Weekly Student Blog
Every week, our students share their ideas, opinions and insight in the Wenona Weekly Student Blog.
A message for our new leaders
At
our Principalâs Assembly this week, Nina, our outgoing Head Prefect (2017/2018)
gave these words of advice to her student cohort as she handed over the reins
to the new student leadership team.
âOver the past year, I have spoken to you
about kindness, respect and resilience. And most recently, I challenged you to
take the initiative to be a leader in everything you do. I asked you to act
with integrity and kindness; to be the best version of yourself.
The handover of leadership positions is a
time of change. It presents each of you, no matter what year youâre in, with an
opportunity to reflect on the year so far, and to make decisions about what
comes next.
In light of this, I wanted to remind you
that you have the power to make a positive difference to the lives of those
around you. It might seem like an easy thing to do, but itâs also an easy thing
to forget to do! In the words of J.K Rowling, âWe do not need magic to change
the world. We have all the power we need inside ourselves already. We have the
power to imagine better.â
Perhaps you assume that as an individual,
you donât have the power to make an impact. But you do! Just remember that all
you need to get started is a desire to make a change⊠and a little bit of kindness
to help you succeed along the way.
There is a saying that on a high tide, all
ships rise. Put simply, when you make a difference to someoneâs life, it
creates a ripple effect. That person will then hopefully help someone else, and
so on, and so on. By taking 10 seconds out of your day to talk to someone new
or to help someone who is struggling, you will help to create a lasting
positive effect on everyone around you.
Half the year is gone, but you still have
another semester to decide what impact you will have on the world and the people
around you. It can only be what you make of it, so choose something bigger than
yourself. Choose to make an impact. Choose to give to others.
Girls, over the past year it has been such
a privilege to see you dive in, treat each other with kindness and give your
time to each other. In the conversations Iâve had with so many of you, Iâve seen
your strength, your passion to make a difference and your humour. Itâs reminded
me how lucky I am to be part of this community.
So, all I ask now, is that you carry with
you the importance of being kind to others; the importance of acting with
integrity; and the importance of working to be the best version of yourself. Never
forget the impact you can have on the lives of the people around you!
Thank you for a wonderful year.â
Nina
Head Prefect
Be a leader
As we announced our new School Leaders for 2018/19 at Assembly this week, our current Head Prefect, Nina, spoke to the School about what it takes to be a leader.
âIn light of todayâs leadership announcements, I would like to share this story with you.
A few years ago, I was in London with my Mum. Weâd been visiting family and were returning to the hotel. As I walked over to the lift to go up to our room, I turned round to find Emma Watson standing right next to me.
As a huge Harry Potter fan and just a general lover of all things Emma Watson, this was my dream come true. I introduced myself, confessed my love for Harry Potter and told her how inspired I am by her work with the UN. I was hoping to have a decent conversation with my idol. But after an incredibly brief conversation - which consisted of a few words at most - Emma turned to face the other way and put her headphones back in.
Slowly, realising things were not going to plan, I attempted to extricate myself from what was an awkward situation. My Mum then politely asked if I could perhaps have a photo with her. A question to which Emma Watson replied, âNo thanks.â
I found it incredibly disheartening that someone who I had always looked up to, would treat me in this way. The reason we admire people is because we want to be like them, because their actions, choices and decisions are ones we support and perhaps wish to emulate. Given we are celebrating our new leaders today, I wanted to share this story with you and explain why it had such an impact on my 15-year-old self.
A role model holds immense power. When someone is your role model, their actions and their values are incredibly important to you. When my role model treated me in a way that was less than admirable, I was disappointed.
Today, I can be a little bit more rational about it. Emma was probably having a bad day, as we all do, and didnât want to talk to some random, lanky, awkward 15-year-old. And I also want to reiterate that I still find her work for the HeforShe campaign inspiring.
But any leader - whether you are as famous as Emma Watson or you are a leader here at School - has a responsibility to consistently act in a genuine and kind way. You donât get to pick and choose when you want to be a leader and who you want to be kind and giving to. You can have a bad day, but you cannot take it out on the people around you. Being a leader is about acting with integrity at all times; it is about genuinely caring for others.
Being a leader is about understanding the impact of your actions.
I want you to think about someone you look up to. Maybe it is someone in an older year, a sibling or an actress. What impact do they have over you? How have they shaped the way you act?
To Year 11 and Year 10, regardless of whether you are elected in a formal position, you all have a choice to act like a leader over the next few years. And to every girl in this room in any year group, you have the choice to act like a leader. Because it isnât something that just happens when you are given a badge. In reality, it is you who decides whether or not you are going to act like a leader. If you act with integrity, if you are authentic, and if you are kind and giving, you are a leader. And you will continue to be a leader, regardless of whether you have a badge.
