Number 5 - 4 March 2015 From the Deputy Headmaster/ Head of Senior School Late last year, I wrote a newsletter article regarding anaphylaxis. I have, with minor editing, included it again in this edition. I do so in order to try and raise awareness of this very significant health issue within our school community. I have an important request to make, but do so in a rather roundabout way below. If you read only one paragraph of this article, please make it the last paragraph. Last year, I watched a program called Insight, on SBS. It may be familiar to some. It is perhaps best described as Q and A with experts rather than politicians. The topic in question was allergies or, more specifically, anaphylaxis. This is a term of which every teacher is aware. We are mandated by Ministerial Order to have two briefing sessions per year on how to use an adrenaline injector and in which circumstances. We are also mandated to have a 3 hour training session every three years so that our skills in identifying a suspected anaphylactic reaction, and our skills in dealing with it, are honed. Awareness of anaphylaxis is part of the professional life of every active teacher. This wasn’t always thus. I first heard the term around 2006. Before then, there were some students with allergies, but these weren’t necessarily seen as life threatening conditions, but rather as something of a curiosity. I didn’t see an epipen, the name for the adrenalin injector, until 2010. Some avoidable tragedies began to sharpen the educational world’s focus on anaphylaxis. The most striking statements on Insight came from parents who were living with a child who has anaphylaxis. There were some very moving comments about the difficulties of managing such a condition, where exposure to an allergen can be deadly. One mother stated that she was often looked at as if she were crazy or, at best, over protective, in her desire to keep her 4 year old away from such common things as nuts. Yet exposure to nuts, the most common allergen for those suffering from anaphylaxis, could result in the death of her child. She has learnt to brush aside such attitudes. The Senior School has students within its ranks who are at the most severe end of the anaphylactic range. An allergen has to be consumed for an anaphylactic reaction to happen. However, we have students amongst our number who are having allergic reactions, albeit not life threatening, when in the proximity of nuts. These reactions have lingering consequences, and have resulted in significant absence from school. They have also resulted in feelings of insecurity, and a sense that school isn’t always safe. The highest incidence of death as a result of anaphylactic reaction occurs amongst teenagers. There is, no doubt, a range of reasons behind such a statistic. I am sure one of the major reasons is that this is the time young people are starting to move out into the world and express their independence, a world which provides its own share of joys, and dangers, for those who don’t have allergies that could kill them. For those that do have such allergies, this is the most dangerous time. ...cont’d/.. It is, perhaps, impossible to protect them entirely from the world. In many ways, the most important educational task confronting those with life threatening allergies is to learn how to manage them in environments that can’t necessarily be controlled. One environment that can’t necessarily be controlled is Melbourne Grammar School. We have a nut policy, which does state that Melbourne Grammar School cannot be declared nut free. Certainly, no food will knowingly be served with nuts, but we as a school do not ban nuts. However, I would ask respectfully that all families consider the above when sending lunches and snacks along to school, and avoid sending nuts, or foods containing nuts. Our students with deadly allergies are only just beginning to learn how to manage them, and to remove one possible source of danger would make a very substantial difference to their peace of mind. They are beginning to negotiate a world in which substantial danger lurks. To remove one such danger in their time in the Senior School would provide some measure of reassurance. We can but ask on their behalf. Nick Evans Headmaster’s Reflection I was pleased to receive permission from the Melbourne Grammar School Council to take sabbatical leave during Term 2 this year. I have divided the leave into two sections; during the first half of the term I will be present for a number of important MGS events, but will be overseas during the second half. In recognition of the centenary of the ANZAC landing at Gallipoli, there will be several significant school events at the commencement of Term 2. Mr Rob Shields, Teacher in Charge of Rugby, has organised a unique ANZAC rugby tournament which will involve schools from a variety of states in Australia, as well as several schools from New Zealand. At the commencement of the tournament, there will be a ‘naming ceremony’ for the fallen Old Boys from each school who were killed at Gallipoli, led by the respective rugby captains. An ANZAC Service will be held, as well as a variety of social functions, including a formal dinner in the Luxton Dining Room. On 27 April, the School’s ANZAC Day Service, held in the Old Melburnians’ Memorial Hall, will be a special event enjoyed by Senior School students. A variety of curriculum initiatives, especially by the History Department, have been implemented to recognise the important celebrations occurring this year. I will be present for these and other important MGS events, such as the entrance examination and various School AGM’s which are held in April and May. In the second half of the term, I will be visiting current parents, past parents and Old Melburnians in Hong Kong and London, before flying to Singapore to complete a leadership course at the Centre for Creative Leadership. The course topics will cover strategic issues, business operations, managing change, boundary spanning, talent identification and management, as well as individual leadership styles. The course has been highly recommended and I am looking forward to attending. During my absence the Head of the Senior School, Mr Nick Evans, will be taking on duties as Acting Headmaster which will be a great experience for him and I am confident he will perform admirably in the role. I will be returning to Melbourne Grammar School in the final week of the July holidays to resume my duties for the commencement of Term 3. Roy Kelley From the Director of Leadership The Old Melburnians As many within the Melbourne Grammar School community well know, we are incredibly fortunate to have such a large and actively engaged alumni body, known collectively as The Old Melburnians. While I remain very fond of my old high school, even attending the occasional casual reunion, there is no formal group or association charged with keeping alumni connected to the School or one another. As a result I know little about the goings on at the School or what some of my former classmates might now be doing. In contrast The Old Melburnians remain involved with Melbourne Grammar School through sporting clubs, functions, mentoring programmes and various other activities. They are also kept up-to-date with the current life of the School through publications such as the Grammar News and The Melburnian. During