Filter Content
- Principals Message
- Mission Appeal | Timor-Leste
- Day For Daniel | Friday 27th October
- Sacrament Of First Communion | Parent Information Night
- Reflection With Deacon Mark Kelly
- Along the Track | The Light Within
- Warragul Cycling Club | Ages 5-12 AusBike
- Warragul Cricket Club | 8 Week Program
- Upcoming Events
Dear Parents,
Welcome to Term 4! I hope you had an enjoyable holiday period with your families.
Unfortunately to begin this term I have to inform you that our after-school care provider, Extend, will no longer be providing service at St Angela of the Cross. After months of not being able to find staff the school, Diocese of Sale Catholic Education Limited (DOSCEL) and Extend have come to an agreement to end the contract effective immediately. We are currently engaging with some other providers and will advise parents as soon as we know more. We apologise for the inconvenience this has caused and hope to rectify this ASAP.
2024 Preparation
In preparation for the 2024 school year we are close to finalising our school budgets and student numbers. In 2024 we will move to a ten-grade structure and begin with approximately 220 students. The class structure outlined below enables us to have the lowest class sizes possible.
- Foundation
- Foundation
- Foundation
- Grade 1/2
- Grade 1/2
- Grade 1/2
- Grade 1/2
- Grade 3/4
- Grade 3/4
- Grade 5/6
We are still finalising our staffing requirements and will advise parents of new appointments and teacher grade allocations in due course.
Building Update
Work on our stage 2 building has continued over the holidays and next week students will be able to access the newly landscaped play areas (See pictures below). Work will continue on defects and our school canteen area over the coming months.
As a Catholic Community we are inspired by the life of Jesus to reach out to those in this world that are marginalised or less fortunate than we are. Our mission focus for part of this term is on the work of Catholic Mission in Timor-Leste in supporting the work of the Salesian Sisters. At St Angela's we are focusing our fundraising efforts on the Children's home. Every $20 that we raise at St Angela's will provide the students with books and equipment to aid their learning.
If you would like to learn more about the work that Catholic Mission is doing, please check out the website Socktober: for mission
Day For Daniel | Friday 27th October
Held annually on the last Friday of October, Day for Daniel honours the memory of Daniel Morcombe.
We ask all students & staff on this very special day to Wear Red, Educate and Donate.
Sacrament Of First Communion | Parent Information Night
First Communion dates:
Inquiries:
St. Joseph’s Parish Office
56231642
Reflection With Deacon Mark Kelly
Who are those tenants?
If we are standing outside this parable glaring at those cruel tenants who deserve what is coming to them then we have missed Jesus’ point entirely (Matt 21:33-43). Indeed those tenants who kill the landlord’s son aren’t worth sympathy. But then we realise we are the tenants Jesus is really addressing. Like those parable tenants, God, our Master, has given us each and collectively a vineyard to look after and everything we need to make it prosper. Our families, our communities, our workplaces and schools, our parish, our environment are all parts of our vineyard and, before we protest the comparison with the tenants in the parable, we need to consider how we have done tending our vineyard.
We have everything we need and much of what we want. How have we employed the gifts he has given us? Have we used those gifts to prosper the vineyard or have we horded them to our own self-indulgent ends?
God has given us Jesus and in him the promise of eternal life but, if we are so inclined, we can ignore him, cast him out, attempt to kill him in our lives and the lives of those in our vineyards. Our moral laziness and cowardice can reduce him to a practical irrelevance in our lives and the lives of others; our callous meanness can banish him from our hearts and we can flagrantly and pro-actively disobey his law.
Instead, we are called to live our mission in the vineyard with resilience, joy and hope including regular prayer and joining our church community in worship but also Christian outreach to family, friends and particularly the lonely and vulnerable. A simple smile to a stranger can go a long way. We need to be tenants who lovingly tend the vineyard we encounter; open to the Son who is present in every aspect of our lives.
Deacon Mark Kelly