A Typical School Day

Children at Village are engaged in learning throughout the day, in a wide variety of ways.

A typical day at Village School has much in common with other primary schools, and yet there are also some key differences. Children are engaged in learning activities throughout the day and interact with staff and other students as required.

But there’s a lot more variation in the individual activities, in the nature of the interactions, and the general rhythm of the school. A casual observer of a typical day at Village School might see students moving around the classroom, engaged in various activities, or moving around the school grounds, interacting with staff, students and animals.

Learning takes place in all these activities, not just in the classroom. Real life tasks have real life outcomes. For instance, if you’ve tethered your pony too close to another the tethers will entangle and you’ll need to go back, untangle the ropes and move your pony to an emptier space. Hopefully the next time you do that task you remember and modify your behaviour.

A typical day at Village

Here’s a breakdown of a typical day at Village School.

  • 8:30 am - Students and teachers begin arriving at school

  • 8:45 am - Higher year students complete farm duties or do quiet reading

  • 9:00 am - Home group meeting

  • 9:15 am - Learning

  • 11:00 am - Recess / break

  • 11:30 am - Learning

  • 1:00 pm - Lunch – Students usually spend lunch playing with friends, building cubby houses or playing games.

  • 2:00 pm - Learning

  • 3:00 pm - Farm duties, followed by classroom jobs

  • 3:30 pm - End of school: After learning is finished and chores are complete, students collect their bags and spill out into the school grounds to meet up with parents and play with friends.

After school some students head for the corral for extra pony riding lessons, others might go to a kids’ yoga session or music lesson in the hall.

The time after school is often just a social time for parents and kids. We find that parents tend to hang around more after school, because it’s such a small community and we don’t all live in the surrounding area, so lots of play dates are arranged at this time.

Special lessons

Apart from the standard in-classroom activities and typical days, there are sessions and days when students reorganise and rotate through various specialised activities.

Homework

We aim to instil a love of learning and keep homework to a minimum. We take a different approach from many schools when it comes to homework. Although students may complete schoolwork at home, it is not a necessary part of their schooling, and we aim instead for it to be a natural extension of a child’s curiosity and love of learning.

Our approach to homework

We believe that play is an important part of the learning process, and that childhood should allow plenty of time for exploration and self-directed learning. This philosophy extends to our approach to homework, which is to minimise the amount of work that we send home with students. So although we are not a fully “no homework” school, our students bring home significantly less schoolwork than your average primary school.

Teachers may on occasion provide tasks for extra practice or to reinforce classroom learning, such as troublesome spelling words or key maths skills, but the level is kept low. This also means that the demands on busy parents are minimal, although we encourage practising English and maths skills with children in the course of everyday activities. Teachers may also provide access to online learning platforms that students can use from home, to further reinforce concepts and skills learned at school.

We also aim to instil a love of learning in our students and expect that this will spill over into their home time activities, where they may choose to continue with projects from school or initiate learning about a topic or skill of interest.

Do primary school students need homework?

There has been much debate over the years about the value of homework, especially for primary school students.

With parents reporting high stress levels for themselves and their children as a result of the demands placed on them by homework, it’s important that we ensure that all work sent home provides sufficient value to warrant it.

And Finland’s recent academic revolution, where it moved to the top of the world for reading, maths and science, based on a program that has minimal tests, no rankings, plenty of time for play and minimal homework, suggests that sometimes enough is enough.

The Victorian Department of Education website also quotes a recent study that shows that the quality of homework is more important than quantity and can be made more effective by providing students with more choices over the work they do.

Our relaxed approach to homework is in line with these experiences around the world, by keeping homework to minimal levels, relevant to in-school learning and self-managed by students.

fairy tale dress up day two little red riding hoods
student proudly showing their artwork
collaborative dot murals

Examples of homework

Keeping in mind our general approach to homework, here are some examples of situations that might generate homework and the types of work that you might see coming home with your child.

Student Reports

Our holistic approach to learning means that reports and grades play a different role at Village School. Although we provide written reports and parent-teacher interviews twice a year, our focus is more on the individual development and achievements of each child. We also provide regular progress updates and feedback to students and parents, as part of the day-to-day learning process.

Our Reports