Dear Parents, Teachers and Students
Course selection evening – Year 10
Thank you to the many teachers and leadership staff who ran and attended the course selection evening on Tuesday night. I was impressed with the quality of the advice, the serious engagement of the students and the warm support that parents were giving to their children and to the school. If I could re-state some of the general points for all of you:
- The Australian curriculum provides a wide range of opportunities for students to develop their knowledge, understanding and skills in a range of subjects that promote personal growth and knowledge and a capacity to participate in a flexible and diverse workforce. There’s a lot to be said that’s good about knowing things and applying that knowledge to strategy, planning and problem solving; and improving one’s own life is important also.
- The last few years have shown the world in general and Melburnians in particular, that the future in unpredictable. They’ve also shown us that the people who prosper and do well in rapidly changing and often adverse situations are the people who can bring flexibility, openness, dynamism and good will to those changes.
- In this world of easily acquired information (as opposed to understood information) personal integrity and honesty still applies. We are still working out what artificial intelligence can do for us. 50 years ago, pretending that some work was yours when it wasn’t was called plagiarism or cheating. The emergence of AI has not changed this fact. We want honest people of integrity in our classrooms and so this fundamental fact still applies.
- The dangers of emerging technologies in my lifetime revolved around who would be the master and who would be the servant with these technologies. Humankind has embraced these communication and information technologies for all their good and all their bad. In doing this successfully, we have to ask ourselves, ‘What kind of person do I want to be?’ and ‘How can I be my best self for my own peace of mind and for the enhancement of those who trust me and love me, for my community and for human progress?’.
These are big ideas that land on us out of nowhere, when we least expect it. Students should choose subjects that they like and they’re good at, and they should work with trusted expert teachers to apply critical thinking, research, problem-solving, listening, agency and integrity to that learning. Rarely does the sun rise on a day where I’m not optimistic about the future. I’m very excited about the future of this country because your children and our students will be part of it.
Michael Lee OAM
Principal (Acting)
Written on Boon Wurrung Country