Thursday, 26 June 2014

Pre-summer holidays clean up

Pupils from across the year groups have been helping with a big pre-summer litter pick of the school grounds over the last few days of school.

These S4s tackled a particularly tricky section of dense woodland planting with lots of jaggy hawthorn bushes, with Mr Atha. Thanks guys!

These S2s did a wonderful job of the upper section of the burn just at the entrance to the school.
The wildflower meadows planted by pupils a few years ago are in full flower and look brilliant
Thanks to everyone who got involved.  The grounds now look brilliant and it's great to be leaving everywhere looking so lovely over the summer holidays. Have a good break and see you back on 13 August!

Thursday, 19 June 2014

Food for Life—Currie Community High School continues apace with healthier food



Achieve
One year ago Currie CHS became the first mainland Scottish High School to have achieved the Food for Life (FFL) Catering Mark Bronze Standard for our Dolphin Café school kitchen.  One year on, work continues apace to provide healthier and more varied options for our enthusiastic and hungry pupils!

All Schools
The pilot project at Currie has been so successful that the City of Edinburgh Council has decided that all Edinburgh primary, special and high schools will aim for Bronze standard from October 2014.  This is a huge undertaking for the Council and one which has to be viewed as very positive step for the health and wellbeing of all pupils.  Locally sourced produce will benefit Scottish farms and food providers, animal and fish welfare is greatly improved which has a positive direct impact to our precious environment.

So what’s been happening in Currie of late and what are our plans for the future?  

Ambitious Project Group Meetings
Mairi Mitchell (S3), Matthew Day (S6 leaver) and Peter Sawkins (new S3 member) have been active throughout the past year and have contributed greatly during our regular Food for Life Café Project meetings.  Our meetings are enthusiastically attended by Amanda Stuart our superb Health & Food Technology Teacher, Julie Young, Cook Supervisor and Fiona Buckley, Area Field Trainer our willing and ideas packed catering staff, Joe Hind and Kirsten Leask our informative guides from the Soil Association, Laura Nisbet our Food & Health Development Officer who maintains very positive links to the centre and other schools, Ben Stewart our lead Depute and our initiator and leading light Environmental Projects Worker Rachel Avery.

Yummy Parent Evenings
Of late, Julie and Fiona have taken part in both new S1 and new S2 parents’ evenings with the provision of delicious tasters for parents for which feedback has been hugely positive.  S1 parents have responded positively to the groups suggestion that S1 pupils remain in school at lunchtimes from August to the September break and for the new S1 to sample the various dishes on offer.

Exciting House Assemblies
Mr Stewart successfully led three House Assemblies developed by the group.  He explained to all pupils the background to FFL and the potential impact on health, local business and the environment.  Julie and Fiona provided FFL tasters for pupils.  A giant carrot and a giant cow were in attendance to help promote the message. 

Healthy Vending!
We have installed a healthy vending machine in the main foyer which offers a healthier selection of milks, fruit, water and juices some of which are fair trade.

Busy Bees…………
Julie, Fiona and their team comprising Anne, Marion, Lisa and Jackie have carried out a huge amount of work over the past 12 months to ensure school food meets the Bronze Standard and are gradually moving the school towards Gold Standard.

Lovely Welcoming Furniture
New furniture and breakfast bars with high stools were successfully installed in the café last year.  One set of breakfast bars looks out over the gardens to the rear of the school where pupils can watch birds on our bird feeders.  Goldfinches are spotted regularly! 

Meeting important people!
Mairi Mitchell and Peter Sawkins recently met in Edinburgh with Richard Lochhead, Cabinet Secretary for Rural Affairs and the Environment, to talk about their involvement with the project.

Going for Gold………………..
The school is not resting on its laurels, we intend to achieve Gold Standard later this year.  Gold Standard is achieved by meeting a minimum points scoring from a range of attainment options.  We will look to source more organic, free range and sustainably sourced fish, more ingredients from Scotland or elsewhere in the UK supplied from local farms thereby reducing food miles.  We are also looking to make healthy eating easier by reducing meat consumption, minimising salt and cutting plate waste.

For full details of how the standards are met please refer to the following link:

Wednesday, 18 June 2014

Farm Trip for Health & Food Technology Pupils

To launch the new 'Contemporary Food Issues' unit of the National Health & Food Technology course, 40 HFT pupils in S4 visited Craigie's Farm out by South Queensferry last week.

