Filter Content
- Principal's Message Term 2 Week 9 2025
- CE Executive Director's Article
- Religious Education News - Anne Leet
- Second Step
- Vinnies Sleepout
- Sport with Mrs O'Keefe
- Class Awards
- MTS Lunchtime Clubs Term 2
- Extra Curricular Activities at MTS
- The MTS Yearbook request for photos
- Support our MTS Netball Club
- Free pop-up influenza vaccination clinics for young children
Principal's Message Term 2 Week 9 2025
Dear Parents and Carers,
Families Leaving
If you know you will be leaving Mother Teresa in 2025 can you advise the school office as soon as possible. We have a growing waiting list with families keen for a place in 2026.
Extended Holidays
A reminder to families taking extended leave to contact the office to confirm the number of days and if you are required to complete the extended leave application. When granted, a certificate is issued by the Principal and must be carried with travel documents.
Principal
CE Executive Director's Article
When the Catholic Voice asked me to write an article setting out my vision for Catholic Education in our archdiocese, my first thought was “Well, it won’t be MY vision; it will be OUR vision.” For a vision to become reality requires that it is developed in collaboration with the people who will be responsible for making it happen.
So my top priority as the incoming Executive Director of Catholic Education will be to visit every principal in their school and to listen very carefully to what they have to say. They combine vision and action. In the opening words of Vatican II’s Pastoral Constitution on the Church in the Modern World, “Gaudium et Spes”, I want to hear about their “joys and hopes, griefs and anxieties” in relation to carrying on the mission of bringing the Good News of Jesus to the world through our schools.
This commitment to consultation and collaboration is aligned with Pope Francis’ hope – reiterated by Pope Leo – that our church be characterised by “synodality”. But synodality is not the same as our secular concept of democracy – “majority vote”. In his accompanying note to the final document of the Synod on Synodality, released last year and subtitled “Communion, Participation, Mission”, Pope Francis described synodality as “the appropriate interpretive framework for understanding hierarchical ministry.”
Our hierarchical church has previously articulated its vision for Catholic Education in numerous documents. For example, Pope Francis has stated that,
Our world does not need automatons that simply repeat what has already been said and done. It needs new choreographers, new interpreters of our rich human resources, new social poets. Educational models that aim merely to produce “results” are useless in the absence of a cultural vision capable of forming persons prepared to help the world change gears by eliminating inequality, endemic poverty and exclusion.
And Pope Leo has diagnosed the causes of the sense of isolation and exclusion many young people experience, especially in the affluent West:
Think of the isolation caused by rampant relational models increasingly marked by superficiality, individualism, and emotional instability; the spread of patterns of thought weakened by relativism; and the prevalence of rhythms and lifestyles in which there is not enough room for listening, reflection, and dialogue, at school, in the family, and sometimes among peers themselves, with consequent loneliness.
So our schools must be places where the primary mission is to offer a “cultural vision” of hope, meaning and purpose through faith in Christ. Our schools must evangelise through education, and educate through evangelisation.
This means that we should not be entertaining a false dichotomy between faith formation on the one hand and academic excellence on the other. The code of Canon Law states that “Directors of Catholic schools are to take care under the watchfulness of the local [bishop] that the instruction which is given in them is at least as academically distinguished as that in the other schools of the area.” It also states that in partnership with parents, in Catholic schools “children and youth are to be nurtured in such a way that they are able to develop their physical, moral, and intellectual talents harmoniously, acquire a more perfect sense of responsibility and right use of freedom, and are formed to participate actively in social life.”
So faith-based education and academic excellence are not in conflict. They are not somehow at opposite ends of some continuum like freezing water and boiling water that somehow have to “balanced” to in order to be “just right”. Faith-based education and academic excellence actually go hand-in-hand and reinforce one another.
In fact I would go further and say it is not possible to have a true understanding of the world and of ourselves – which is what academic excellence is aiming for – without seeing that world through the eyes of faith, as created by God, and redeemed by God, out of love and for love.
In Catholic schools, faith and reason work together, not in conflict, to present the world as it really is. As Saint John Paul II said, faith and reason are the two wings on which the human spirit rises to the contemplation of the truth.
But if you have a narrow definition of faith-based education as time spent in Religion class, and an equally narrow definition of academic excellence as high scores on standardised tests, then I can see how you could see these things as in competition. But they are not.
The religious dimension of education in Catholic schools is much more than Religion lessons. A faith-based vision of reality should infuse the teaching and learning of all subjects, which after all are just the way we humans have divided up reality to make it easier to comprehend.
A key challenge for us is to ensure that our schools remain accessible to all families, especially the most disadvantaged families in our community. Catholic social teaching calls on us to have a preferential option for the poor, but to enable this requires a fair and reasonable system of government funding. Catholic schools have never been just for the wealthy. Our history shows the opposite. But changes in government funding over the next few years will put pressure on our capacity to share the gift of Catholic education with everyone. The opportunity I see for Catholic education is to build on the great reputation we have for academic excellence and be bold when it comes to our evangelising mission, because more than ever our society is in need of its message of love. The secular view of the world as essentially meaningless has led to a culture of self-centredness which fails to deliver on its promise of happiness. The Christian vision of life is other-centred, and it offers salvation from meaninglessness, through encounter with Christ. This is the primary purpose of Catholic schools, and we should be bold in pursuing that purpose.