my time at MGS I have also been impressed with how many OM’s are willing to return to the Bluestone to speak to current students and staff. In my role I am contacted on almost a weekly basis by former students offering their assistance in one form or another. Some are recent graduates, but the majority finished some decades ago. Of the latter, a number have not visited the School since the day they graduated. One such person is Mark Balla (OM1980). Following a lengthy career as an editor with Lonely Planet Publications, which saw him travel to over 70 countries, Mark established and later sold a technology company to Indian interests. It was during a business trip to India that Mark visited some schools located in slum villages near Mumbai. He noticed that while the schools were full of young children and adolescent boys, there were very few teenage girls. Upon enquiring why this was the case, Mark was shocked to discover that the main reason was the absence of toilets at the schools. While this had little impact on the sanitary requirements of the boys, it caused significant shame and practical difficulties for girls once they started menstruating. Mark returned to Australia and formed a charity named ‘We Can’t Wait’, with the aim of funding the installation of toilets in Indian schools. Mark made contact with me two weeks ago following an invitation he received to attend the Community Speaker Series. His email briefly outlined his career to date and included an open offer to speak to students if an opportunity presented itself. With this week’s Senior School Assembly being used to promote the forthcoming Global Awareness Week, I invited Mark to speak at the assembly and run a lunchtime discussion forum in the CLL. Arriving at MGS early, there was time to take him for a tour of the School before the assembly commenced. This is always an enjoyable experience, particularly if an OM has not visited the School for some years. It is remarkable to hear former students vividly recount stories or experiences. In Mark’s case he was able to recall fleeting moments or anecdotes even though they happened some 35 years ago. Walking into the Memorial Hall for the assembly, memories of his graduation ceremony came flooding back. Mark then provided the audience with a lighthearted but insightful overview of his work. The involvement of former students at Melbourne Grammar School is quite unique, with few Australian schools having such an active alumni association. Hopefully this will continue for years to come, with our current students remaining closely connected to the School beyond their time of graduation. Nathan Jessup From the Chaplain Global Awareness Week The Pakistani girl, Malala Yousafzai was only 11 years old when she began writing an anonymous diary blog advocating for girls’ universal rights to education. She was shot in the head by the Taliban. She miraculously survived. She was named one of TIME Magazine’s most influential people in 2013 and she has since won the Nobel Peace Prize and is now a global champion of human rights. As I write, two Australian citizens, alongside many other people, are awaiting execution in Indonesia. At least 150 children are locked up in detention by our Australian government. Thousands of people are imprisoned throughout the world for speaking their opinion or just for being who they are. Between 40 and 50 million people are currently displaced and seek safety outside their country. It is no longer possible not to pay attention to what is going on around us in the world. Technology has brought us so close together. With one click, we can celebrate what happens on the other side of the world and we can weep over injustices. We are living on one planet. We are one human family. We are all inter-connected. What happens to one affects us all. We have many cultures and expressions of our humanity but ultimately we share one world and we have to learn to live together – our future depends on it. Who is my neighbour, the lawyer asked Jesus in the famous story of the Good Samaritan. Jesus illustrated how our neighbour is everywhere: he or she is the one right next to us. But our neighbour is also the child dying of Ebola in Africa, or the girl denied her educational rights in Nigeria, or an asylum seeker boarding a boat to reach Australia, or the homeless living right next to us in our own city. Our neighbours are everywhere. Christianity is very clear: we all belong together and we need to love our neighbour as ourselves. On these two commandments hang all the law and the prophets. It begins with our neighbour right beside us and extends to the furthest corner of the earth. I am sure that you, like me, take great inspiration in the way Malala Yousafzai spoke up and inspired the world. Let us hope and pray that we may all have the eyes to recognise our neighbour in need and have the courage to love him and her. Next week is Global Awareness Week in Senior School and we are already beginning with activities and speakers this week. The Chapel services throughout the two weeks will be entirely student-led with a year 12 student reflecting on the Good Samaritan story and a guest speaker next week reflecting on her experience as a refugee. I hope that our students and staff will enjoy our global focus so that together we may come closer to living in harmony with our neighbour. Blessings, Rev’d Hans Christiansen From the Languages Department MGS Japanese Department: Tour/Exchange Opportuni es Notices have been sent home with all students of Japanese in Years 9-12 this week in relation to the following opportunities. If you are interested in your son participating in any of these programmes, please contact me by email at [email protected] or phone on 9865 7774. 2016 Japan Tour (27 December 2015 – 15 January 2016 TBC) We are currently working to finalise the arrangements for the next Study Tour to Japan. It will follow our usual pattern of just over one week of travel to various parts of Japan, including the ancient capital of Kyoto and then another week spent in a home-stay with the students at Waseda Senior High School. Hosting (25 July – 8 August 2015) In weeks 3 and 4 of Term 3 each year, we welcome about 12 students from our sister-school, Waseda High School, with two of their teachers. We provide ESL classes for the Waseda boys each day and they spend the rest of their school days in class with their host brothers or on excursions to Healesville, the Botanic Gardens and the like. As with all exchange programs, we rely on the generosity of families to host incoming students and provide them with an opportunity to experience normal family life in another culture firsthand. Students planning to participate in the Japan Tour are normally expected to host. Year 10 Waseda Exchange (27 December 2015 – 30 January 2016 TBC) There is an exciting opportunity for up to 3 students currently in Year 10 to stay on for a further 2 weeks in Japan at Waseda High School at the conclusion of the 2016 Tour. A small number of boys have taken up this additional opportunity to challenge themselves and develop as self-directed learners since the introduction of Beyond the Gates. The boys would return to Australia in time to begin the first full week of the 2016 school year (Monday 1 February). Megan McLaughlin Head of Japanese
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