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Northwood Newsletter
Northwood Nursery Newsletter
13th November 2015 – Nursery Newsletter
6th November 2015 – Nursery Newsletter
23rd October 2015 – Nursery Newsletter
16th October 2015 – Nursery Newsletter
9th October 2015 – Nursery Newsletter
2nd October 2015 – Nursery Newsletter
25th September 2015 – Nursery Newsletter
3rd September 2015 – Nursery Newsletter
National School Meals Week – Best of British
There will be a special menu for the week beginning 2nd November to celebrate National School Meals Week. The theme of the week is Best of British with meals costing only £1 per day!
The menu for this week can be seen on the picture below, it sounds yummy!
Robins Class Trip to the Museum
The Robins class went on a trip to the Manchester Museum of Science and Industry on Wednesday 13th May. They had a great day out and two members of the class were chosen to get up and join in one of the shows they went to see. They investigated the ‘Air and Space Hall’, the ‘Power Hall’, and the ‘Great Western Warehouse’. There was also a fabulous floor where you could complete lots of exciting experiments and even make a skeleton appear if you pedalled fast enough! The weather was lovely and the Robins sat outside and ate their lunch. They have taken lots of great photos and uploaded them onto our webpage if you would like to see how much fun they had!
Macmillan Coffee Morning
A big thank you to all parents who attended the Macmillan Coffee Morning held at school on Friday 26th September. We had great support from parents on the day and the children had lots of fun selling their cakes they had made.
The school raised a total of £705.29 from selling a variety of cakes and drinks throughout the day, what an achievement!
Well done everyone!
NSPCC Gangs Helpline
NSPCC launches helpline service for parents worried about gangs
Adults who are worried a child might be at risk from being involved with gangs can now contact the NSPCC helpline (0808 800 5000).
The NSPCC is launching the service, which will be delivered through its existing helpline, to support parents as figures show that one in six 13 to 15-year-olds say they know someone in a street gang1.The charity is also responding to concerns from across the sector that too many children are being left to ruin their lives in gangs and need adults to intervene and help them.
The new initiative has been made possible through funding and support from the Home Office. The department’s Ending Gang and Youth Violence Programme has helped provide specialist training2 for NSPCC helpline practitioners – who will be able to help identify whether the behaviour the caller is concerned about indicates that a young person is involved in a gang.
John Cameron, NSPCC Head of Child Protection Operations said:
“Young people involved in gangs are frequently abused, exploited and put in dangerous situations.
“We know from listening to children that they are often terrified of what they are doing and want to leave gangs and we believe adults have an incredibly important role to play in helping them to break free.
“Parents, carers and other adults often struggle to know where to turn when faced with a young person who they think might be involved in a gang. This is exactly why we are extending our 24/7, anonymous helpline – so we can offer advice, support and information on what action they can take.
“Through our new helpline service and by working together with other agencies we can help stop young people’s lives from being ruined by gangs.”
Crime Prevention at the Home Office Minister Norman Baker said:
“Gang culture is a destructive element in our society, for both the individuals caught up in it, and indeed for the communities unfortunate enough to come into contact with gangs.
“As part of our Ending Gang and Youth Violence programme, we pledged to prevent young people getting involved in gangs, to help those already involved in gangs to leave, and to work with the NSPCC to extend their extremely important helpline.
“By offering specialist backing and support, this service will empower parents and others to help the young people they are concerned about to find help, turn their lives around and leave the corrosive life of gang violence behind them.”
Street ambassadors will promote the helpline service to communities in the 33 local authority areas identified by the Home Office as places where gang culture is deemed to be an issue3. The service will also be promoted through a poster campaign and a specially produced video which will help adults to identify if a young person may be at risk4.
Anyone who has concerns about a child or wants advice can contact the NSPCC for free 24 hours a day, by calling 0808 800 5000, emailing help@nspcc.org.uk, texting 88858 or using an online reporting form. They can choose to remain anonymous if they wish.