmentalist Mels Barton & marine biologist Emma on a beach trip with a difference.

We braved the thick mud of the Tamaki Estuary to collect data on the sea life. Our parent volunteers went above and beyond assisting with carefully recording data and retrieving children stuck in the mud. Thank you! Only one gumboot was lost completely.

Despite looks there's lots living down at the Rotary Walkway at low tide; shrimps, fish, crabs, sea worms, snails and lots of cockles. Ryan found an as yet unidentified bright green aquatic worm and Billy found an albino mud crab.  We'll upload our findings for scientists at Otago University to track trends in our marine health.

How cool is it to be hanging out with real scientists in the field and helping collect data for a nationwide study.

We're looking forward to when Mels Barton returns to Sunnyhills so we can compare our data with our last trip.








Tuesday, 20 November 2018

Scoot to School Day


Lots of fun scooting at lunchtime today.  Andy from Auckland Transport was there to check on scooting skills and help out with tips.

Supporting Squawk Squad - We've trapped 20 pests!

The Senior kids at Sunnyhills were set the challenge to use what they've learnt in their enviro lessons this year to create a project that helps nature.

One group planned and ran their own food stalls over two days to raise money for The Squawk Squad. They raised $164.70, that we'll use to fund a trap to help save our native birds. 

Sunnyhills School already has one trap we raised money for last year, and the kids love watching the tally displayed in the hall going up. 

Our trap has caught 20 invasive pests! That's a lot of kiwi chicks being made safer in their natural hime.

Room Tekau Eat Strawberries

Our new bird netting is working a treat; everyone in Room 10 each got a ripe red strawberry today.





We're using the 5+ADay Resource to learn about growing food and healthy eating.

Sunday, 18 November 2018

Enviroschools Celebration 2018


The Enviroschools Celebration closed out an amazing year for Education For Sustainability at Sunnyhills. The learners who represented our school did an amazing job of sharing our action learning with the other schools, councillors, facilitators and local board members. We loved seeing what other schools and ECE's have been up to as well.

In addition, the celebration was a wonderful opportunity for Mrs Daniel, Mrs Venville and Mrs Driver to network and reflect with fellow educators and community contacts.

It was a really proud moment officially receiving our GreenGold Enviroschools Certificate.

Check out all the photos by following this link: https://1drv.ms/f/s!AgJZrEIOptcdvz6dpjzgDvOJ9tTP

Thursday, 15 November 2018

Wednesday, 14 November 2018

Wonderful wetas

Room 12 have been looking at the little animals that live in our backyard πŸπŸžπŸ¦—πŸ•ΈπŸœπŸ¦‹

Today we went on a weta hunt.






We found one baby boy in the Kea weta hotel and one grown up female in the cabbage trees. Do you know the difference between the boys and girls? Ask a Room 12 learner to tell you πŸ™‚

Our weta are special. We look after them.

Tuesday, 13 November 2018

Get Hooked on Nature - Our Design Technology Project

Ben Klasky's TED talk inspired our Year 5 & 6's to come up with a solution to the question "How might we encourage kids to get hooked on nature"


The results have been awesome! Our Year 5 & 6's problem solved in teams and incorporated lots of technology in their solutions. Projects included card games, scavenger hunts, videos, food stalls, eco classroom designs, raps and web sites.

Below is a video about Auralie & Holly's Bugstagram website:


Find more examples of our projects by searching for "Get Hooked on Nature" on Youtube

Wednesday, 7 November 2018

Dissecting Kutai

Today Going Gold dissected kutai (greenlipped mussels), as part of our prep for the Marine Metre Square Project.

Did you know the Hauraki Gulf used to be completely covered with mussels that filtered the water clear? Unfortunately humans stripped all the mussel beds destroying ecosystems and leaving the water murky. We wondered what could be done to fix this.



It was so fun to dissect the kutai and identitfy the parts. A mussel dinner will never be the same again! Did you know they have a foot? And the beardy bits are actually called byssal threads? They're the part that attaches the mussel to the rocks.

We found some surprise crabs in our mussels and did further research about them. They're called pea crabs. They use that mussel as a place to live and eat its food. Some of the crabs had eggs.

