MARK YOUR CALENDAR

  • March 21st-23rd – ASAC Sr. Football Tournament at CIS
  • March 22nd – Reports cards sent home
  • March 29th – Logos Elementary Talent Show @5:00pm 
  • March 29th-April 1st – SEAMEI/ASAC MUN Conference @ NISC
  • April 1-5 – Secondary Spring Fling
  • April 8-12 – Khmer New Year events
  • April 15-19 – NO SCHOOL: Khmer New Year Holiday

WHOLE SCHOOL

REMINDER: RE-ENROLLMENT FOR 2024-2025

Dear Logos Parents/Guardians,
This is a reminder that Re-Enrollment deadline will be on March 29 along with $200 for Annual Media Fee, which is non-refundable. You also need to complete the linked re-enrollment form (for each child) to update your information. For your convenience, you can pay the Annual Media fee by ABA. 
If we do not receive the completed re-enrollment form and Annual Media Fee by this date, we will assume that your child will not be returning to Logos for the next school year, and their place may be given to a child on the waiting list. We appreciate your cooperation in this matter.
Yours sincerely,
Logos Administration

ELEMENTARY

SECONDARY

Here is the link for Logos Lightning News Flash

COUNSELOR CONNECT

Click Here for a Fun Breathing Video 

MENU FOR MARCH

A NOTE FROM SCHOOL NURSE

Healthy Eating

Since you live in Cambodia, you most likely have been invited to a wedding. The reception can be quite fun, though the music is often way too loud. As a guest, you are seated at a table for 10. When the seats are filled, 7 courses of food are delivered one after the other, and that can be a lot.
As living beings, food is a part of our daily needs. It nourishes our body and provides energy for various systems to function. Our daily meals are enriched as cultures interact. However, too much food put in our bodies is not always beneficial to us. We live in a time when we do not have to labor all day. This means we do not need the extra food. Thus, it requires us to be mindful of what we eat to stay healthy and keep physically well. Furthermore, we face the choice of being healthy or being convenient every day. Healthy food choices can be time-consuming and expensive, but they are beneficial to our well-being and surely help our health in the long run.
When it comes to healthy eating, young children always observe their older ones. Creating healthy eating habits should begin when children are young, which will help the habit last. As for daily food choices, we should focus on the five main food groups, not just one. As a Cambodian, and probably most Asians, I know that rice is so ingrained into our lives, and, yes, we have it three times a day; however, there are four other food sources that our body needs as well. Studies have shown that healthy eating can lower the risks of health problems like overweight and obesity, heart disease, type 2 diabetes, and some cancers.
We should eat healthy today, so that we can have better health tomorrow.
For more on healthy eating: https://www.nutrition.gov/topics/basic-nutrition/healthy-eating

If you have any questions, please let me know:
Sureyah Tach, Sub. School Nurse, ttach@asianhope.org

LIBRARY CORNER

Related posts