We saw their free range hens and 'pick your own' eggs

We saw, and smelt, the pigs they are fattening up to sell for meat

We saw the jam kitchen where they turn soft fruit grown at the farm into jam they can sell in the farm shop - creating added value

We learnt about the complexities of growing strawberries commercially
and visited other polytunnels with fruit and vegetables.















Thanks to John the farmer and Karen from the Royal Highland Education Trust for having us to visit!

Citizenship session for new S6 pupils

All of our new sixth year pupils spent this morning thinking about citizenship as part of their S6 induction. They discussed the benefits of real-life pupil-led case studies that have led to positive changes, locally and globally, and then came up with their own ideas of projects that could improve the school or the local community.

Doing a flow chart of benefits stemming from a real-life case study

Envisaging our 'ideal school' and local community

Sharing ideas with members of other groups

Prioritising our different ideas for improvements

Signing up to lead, or participate in, groups to make change happen

Ideas prioritised for action include refurbishing the gym equipment and making it accessible for pupil and community use, working more closely with pupils from Woodlands school, promoting gay rights within school and creating a cycle path to make it safer for pupils to cycle to school. Groups have been formed to make these and other ideas happen. Watch this space for great stuff next year from our new S6s! 


Animal cruelty



Groups of pupils spent the last few weeks of their S1 year at Currie working on projects they felt strongly about whilst in SDE classes. One group researched cases of animal cruelty in the local area and as part of their awareness raising efforts they have written a piece for the next Currie and Balerno News:

We are a group of new S2 pupils from Currie Community High School writing to tell you about the project we have been doing to show that animal cruelty is a huge problem in our area not just in Scotland. We contacted the SSPCA in Balerno to ask them some questions about the animals they rescue. They told us that; in the last 4 months they have taken in almost 3,700 pets that have been abandoned, neglected, no longer wanted by their owners or found injured. The worst case of animal cruelty they have dealt is that someone tied their dog to a tree and set the dog on fire, this disgusted us all. Just now they are dealing with the most cases of animal cruelty they have seen. This is worrying and we think its need to be recognised by the people in Currie and Balerno that lots of animal cruelty is happening in their area.

Kind regards
Ellen, Jodi, Alyx, Katy, Kirsty, Megan S1 Currie Community High School 

Wednesday, 11 June 2014

Currie Ecology Nest Record Scheme (British Trust for Ornithology)

Trials and Tribulations for the Roof-nesting Oystercatchers !


One of the adult Oystercatchers was found dead on the ground at the back of the school a few days ago. The cause of death is not known but it left a real challenge for the remaining parent to feed and protect both chicks.  When it is away collecting food on the playing fields it cannot protect the chicks from predators such a gulls.  Soon after the death of the parent both chicks seemed fine but within a few days the one on the right of the picture, which was slighlty younger and smaller than the one on the right, had died - probably of starvation. In other words the single parent could not cope with providing food for both chicks and the older dominant one took the lion's share of what food was available.  If there is anything good from this it is that the remaining chick is growing well (now not far off flying)  and is still looked after by the one attentive parent.

Good news on Camera Box Blue Tits!

Many people have enjoyed following the Blue Tit nest in the Quad.  All the chicks have fledged successfully and have left the box.  On the 5th June one chick was seen by one observer doing "a lot of wing whirring" - flying practice!  By the next day it was gone and by the 9th June all the chicks had fled the nest!  They will be looked after outside the nest by the adults for a week or so and will then be independent.  Wonder if one of them will come back to the nest box next year.
By Molly

John Muir Book and Film

Last term a group of Currie pupils met the illustrator of a graphic novel about the life of John Muir, the great conservationist. We looked through drafts of his drawings on two occasions and gave him our suggestions and ideas. The book has now been published and a class set has been sent to every single High School in Scotland!  The names of all the pupils are in the back of the book and we have our own class set to use in school.

The John Muir Trust have just made a beautiful 5 minute film about how young people feel about the legacy of John Muir featuring some of the CCHS pupils involved in the project. Do have a look by clicking on the link below, its a great film!

John Muir Film

One of the pictures from the new book