Religious Education News - Anne Leet
This term ‘The Mother Teresa School Way’ is to be:
Companions on the Journey: Caring, Supporting, and Growing Together.
“Therefore encourage one another and build each other up, just as in fact you are doing.” — 1 Thessalonians 5:11
Something to Think
Peter failed often but he kept coming back to try again. It is easy to see ourselves in Peter - sometimes we have trouble following Jesus too, and we make mistakes along the way. Even though Peter was far from perfect, he was the one Jesus chose to lead his community. We do not have to be perfect to be a disciple or a leader! We just need to hang in there and stick with Jesus.
The Story
In this gospel story, Jesus is looking for information - what are people saying about him? Who do they think he is? The disciples all have a go at answering but it is Peter who comes up with the correct answer: 'You are the Messiah'. Peter was a fisherman. He had a wife and maybe a family. He was called by Jesus, along with other disciples, to be 'fishers of people'. Like the other disciples, Peter often found it hard to understand Jesus and his message. In this story, Jesus calls him 'the rock', suggesting that Peter's faith was strong and steady.
Firstly, a heartfelt thank you to everyone who attended the First Holy Communion information sessions on Tuesday. Your presence and commitment—despite the chilly weather—were truly appreciated.
A reminder that this weekend marks a key moment in your child’s preparation: the Enrolment and Commitment Mass. Attendance at one of the Parish Masses this weekend or next is essential.
Please bring the following items with you to the Mass:
- Completed enrolment form
- Prayer card (which your child will present to a parishioner)
- A copy of your child’s baptism certificate
- Payment (due by 4 July)
Important: Enrolment forms cannot be submitted at school. They must be handed in at the Parish Masses only.
Thank you once again for your continued support as we guide our children through this sacred and significant step in their faith journey.
Peace and Best Wishes.
Anne Leet
Religious Education Co-Ordinator
The Sports Spectacle
As we approach the finish line of this term, we have some exciting news to share! Several talented students from Mother Teresa School have been selected to represent the U12 ACT School Sport AFL team, and some students are still to find out if they have been selected for Soccer and Touch Football. Let’s give a big round of applause to our sports stars!
We have two of our senior students, gearing up for an AFL adventure in Maroochydore, QLD next Term! A special shout-out to Logan Blain and Lachlan Rodda for their outstanding efforts.
In total, we had 9 enthusiastic students step up and showcase their skills in trials for different sports. Talk about putting their best foot forward! If you're interested in joining the ranks and representing the ACT in a school sport team, don’t forget to check out their website: ACT School Sport (https://schoolsportact.org.au/). Who knows? You might just be the next star on the field!
Now, as we look ahead, I will be finalising the teams for the upcoming futsal competition in the next week or so. Parents and students, please remember that crafting fair and competitive teams for Mother Teresa School takes time and careful thought. After all, we want to make sure everyone has a chance to shine—while also keeping the competition lively and fun!
So, lace up those sneakers and get ready for an exciting finish to the term!
Upcoming Events
Term 3
- Capital Football Futsal School Cups Yr 5/6 Girls (23 July)
- Capital Football Futsal School Cups Yr 5/6 Boys (24 July)
- Years 3/4 Oztag Gala Days TBC
- North Gungahlin Regional Track and Field Carnival (4 Sept)
The MTS Yearbook request for photos
The Mother Teresa School Yearbook has been confirmed for 2025, but this year, we are going to need your help to get it across the line.
Families that have been with us for a few years would know that each year, with the help of our school committee and dedicated parents and our amazing teachers, we have produced a 200 page, professionally printed yearbook featuring all classes and highlighting the momentous occasions and experiences throughout the year.
The Yearbook has always been wonderfully received in the school community and are great keepsakes for the children to reflect on their journey here. To help in that undertaking we are hoping for your assistance
We would specifically like to request any photos from the events that have occurred in term 1 while they are fresh on your memories
-swimming carnival
-Reconciliation
-Harmony day
- Excursions
If families have any photos or if you’re attending school events (sporting, social etc) and you take any photos we’d love for you to snap and send a few back to us to use in the yearbook (appropriate permissions will be sought).
If you can help us with the above, please reach out and contact the Yearbook team via the yearbook email MTSYearbook00@gmail.com
Kind regards
Lindsay Hackett
MTS netball is trying to raise $300 towards the netball club. In order to reach our goal we need MTS help.
Gungahlin grilld has a jar. Every $10 spent you receive a bottle cap to place into the jar.
Please help support MTS netball.
Free pop-up influenza vaccination clinics for young children
The ACT Government is running pop-up influenza vaccination clinics around Canberra in May and June for children aged six months to under five years. Please share the attached flyer with your school communities.