I can think of so many girls who have the influence and the impact of a leader. Only some of them have badges.
Annie is a leader because of her passion and her hard-working nature. Katerina is a leader because she brings positivity to any situation, and positively influences those around her. Sophia is a leader because of her strength, her ability to share with others and her humour. Julia is a leader because all she ever does is try to make the people around her smile.
While these girls all have different qualities, they all share something in common: they choose to act in a way that changes the days and lives of people around them for the better. They choose to be leaders.
So, in light of Harry Potter, I want you to consider the words of Dumbledore, âIt is our choices that show who we are, far more than our abilities.â
I want to leave you today with a challenge. Todayâs leadership announcements will only define who you are and how you act if you let it. Regardless of the results, be true, be genuine and be kind to everyone. Uphold the values you hold dear and use them to bring positive change to the lives of those around you. Be resilient, act with grace and give your time to others. Take the initiative to be a leader!
Thank you.â
Nina
Head Prefect
With Refugees
Ahead of Refugee Week 2018, Rose (Year 12) addressed Assembly and encouraged everyone to celebrate the valued contributions refugees make to our society.
âAccording to the Oxford Dictionary, the definition of a refugee is: a person who has been forced to leave their country in order to escape war, persecution, or natural disaster.
Over the past few years, Australia has engaged in the processing of asylum seekers in offshore detention centres in an attempt to stop refugees arriving in Australia by boat. This decision stemmed from a perceived âloopholeâ in our Human Rights legislation â if refugees do not enter Australian waters or arrive on land, they are not âour problemâ.
This method of detaining refugees in offshore detention was meant to be a deterrent to asylum seekers using unsafe boats as a means of transportation here â which is considered illegal by our government as they do not have Australian visas.
However, what our government has done, and continues to do is illegal.
It is in direct violation of Article 9, 13 and 14 in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, a document which our government has signed and ratified into law in this country. Article 13 stipulates that no individual may be unfairly held in detention with Article 14 outlining that everyone has the right to seek AND ENJOY in other countries asylum from persecution.
We have been called out by the UN and other countries due to our conduct in the treatment of refugees and this era of wilful ignorance must come to an end.
The gross abuse of Human Rights which occurs in these centres gains publicity for a short period of time, and henceforth appears to dissipate from public discussion.
We must take action or we are just as culpable as those who put these innocent people behind bars.
This yearâs theme for Refugee Week is #Withrefugees. Its purpose is to highlight the success of refugees in our country and foster support for those who remain unable to enter Australia.
Consider this. Since beginning this speech, 40 people have been forcibly displaced from their homes.
Do we want history to remember us as people, women of agency and privilege who stood by and said nothing, who did nothing about the illegal prosecution of those fleeing their war-torn countries in search of a better life?
Or do we want to be remembered, both by ourselves and under the harsh light of history, that we, as articulate, privileged women stood #Withrefugees in opposition to this policy of human rights abuse?
I urge you to consider and discuss with those around you the ramifications of silence in this matter and to contemplate what we can do to change it.
Thank you.â
Rose (Year 12)
National Reconciliation Week
Last week, Wenona marked National Reconciliation Week with some inspirational speeches at Assembly. Here is an excerpt from Brooklynâs speech (Year 12) about Reconciliation.
âI would like to start by acknowledging the traditional owners of the land both past and present, the Cammeraygal people of the Eora nation. That may mean nothing to you right now, but to an Indigenous person thatâs everything, getting recognition for something that belongs to you.
Now for those of you who may not know me, my name is Brooklyn. Iâm a Year 12 student and Iâve been attending Wenona since Year 8. Iâm meant to talk about Reconciliation so I researched the word. It came up with ârestore friendly relations betweenâ and I thought, thatâs not really true. Not everyone is friendly, have you seen me on a Monday morning? Iâm basically a black version of the Grinch! Not even kidding though.
