Q: What are the 10 letters of the pirate alphabet?
A: I, I, R and the seven C’s
This week St Joseph’s Primary celebrated Book Week with a Parade. Students got into the spirit of Book Week dressing in wonderful costumes as all their their favourite characters from Harry Potter, Wolfman, Wimpy Kid, Riverrdale Gang and Fairies.
The week celebrates Australian authors and illustrators and this year’s theme was find your treasure. All the teachers and staff dressed up as pirates and the community came to cheer us on.
The purpose of book week is to encourage students to read books. At St Joseph’s Primary we believe that reading is very important and by promoting books we are encouraging our learners to become more proficient readers.
It was a fun morning all round and dressing up as your favourite character really highlighted the love of books.
Click here to view and download photos from the day
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09 Jun 2026
Helping Your Child Learn at Home - Practical strategies every parent can use
How can you help your child learn at home without stress, conflict, or overwhelm? Join CSPD’s Learning Outcomes team for a practical parent session focused on simple, realistic ways families can support learning at home, from primary through to secondary school.
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14 May 2026
From Facebook
Congratulations to our students who represented our school yesterday at the CSPD Cross Country! Thank you for your incredible effort, sportsmanship, and for running your absolute hearts out! You made our school community incredibly proud!13 May 2026
From Facebook
Uncle Ted from Jarara came out to visit today, we sat together and talked about their culture. The stories that shaped their people, the land that holds their history, and the totems that carry meaning through generations. Uncle Ted shared what he knew, and the students asked lots of questions, and found new ideas connecting their identity. From those conversations, a creative spark took hold. Together they explored ways to bring those ideas to life through art sketching and painting. It became a meaningful exchange: culture passed on not just through talking, but through making.