Bright Beginnings Family Daycare | Primary School
Bright Beginnings Family Daycare
Phone: 0401387197
Address: Mt Warren Park 4207 Mt Warren Park Queensland, Australia
Website:
Likes: 289
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25.01.2022 This weeks cooking experience is Tomato soup which is one of my friends favourite meals to eat for dinner . The children helped cut the tomatoes up and mix all our ingredients together carefully on the shove . We also made homemade garlic bread with parsley from our garden to drip into our tomato soup . The perfect meal for a winters day .
25.01.2022 Today we cooked some yummy salt crusted baked barramundi for lunch !! Thanks Grandma for getting us the barramundi and Pop for sharing the recipe
25.01.2022 Making sure our bikes are up to roadworthy standards for National Road Safety Week ! We created our own bike garage where we serviced and fixed the bikes with spanners, hammers, nuts and bolts to ensure they meet roadworthy standards. While the children were working hard on their bikes we talked about bike safety. Why do we need to wear helmets when riding our bikes? What are the reflectors on our bikes for? We should always walk our bikes when crossing a road! And we should always ride our bikes on the side walk with our parents till we get older!
21.01.2022 Today we started our Reconciliation week celebration by learning about the Aboriginal History of Hunting and Gathering. Which lead us to attempting to make our own hunting tools .
21.01.2022 Today we went and explored Pirate park in lead up to Talk like a Pirate Day . @traceyslillangels If you would like to make a donation to help a family effected by childhood cancer hit the link in the comments
20.01.2022 / Kindergarten / I am 4. I cannot write my name because instead youll find me lost in a world of magical, imaginative play. I cannot recognise many letters bec...ause instead I am busy taking risks and learning resilience through failure in play. I cannot read a book but instead I can read other peoples body language and determine how they are feeling. I cannot count beyond 20 but instead I am learning inclusion and know how exclusion makes others feel. I do not sit still because instead Ill be running, jumping, swinging and turn-taking in the garden. I do not complete worksheets because I am busy using my natural curiosity and learning in authentic ways. I do not need any flash cards because my vocabulary is already advanced from the singing and reading I do with my loved ones. I can already rhyme, hypothesise, initiate and reciprocate conversation and there wasnt a test needed to determine that! I am not always happy, because I have a healthy respect for ALL of my emotions and am learning how to regulate them. I am actively involved in decision-making that affects my life and learn natural consequences from some of my decisions. My social & emotional skills are actually far more predictive of the positive outcomes ill experience as an adult, rather than early academics. Regardless of my families wealth or demographic, my social & emotional skills right now will largely predict my future wellbeing including criminal activity, tertiary skills, and overall happiness. Do not feel the urge to rush your children into early academics. There are FAR more important things in life
20.01.2022 Lots of fun was had today with this invitation to be imaginative with The Very Super Bear
20.01.2022 Pour , fizz and bubble
20.01.2022 Happy International Mud Day
19.01.2022 Ruth Nalmakarra, Milingimbi Art and Culture chairperson and senior artist, demonstrates the upmost respect for her materials. Nalmakarra harvests all of her mat...erials by hand from Yolngu country. Her artworks are of the country and tell the story of the country. Her recent giwilirr (conical baskets) are painted with Djirrididi miny’tji, Garrawurra clan kingfisher designs. These designs are also painted on the body during Garrawurra ceremonies. Representing the Djan’kawa sisters; their knowledge, journey and giving of all things life sustaining, these pieces have a big story to tell. In the context of Long Water exhibition (currently on display at IMA, Brisbane) these pieces draw our attention to the salt water that the sisters traversed, the sacred waterholes they created and the fresh water they drew to the surface. 1/ Nalmakarra. Photo by Rhett Hammerton, 2019 2/ Nalmakarra holding Gamununggu (earth pigment) harvested from the saltwater country at Langarra. Photo by Rhett Hammerton, 2019 3/ Nalmakarra holding freshly harvested gunga (pandanus). Photo by Rhett Hammerton, 2019 4/ Installation of Djirrididi giwilirr for Long Water, IMA, Brisbane. Including pieces by Ruth Nalmakarra, Helen Ganalmirriwuy and Mandy Batjula. 2020 #ruthnalmakarra #helenganalmirriwuy #mandybatjula #imabrisbane #garrawurra #yolnguhomeland #australiancpntemporaryart #fibreart #weaving #earthpigment #sustainableart #bigstory See more
19.01.2022 This weeks cooking experience was sausage rolls. The recipe was shared to us by one of the children as their favourite thing to cook at home with their family. The sausage rolls were healthy and delicious. Our worms also go to have our vegetables scraps for lunch
19.01.2022 Pyjamas + yummy food + games = A fun day
17.01.2022 As the children and I have been doing lots of cooking experiences as of late , we have been thinking of different ways to dispose of our food scraps and decided to get our own worm farm . Yesterday we constructed our new worm farm and put our worms inside.