Instead of telling you the urban dictionariesâ idea of Reconciliation I thought I should give you an example of someone who shows the true meaning of Reconciliation. Reconciliation is about integration, itâs about coming together, not judging a person by their race. I believe the person who best represents this is my dad. Iâve always had quite a strong connection with my dad because he is such an inspiration to me. I look up to him. In my eyes no one can even compare to how caring and compassionate he is. Growing up was extremely hard for him. A lot of people in his life put him down because of his colour. No, itâs not because heâs black, it was actually because he wasnât black enough. When dad was growing up he used to ask why he was lighter than everyone else. My nana told him itâs because he was born in the sun. My dad is truly amazing, heâs made connections all over the world. Firstly, he married my beautiful step mum. Guess what! Sheâs Dutch, Spanish and English and was born in Australia; sheâs the whitest race to come into my life. Sheâs the first white person to become part of our family and honestly, I love her just as much as I love my black mum. My dad branched out and became a part of the Native American community. He contributed in their traditional dances and was welcomed into their tribes. He doesnât just accept other races, heâs also adamant about helping our home community to get our lands back. And the movie he made was showcasing our culture, airing it to the world. He released it at the Sundance Film Festival, the Byron, Melbourne and Sydney film festivals, winning numerous awards. I think having a harder life growing up was what made him the man he is today and I admire that. Heâs so humble with everything heâs done. Heâs delivered a TedX talk. Heâs made his own movie. Heâs been an actor. Heâs done so much with his life because he doesnât let his skin colour bring him down. Heâs owned it. He wears his colours with pride.
Reconciliation is about accepting people, no matter what their colour or religion and recognising who they are as a people.â
Brooklyn (Year 12)
Letâs hear it for Cochlear!
During the holidays, Alisha and I were fortunate enough to participate in the Cochlear Autumn School of Engineering. We are both interested in studying engineering in the future, and this week gave us a chance to learn about the different disciplines of engineering and what is involved in the everyday life of an engineer.
On the first day, we visited the University of Sydney and Macquarie University. At both schools we were able to learn about the different types of engineering they offer, tour the facilities and complete a couple of engineering challenges, which included making and launching bottle rockets!
On the Tuesday, we visited UNSW where we spent the morning making solar cars that we then raced, despite the unfortunate lack of sun. Wednesday started with a Q & A session with engineers from a range of companies. We were given time to ask them questions and learn about what to expect going into the profession, especially what is like to be a woman in the field. Later that day, we visited the Royal Australian Airforce Base to learn more about the role of an aeronautical engineer there. We also had the opportunity to have an inside look into some of their incredible planes.
The next day, we visited ResMed, a company that makes products to assist people with breathing difficulties. This was a unique experience as we were able to enter the manufacturing area and see the processes and machines used to build the products. We later visited UTS, exploring the campus and completing some very cool challenges. Our team even broke the UTS record for the âfloating houseâ challenge in which we had to support as many marbles as possible on a contraption that we built from limited materials.
On the last day, we visited Cochlear, a company that makes devices for people with hearing impairments. It was amazing to see the life-changing work they are doing and we even heard from someone whose life has been made much easier due to the implants they produce.
The week was an incredible opportunity and we were very lucky to experience it. It has helped us gain a better idea of what sort of engineering we want to do and how we can change the world in the future. So watch this space!
Rebecca and Alisha (Year 12)
Women Have Always Been Cool
They say that we're not in the scientific zone
There is the issue of a single chromosome
They say that thereâs a difference
And thereâs a silent inference
That we canât do it.
Stephanie Kwolek made us bulletproof
Mary Anderson keeps our windshields smooth
Amelia Earhart literally took flight
Mary Shelley got sci-fi right
Then thereâs Agnodike
She existed probably
First female midwife
Threatened with loss of life
When the men tried to get her throat slit-ed
The women got together and got her acquitted
Now people like Rosemary Jones find genders that fit-em
And go on to be gynaecologists!
She can do a thing called âLaparoscopic hysterectomyâ
And some people say girls canât do chemistry!
Clementine Rappaport whose name makes me feel incompetent
Founded and runs a child-psychiatry department
Elin Rova is a trauma nurse
Marie Curie, of the women, won the Nobel prize first
And then again
For an advancement in a different field
Guys, female STEM power hasnât been ârevealedâ
Itâs not a thing thatâs just been unsealed
Cool? Weâve always been.
Itâs only now that people are listeninâ
Doctor Judith Dey won prizes for chemistry at school
She went on to work with disabilities developmental
And maybe you think that isnât a place where you could be at But ladies, youâre sitting where she once sat
So
You might meet someone whoâs stupid and feeble
Not able to see that people are people
But thatâs okay
You don't need them
You just need you and the people who can
Yes, thereâs women whoâve been pushed and they fell
And that sucks and thatâs bad and itâs a modern-day hell
But they stand up just like us for the truth Iâm trying to tell
For a fact itâs hard to get it taken well
Men and women in all ways including STEM are equal
And those who say stuff otherwise are being quite deceitful
If I have to, just for them, I will write a sequel
But ladies,
This is really for you
Stand up for whatâs right
And stand up for whatâs true
Donât let anyone lord it over you
That they âknowâ thereâs something that you canât do
Because women werenât allowed to Antarctica
On the basis of their gender
And 30 years later
Weâve got ourselves there
So
Let me get it across: nice and peaceful
Even in science, women are people!