Valentina said its the most fun thing she's done in Enviro so far.

We wonder if we'll find mussels on our MM2 field trip ...

Room 19 & 18 Eat a Rainbow

Today we foraged in our edible gardens to create delicious salads. Look how colourful they are!

Eating a rainbow of fruit and veges everyday is an easy way to get a variety of vitamins and minerals our bodies need to learn and grow. And they taste great too!


Can you identify some of our salad ingredients? Comment below!

Tuesday, 6 November 2018

Room Tekau Ma Tahi Create Weta Wonderlands

Room 11 have been researching wetas. They have created hotels for them with the materials left by one of our knowledgeable Greengold Reflection guests. Let's hope they protect our tree weta buddies!

Stay tuned to see if we get any guests.









Tuesday, 30 October 2018

Magic Beans!

What is a bean?

Year Four have been picking our broad bean pods and researching to find out!


Valentina "Beans are seeds!"

We dissected a bean seed each to find the seed coat, embryo and endosperm.

Daniel,"Seeds need water, space, soil and warmth to grow."

Seeds have a coat, some food and a baby plant inside.



Wednesday, 24 October 2018

Silver Beet Scones So Yum

Yesterday Room 18 & 19 harvested our silver beet and baked scones. So easy - we used the Edmonds Scone Mix - just add water!



Everyone washed and ripped up the silver beet leaves. Then we microwaved to soften, before adding them to the sticky scone mix. Twenty minutes in a hot oven and they were DELICIOUS!




Fun to grow & fun to eat πŸ₯¦❤

Room Rima Boys Accept the Radish Challenge

Room Rima Boys Accept the Radish Challenge - How spicy are our home grown radishes?


Lucas "They tasted as spicy as a chilli seed"
Max "The leaves taste like mint"
Ali "It actually tastes really good"
Bodhi "6/10 for spicy"

Wednesday, 17 October 2018

Room 12 and the Wriggly Worms





Austin "They are slimy"
Samuel "I see a baby one. This one is so long".
Emme "They are slow and wiggly"
Harry "We're keeping them in the dark because they live underground".
Loyee "They tickle my hand".
Jerry "It's a little bit gold"

What do you know about worms?

Tuesday, 16 October 2018

Eating Kohlrabi with Year Wha







Do you know what a kohlrabi is? It's a German turnip and we've been growing white and purple ones in our gardens.

Today our Year 4's explored the edible gardens with  a scavenger hunt and then we got to try the kohlrabi. We pulled them up and Mrs Daniel chopped off the root, upper stem and outer peel. We ate the round part of the stem.

Baxter said it tasted crunchy and sweet, like carrots. Yum!

WE'RE A GREEN GOLDENVIRO SCHOOL



Thursday 20th September 2018

Dear Whanau,

I am sure by now your child has come home and told you that today we were successful in achieving our Green-Gold Enviro School status!

Thank you to the whole community for helping to transform our school environment through our working bees to support us on our journey.  The day started with an amazing mihi whakatau (welcome) where our kapa haka group and whole school sang beautifully to set the tone for the day. We were also blessed with beautiful weather!

Thanks to Whaea Tiana, Sapphire and Mrs Knofflock for guiding our kapa haka group and to all the teachers and learners for demonstrating our understanding of the Enviro-Schools waiata.  A special thanks to Mrs Daniel and Mrs Venville for their leadership in our journey.  Our team of student reflectors guided our 5 visitors around the school and through many classrooms to share our learning and show evidence that we meet this Green-Gold statement:

We have a living, evolving vision - progress is celebrated and new ideas added.  The Guiding Principles are woven into all aspects of our centre life.  Sustainability is part of all our decisions and everything we do. Children at our centre have a strong sense of connection to the environment - we know we can effect change for a sustainable world.  Children mainly lead the enquiry and action, with strong support from adults.  We have been able to measure many changes from our actions, and show that we are making a difference.  The environment is more vibrant and healthy; it feels like a living ecosystem that can support our community towards sustainability. Māori perspectives are enriching our journey.  The centre is involved with our community, honouring the diversity of people within it.

Ehara taku toa i te toa takitahi, he toa takitini
Success is not the work of one, but the work of many!