17.01.2022 And that’s how you transport your toys from the bottom floor to the top floor of the loft! Team work
16.01.2022 We acknowledge the Traditional Owners of the Land on which we stand. We acknowledge the Yugambeh People of the Yugambeh Land and pay our respects to Elders past and present. #nationalreconcilationweek2020 #InThisTogether2020 #NRW2020
16.01.2022 Happy World Chocolate Day
15.01.2022 Thursday morning spent outside
14.01.2022 Were all being encouraged to growl like a pirate and even dress up as one to ensure a child cancer support charity can continue its great work. With COVID-19 ruining so many events, the pressure is on to make Talk Like A Pirate Day a huge success.
13.01.2022 What does it feel like sensory experience lead us to feeding our babies who then needed a bath
13.01.2022 What you need to know before July 12!
12.01.2022 Children take increasing responsibility for their own health and physical wellbeing. Cutting up our own fruit salad for morning tea and planting our own vegetables, both experience allows children to show an increasing awareness of healthy lifestyles and good nutrition.
12.01.2022 Fun at Funderwood Park with @traceyslilangels
12.01.2022 What do you do when you have copious amounts of ripened mulberries? You make mulberry pie and you have to have personalised cooking aprons
11.01.2022 Showcasing Aboriginal and Tories Strait islander culture for Naidoc week.
11.01.2022 Shark bay small world play for #sharkawarenessday
10.01.2022 Meet Rosko! He enjoys cheese and showing off his skills Children bond quickly and closely to animals and tend to confide in them. Therapy animals, such as dogs, have contributed to countless health, social, behavioural and emotional benefits, and may have positive impacts on overall wellbeing and operate as psychological assets.
10.01.2022 When Mother Nature gives you wind you make a kite and fly with it
09.01.2022 National Aboriginal and Indigenous childrens day celebrations
09.01.2022 Just another perfect day spent outside with my little friends! Who else is loving this weather
08.01.2022 Now thats a marble track
08.01.2022 Bright Beginnings and Traceys Lil Angels Family Day Care are coming together to take part in Talk like a pirate day, a nationally recognised major fundraiser for childhood cancer support !! If you would like to make a donation please do by clicking the link below! Every dollar raised will help Childhood Cancer Support provides not only accommodation but also transport and other social activities for the whole family free of charge. This would not be possible without your support. Keep a child effected by cancer closer to their family!
08.01.2022 Today we celebrate National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Childrens Day. The theme this year is We are the Elders of tomorrow, hear our voice, which ...honours the movement of traditional knowledge from Elders to the next generation through stories and cultural practice. Indigenous knowledge has a transformative power, crucial to fostering human development and social justice and we must hear the voices of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children today, empowering them to fulfil their role as the influential Elders and leaders of tomorrow. #ChildrensDay2020 #EldersOfTomorrow #StrongInCulture See more
04.01.2022 Yummy home made burgers for lunch today
03.01.2022 Yesterday the children and I read an Aboriginial story about Warnayarra the Rainbow snake . In the story, Warnayarra broke all the trees and smashed some humpies. The children asked what was a humpie. We then learnt a humpy, also known as a gunyah, wurley, wurly or wurlie, is a small, temporary shelter, traditionally used by Australian Aboriginal people. These impermanent dwellings, made of branches and bark, are often built prior to the construction of more permanent buildings. Today the children and I made our own humpy . We then did some researched on Australian Indigenous lifestyle before Colonisation .Aboriginal and Torres Strait Island communities only used the land for things that they needed - shelter, water, food, weapons. They never overused it or damaged it.
03.01.2022 This weeks cooking experience which was a idea shared by one of the families was sushi !! Thanks you for leading us your sushi maker @traceyslilangels!
03.01.2022 This morning was the perfect weather for a trip to the park
03.01.2022 Dont forget to update your income with Centrelink and ensure your 2018-2019 tax return is lodged before June 30. CCS returns on Monday, 13th July .
02.01.2022 Science week Ocean challenge! Life in the Ocean - Marine Plants and Animals #oceanchallenge
01.01.2022 Scissor cutting, leaf threading and mulberry paintings.
01.01.2022 It's National NAIDOC Week! To help celebrate Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander history and culture, this week we'll be sharing the traditional weather knowl...edge gathered by Australian communities over thousands of years. SeptemberNovember is Laju (the hot season) in the seasonal calendar of the Yawuru peoplethe native title holders of land and sea in and around Broome, Western Australia. From October to November is the build up to the wet season, when the days are very warm and the humidity is high. The first rains indicate the end of Laja. It is a time when the seed pods of the various acacias (soap tree, pindan wattle) have split open. The wild pear and cocky apple are bearing fruit but it is not ripe yet. The white gum trees are flowering and attract the honey fly. The honey fly makes honey nests in the Jigily tree and Inland Bloodwood which is collected and eaten. Wood and bark from the paperbark is collected for shelters in preparation for the wet. Explore our Indigenous Weather Knowledge website at http://www.bom.gov.au/iwk/ #NAIDOC2020
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