Sophie (Year 12)
Three qualities for success
Without a doubt, Wenona has been a place that I have loved to be, growing up. Iâve always thrown myself into school life, whether that be on the sporting field, battling my way through choir or attempting to build a car at Restoration Club.
Thinking about being out in the world next year is nerve racking. I wonât have Ms Lovell to help me with essays or Ms Jalili to keep me on track. Like the rest of Year 12, Iâll have to fend for myself, but I know that my year group and the year groups following us, will thrive because Wenona has provided us with the best possible opportunities to succeed.
Before my legendary hockey team takes to the field each week, we try to focus on three key things. So Iâd like to propose three key things that every student here - whether you are just starting your journey at Wenona or you are in Year 12 like me â can focus on in order to tackle life with confidence.
1. Resilience
The ability to bounce back from a moment of weakness or disappointment is an essential life skill. Weâve all received bad marks. Weâve all come second in a race or missed out on team selection. But never stop trying! The capacity to brush yourself off, after taking a moment, and move forward will help you become a stronger person. Never let failure stop you from diving in and doing what you love.
2. Learning from others
No matter what you do or what your passion is, there will always be people better than you. Donât let this limit you. Instead, see it as an opportunity to learn from them. Wenona has allowed me to explore my passion for sport, both in the classroom and on the playing field. While studying PDHPE in Middle School, I looked at successful professional Australian womenâs sports teams. Although the majority of these athletes do not earn enough to be full-time professionals, statistically they are smashing the men out of the park because they are playing for the sheer love of sport. No arrogance, no greed, just fair play. Their hard work and determination is inspirational. Our learning isnât restricted to a textbook. We can learn a lot from observing and reflecting on those around us.
3. Kindness
Nothing is ever gained by being arrogant. Always be kind to yourself and to those around you. Whether that be helping a friend who has missed a day of school, or helping a competitor who has fallen on the sports field. At a time when bad sportsmanship is making headlines, it is important to let kindness and respect for others define you.
For me, my dad is a prime example of kindness. Last year, my uncle had to sell the family farm. On the very last day, my dad collected small jars of soil, which he gave to each family member so that the farm will always be with us. This is an example (and typical of my dad) of how a small gesture made other people smile at a time of great sadness. Kindness doesnât have to be a grand gesture; it should be a part of everyday life.
So in conclusion, embrace resilience, learn from others and actively display kindness at Wenona. Take every opportunity here and donât waste a moment! One day you will be standing where Year 12 is now, ready to move forward and thankful for everything youâve learnt!
Grace (Year 12)
Prefect
Role models of our generation
As young people, we need to be aware of what is happening in our world, so that we can understand life from different viewpoints. In recent weeks, we have seen the horrors of the Florida school shooting, the unveiling of unfair play in the Trump election campaign through social media, and over the past few days, weâve heard about the Cricket Australia cheating scandal in South Africa. Learning about the world around us, and what is happening in it, means we are better prepared to face any situation.
As I am sure you are aware, this coming weekend is Easter. People celebrate Easter in many different ways, and it is interesting to hear from our fellow students about their respective cultures, beliefs and traditions. Some of us might just enjoy the chocolate eggs, while for others Easter has more meaning. Regardless of how you choose to celebrate, it is important that we listen and learn from the people around us in order to gain insight into their lives.
So, what can we learn from recent events? Who do we turn to when people we would normally look up to as role models - like those in the leadership team of Australian Cricket - fail to act in an admirable way?
At Easter, a time of rebirth and hope, we must look to ourselves as the next generation. In times of difficulty, we can still make choices. We canât always control what happens to us, but we can control how we react and we can make informed decisions about what is right as we work towards bringing about positive change.
Over the weekend, 9-year-old Yolanda King, granddaughter of Martin Luther King, spoke to the tens of thousands of protestors demanding gun control at the March for Our Lives protest in Washington. She lead the crowd in a massive chant, cheering, âSpread the word, have you heard? We are going to be a great generation.â
While our circumstances might be different from the students involved in the Florida school shooting, we are the same age as them. These students faced an experience that we cannot comprehend, and in response, they stood up and demanded change. Suffering the loss of friends, this group of students refused to take the easy option and throw in the towel. Instead, they have tried to do what they think is right, as informed, educated and powerful young adults ready to bring about change. They are excellent role models of our generation.
