Céad Míle Fáilte!

Welcome to The Principal’s section of our blog, which includes our latest Newsletters!

You are very welcome to St. Brigid’s new website! Our school community is happy to invite you to learn a little more about our wonderful school.

Our new crest and motto demonstrate our vision and aims, through words and images. Our goal is to ‘promote the full and harmonious development of all aspects of the person of the pupil: intellectual, physical, cultural, moral and spiritual, including a living relationship with God and with other people.’

We hope that our website will demonstrate a little of the work and activities carried out in St. Brigid’s and will provide our visitors with some information about our school.

Together let’s live for today and learn for tomorrow.

What’s happening?

10th June 5th Class Trip to Pine Forest

11th June 2nd Class Trip to Lullymore

12th June Multigrade Meeting for Parents 2.10 p.m.

13th June Sports Day

16th June Sponsored Silence in aid of the School Garden

18th June Return of all Rental Books

18th june 3rd & 4th Class Trip to Zip It

19th June 6th Class Trip Viking Splash/Jeannie Johnson/City Centre

24th June 6th Class Mass & Graduation Ceremony 1.15 p.m.

27th June School closes for hols at 12 noon

29th August School re-opens for new school year

What is Biodiversity?

Biodiversity (short for biological diversity), means the variety of life; the wide range of living things in the world. It includes all kinds of plants and animals in all kinds of environments, including towns and cities. Biodiversity includes the interactions of and inter-dependency that living things have on each other and on their habitat. There is a lot of biodiversity in Dublin City; we just have to look for it.

What can we do to protect biodiversity in Dublin?

  1. Hold onto your trees and hedges. If you need to prune them back wait until after the summer months when the chicks have fledged and are out of their nests.
  2. Keep it natural. Avoid spraying herbicides as this kills off all kinds of lovely wild flowers that butterfly and moth larvae depend on for survival. Plant flowers and shrubs that produce lots of nectar and berries which birds and insects love to eat e.g. hawthorn, marjoram, evening primrose, nasturtiums and lavender. Planting these in patches here and there is even better and having differences in plant structures, height, density and species composition are important
  3. Add some animal furniture! Create a log pile in the corner of your garden for hibernating hedgehogs. Put bat and bird boxes high up on the house wall (near the eaves) and you might be lucky enough to get some new residents! And don’t forget to put up some bird feeders and water dishes out in winter too.

Archives

Our Motto

“Together let’s live for today and learn for tomorrow”

was created along with our crest in 2012 and both continue to be as relevant today as they were then.

Children's painted hands