Itâs called âthe easy optionâ for a reason, because it doesnât challenge us. Choosing to do what is right and what is fair is important. It can be difficult to navigate the best course of action, but if we donât inform ourselves about important aspects of peopleâs lives, about their cultures and traditions, we will struggle to make the right choice. Itâs hard to choose how to respond when the people who should be our role models are not doing the right thing. But as the next generation, we must be our own role models.
The players involved in the Cricket Australia scandal chose the easy option, cheating rather than playing fair. In contrast, I watched Ella (Year 11) display great sportsmanship last week during a tennis match. When the umpire called her shot in, Ella told him that it was out, and that the point should go to her opponent even though the score was against her. It made me so proud to see Ella selflessly choosing the harder option in order to play fair.
At School, we must always strive to do what is right and what is fair, even if it means taking the harder option. This could mean working harder in class or bouncing back from failure when things donât go our way. It could mean taking a stand for something we believe in, but whatever it is, we always have a choice: to give in, or to hold our head up high for what is right!
We should use Easter as a time of reflection, thinking carefully about any choices we need to make. We should also take the time to learn about other peopleâs traditions and cultures, in order to appreciate different perspectives.
We might be young, but we have a voice. How we choose to act and what we choose to do has an influence on others. We can challenge politicians. We can choose to play fair in sport. We can choose to treat the people around us well, and to be kind and considerate of their cultures and traditions. Sometimes this might mean taking the difficult option, but our role models should be those who play fair, such as the students campaigning for stricter gun laws in the US, and students here at Wenona like Ella.
We can be the role models of our generation!
Nina
Head Prefect
Happy Harmony Day
Today is Harmony Day, a day when we celebrate peace and unity within our community. Today is a day when we reflect on the impact we have made within the Wenona community, our own local communities and the global communities we are all a part of.
Reflecting upon Wenona, this is what I found: an amazing place of diversity, difference, and acceptance. But I also found, as at any school, limits to this openness. We live in a community in which we can put up barriers and become distant from each other by what we say and what we do. The fault does not lie with any particular individual or group - that is not what is important. It is important that we endeavour to break the barriers to achieve respect and a better understanding of our common humanity.
For many, such as refugees or those trapped in the middle of a war zone, their normal lives are being displaced, without friends or family or a wider community to belong to. In a world as big as ours many of us often feel that we cannot make a difference. But I have learnt over my time at Wenona that the only way you will know is if you try.
Now, I know two things for certain.
Firstly, that kindness leads to a greater sense of belonging.
Secondly, that sometimes every once in a while, kindness can be a chain reaction.
So today I am not asking you to change the world or end a war. I will ask you to step outside your comfort zone, step outside of your way to be kind to someone and maybe you will be the start of a chain reaction which will change the world.
Smile when you cross the bridge, smile at those coming your way, or look someone new in the eyes and say hello. Whatever it is, whether it be big or small I implore you to do something to brighten someone elseâs day.
I ask you, in the spirit of Harmony Day to âbe kind and have courageâ, and maybe we will be able to create a wider community of caring and compassionate individuals, where everyone feels as though they belong.
Start a chain reaction of kindness today, and we will create a community that is taking great strides to become indiscriminate of difference.
Thank you!
Paige (Year 11)
Embracing individuality
As we grow up we are all exposed to numerous influences that greatly impact on how we think and subsequently, how we act.
Whether itâs social pressures, celebrity icons, or even our parents and friends, these influences can make us second guess how we intrinsically want to act, and make us question who we are and who we want to be. But there comes a time when you have to let go of the constant desire to please those you idolise and want to be like, and instead accept who you are as an individual.
For me, this came when I started at Wenona. Starting at a new school in Year 5 was different from starting in Kindergarten, when you are less afraid about judgement and not fitting inâŠbecause if you wanted to wear a tutu and fairy crown everywhere you went, like I did, you just did it! For the first time, I was struck with the fear that people might not like me, or the possibility that I might not be able to make any friends. This again came in Year 7 when our grade grew, and as familiar faces became less and less, I had to gain the courage to put myself out there to get to know people, and to let them get to know me.
But I found this really quite hard, as Iâm sure a lot of you would have, because putting yourself out there to possibly be judged and disliked at any age is a scary concept. So I instead tried to conform. I looked at how everyone acted around me: what movies they liked, what interests they had, and even how they looked, and I tried to pretend to be an exact copy of them. I would second guess what I said in conversations, in case I said something that was âwrongâ or something that they might disagree with. And though this was all well and good in the short term, it was exhausting trying to pretend to be someone I actually wasnât.
So, my Year-7-self turned to the advice of my mum, who told me something that I still find important today. She said to picture yourself when youâre leaving Wenona and âall grown upâ, and to go back to School trying to be that person. Well, I wanted to be a kind person with a group of friends I could always go to and be there for, be a bit taller and cool enough to wear the vest, and above all, really like who I was.
So I decided to go back to School and each day try to become the person I wanted to be. I had to make a conscious effort not to by-pass what I actually thought or what I really wanted to say, and instead just say it. And although it was scary to begin with, the more I did it, the easier it became. I just had to teach myself how to be me all the time and be happy with that, despite what other people thought.
Once I started to let go of being afraid, of being disliked or judged, and was able to be unapologetically myself the best things happened in return. I started to make real friendships with people I had things in common with. And I started to join groups and pick up activities that I otherwise wouldnât have tried because I lacked the confidence, which ultimately has made my time at Wenona so much better.
You have the possibility to decide who you want to be, because despite what we may think, and what I thought, we are not defined by what we do or say in Year 7 or 10 or even Year 12. If you want a fresh start, then that is completely up to you, and we shouldnât as a community, reserve judgement about people without allowing them to grow and change.
We have to accept everyoneâs individuality, but more importantly, we have to accept our own and let go of the fear of judgement. Because everyone at Wenona has something unique and special that they can offer to our School community and the world when they leave it, but it can so easily get lost under the pressure to conform to be something weâre not. In order to truly be happy with who you are - and become someone you really like and the people around you really like - we have to be willing to be different and accept each otherâs differences. That way we can dive into everyoneâs individuality.
To end with a quote, because it wouldnât be a speech without one, as Piglet says, âIf you werenât you, then weâd all be a bit less we.â
Kate
Prefect and Music Captain (Choral)
Press for Progress
Happy International Womenâs Day everyone! I donât know if it is just me, but International Womenâs Day is one of my favourite days of the year.
It is a day when we celebrate the economic, political and social achievements of women in both the past and the present. It is a day when we thank women all around the world as they continually fight for our rights. It is a day when we take a moment to acknowledge women who have endured through times that we canât even imagine, so that we are able to sit here and gain an education. And it is a day when we call for change as we recognise that the fight for equality is not over, and that we must stand together in unity against those who try to push us down.
International Womenâs Day first started in 1910, at the second International Conference of Working Women in Copenhagen. Clara Zetkin, a leader from Germany, proposed the idea and received unanimous agreement from over 100 women, representing 17 countries around the world. The first International Womenâs Day was held the following year in a few European countries. It attracted thousands of women to hold meetings and protests for equality, which sparked much public debate. To put the significance of the day into context, at this time women did not have the right to vote. In the USA, women over 21 did not get the vote until 1928, a full 15 years after the first International Womenâs Day took place. These women were protesting for rights that we in the present day merely take for granted. Since 2013, International Womenâs Day has been held on the 8 March, and has become a global day to celebrate how far we have come in gender equality.
The theme of International Womenâs Day 2018 is Press for Progress, based around the fact that, according to the World Economic Forumâs 2017 Global Gender Gap Report, gender parity is more than 200 years away! We still have a long way to go. Australiaâs current national pay gap is 15.3% and was ranked 46th on the Global Gender Gap Index in 2016. The highest ranked countries, such as Iceland, are taking active steps towards eradicating the gender pay gap, making the pay gap illegal in the hope of eradicating it by 2020. Furthermore, as of 2013, 34 million adolescent girls worldwide are not attending school. Put simply, 34 million girls do not have the chance to get an education and learn vital skills. These are just a few reasons why the Press for Progress campaign is so incredibly important.
With recent movements such as Me Too and Timeâs Up, there is a strong call-to-action to press forward and make progress towards gender parity. This is a call to motivate and unite friends, colleagues and whole communities to think, act and be gender inclusive. International Womenâs Day is important because it is not country, group or organisation specific. Gloria Steinem, world-renowned feminist, journalist and activist once said, "The story of women's struggle for equality belongs to no single feminist, nor to any one organisation, but to the collective efforts of all who care about human rights." This day belongs to all groups collectively everywhere. And together we must commit to a gender parity mindset.
So I invite you all to come and celebrate the power of women and the importance of gender parity. We will be selling white and black ribbons at the gates in the morning in recognition of the fight against domestic violence and to support the Timeâs Up movement. Our Gender Equity Group will be having a bake sale at recess and a barbeque at lunch in the Undercroft. The Environment Group will be collecting cans for recycling on the day so please remember not to throw them in the bin. At lunchtime, we will also be holding Wenonaâs very first Gender Equity concert â Letâs Hear it for the Girls. All the proceeds from the day will be going to the White Ribbon Foundation. So, please come along to eat, listen and celebrate with all your Wenona sisters!
Rebecca (Year 12)
Community and Service Learning Prefect
Unapologetically yourself
âUnapologetically yourselfâ feels like an oxymoron,
It feels mutually exclusive,
You cannot be one and the other.
It feels like itâs supposed to cover,
For the versions of yourself you present to different people.
It feels dishonest, and overly emotional and paradoxical,
It feels like a boastful, bright banner outside an empty theatre.
The broken record at the back of your head clinically outlining everything that was wrong with the performance,
âUnapologetically yourselfâ feels like a lie.
But on the days when you choose not to care,
Whether itâs that you would rather write poetry than go to a party,
Or that you think dance is the best language,
Or that you actually enjoy studying,
Or that you were born without a soft volume,
Or that you are motivated to get up at 4am and train,
Or that you have perfect pitch,
Or that you listen to crime podcasts in your spare time,
Or that you know every word to Summer Heights High,
Or that you are actually passionate about something,
On these days, you wear yourself like a badge of honour.
It doesnât feel like a question, it feels like an answer.
âUnapologetically yourselfâ is not constant.
Everyone wants to be validated.
Everyone wants to be told,
That every part of them is beautiful,
That every part of them is real,
That every part of them is enough.
âUnapologetically yourselfâ is not easy.
It would be easier to choose to believe them,
When they choose not to believe you.
âUnapologetically yourselfâ does not mean perfect.
âUnapologetically yourselfâ is a weapon,
A war cry,
A refusal to back down,
A promise to turn up the volume,
A hand on the drum,
A fist in the air,
A seat at the table,
A prayer to yourself.
You are valid,
You are real,
You are enough.
It is permission for you to let go.
Annabelle
Vice Head Prefect
What makes a strong woman
Although it embarrasses me to say this, my mother has repeatedly referred to my high school period as a cocoon, where at the end I will transform into a majestic butterfly. Funnily enough, she used the same metaphor when giving me âthe talkâ on puberty. But I believe she had a point this time round. As we develop our own metaphorical âwingsâ, it begs the question; where do we fly?
Now obviously the answer Iâve most commonly heard is that we should all aspire to be strong women of proper character. But as I consult various people with different viewpoints I have really struggled to grasp this concept. What makes a strong woman? Is it independence? Stubbornness? Authority? Virtue? Gargantuan biceps that put âThe Rockâ to shame? Unchallenged dominance in the world open-mic slam poetry championships?
All of these are partly correct; yes, even the last one. Strength, in my humble opinion at least, is attained by avoiding both extremes: excessive pride and a low sense of self-worth.
On one end of the spectrum of vanity we have inflated self-worth; narcissists with excessive pride. To find a middle ground, we need to be realistic about our abilities, and that will maximise the amount of good we can do. People who overestimate their abilities, can often end up burning out, or feeling humiliated when being told by an important person that they are not good enough.
As Aristotle once said: âAt the intersection where your gifts and abilities meet a human need, there in, you will discover your purpose.â
Your hubris or ego can make your ambitions misguided or misdirected. This doesnât make a person any less valuable, everyone has strengths and weaknesses, however, we need to have strength of willpower and humility, and we need to be able to steer clear of this extremity and find a middle ground on this spectrum of vanity.
On the other end of the spectrum of vanity, is low self-worth. As I said before, humility gives you a clear sense of perspective. The issue lies in our coping mechanisms used to deal with events and issues that we face. We must learn to be more resilient through our own self-discipline than through seeking external gratification.
For example, social media obliges us to post the best parts of our lives to create implied superiority over others in their lifestyle, which makes others feel inadequate, or convinces them that they werenât meant to enjoy life as much as possible. However, this low sense of self-worth occurs on both sides of the photo. People posting can often be victims of their own self-esteem as well. With an urge to find constant affirmation that their life is good enough, all measured by numbers. Their value is determined by others online and is completely out of their control.
In the middle ground, we need to find our virtue of strength as modern women. This strength to accurately recognise how much you can do, and have the conviction to do good with your abilities. Find the intersection between your ambitions and your abilities. Balance of your pride and self-worth.
Accepting who you are, whilst constantly trying to better yourselves. Recognising your mistakes but see them as complications that alter your plans rather than inherent faults with who you are. Donât shy away from your mistakes, grasp them as a learning experience without letting them define you.
Reflect on yourself with honesty, dignity and donât let your path in life be dictated by your emotions.
Donât view your journey as a thousand thorns, but as a rose. Itâs impossible to pluck every thorn out; to remove every risk of failure in your lives. And even if you try to, youâll end up becoming like that weird uncle you see every Christmas who wears a foil hat and cuts his meat into cubes for fear of a stray bone impaling him.
So, to answer my question, where do we fly? Being too proud can create hubris and entitlement, all the while losing perspective and lacking humility, which inevitably breeds disappointment. Like Icarus, youâll fly too close to the sun. Being too self-conscious however, can create internal discouragements, preventing us from doing anything at all, stopping us making that inevitable first mistake that we all must learn from. It stops you from flying at all.
So in short, swallow your pride whilst maintaining a level of dignity. Building strong women is not about changing self-esteem, itâs about giving women direction, perspective and grit, whilst having the humility to remember where they came from. Most importantly, itâs about walking that tightrope for as long as we can, because our passions, our character and our futures depends on it, from the moment we exit our cocoon.
Katerina
Vice Head Prefect
Welcome from our Head Prefect
To all the new girls in Year 7 or in any other Year, I would like to say a very, very warm welcome to each of you. It is so very exciting starting at a new school especially one like Wenona, and to any of you who are feeling a little bit nervous or uncertain, just remember that the girls that are sitting next to you are probably feeling the same way. Every girl here today has started fresh at a new school at some point in their life, and so just remember, that we will not hesitate to help, if you are lost and need to know how to find a classroom or bathroom, or if you are just feeling a bit overwhelmed, so please do not hesitate to ask if you need anything.
Today I wanted to start by asking you this question: Is it more important to know exactly who you are all the time, or is it more important to believe in what you can be?
Sometimes it can feel as if you are treading on water, so to speak. We donât quite feel like we have control of what is happening, and we donât really know where we are going. Itâs as if everything was completely fine, and then one day, something changes in your world, big, or small, and everything again becomes uncertain. Itâs not like you are completely lost, but it also is as if the direction you felt you once had isnât quite there anymore.
You can feel as if you know who you are, but this doesnât mean you will always believe in yourself, and back your actions. You can know yourself, but you can also doubt yourself. You can know what you enjoy, but this doesnât mean you will always participate in those things.
Inevitably, we do not always have control of what happens to us. Sometimes, in times of adversity, when things just arenât going our way, when we arenât sure of where we are going, we have to decide how we will react in the face of circumstances that are out of our control.
But regardless of what happens that is out of your control, there are always things that will remain within your ability to change, that you have the power and the agency to control. The first of these is the way you treat those around you, your reaction to the situations that you face. Sometimes we get so caught up in our own worlds, that we can forget that the people around us may also be suffering. We have the power, over our small actions, and do have the power to make someoneâs day a little bit brighter, whether by smiling at them on the bridge or giving someone a compliment when you think that things might not be going their way.
A second thing that remains paramount is your belief in yourself. This to me has always been one of those things that Iâve heard, but not really understood the significance of until only recently. If we could all remind ourselves of our own value, of the things that we have achieved, and of the things that make each of us unique, can boost our belief in our own actions. If each of you were to back yourselves and your actions, you leave yourself so much more room to enjoy everything you do.
No matter what happens this year, we must try, even when itâs difficult, to accept that we can only control so much of what happens to us. But girls, just remember that you have the power to persist, to be resilient, and to change the things that you can. You have the power to change someoneâs day or even their world for the better.
American Civil Rights Activist Maya Angelou once said, âMy mission in life is not merely to survive, but to thrive; and to do so with some passion, some compassion, some humor and some style.â
How will you each thrive, and how will you dive in and believe in yourselves this year?
If you feel like you are treading on water, just know that you have the ability to remind yourself of your own values and abilities. Thriving means doing the things you love and the things that make you happy, and it means giving those around you the support to do the same. You have the ability to persist, or to at least learn to do so. And once you learn resilience, the year in front of you will not fly by as an insignificant, but as one in which you learnt to believe in yourself. Donât think that sitting back and doing nothing will enable you to achieve, but take the action to change the things that you would like to change.
Make the most of everything, and be proud of each other, take care of each other, and support each other. And make sure you learn to be proud of yourselves, and believe that you can do what you set your mind do. Have a fantastic 2018!
Thank you.
Nina
Head Prefect