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From the Principal – Term 1 Week 5

Milestone Moments

The term ‘milestone’ seems to have its origin in Ancient Roman society. In building their extensive road system, the Romans placed stones along the way to mark a distance in travel and to give a sense of how far to the next destination. It appears that in the 17th Century, the term milestone came into use to mark a significant moment in life. Two important milestones in the ÐãÐãÖ±²¥ journey were celebrated in the past fortnight. The Year 9 The Rite Journey Calling and Departure Ceremony and the Year 12 Ball.

The Rite Journey Calling and Departure

This simple but beautiful event was shared with Year 9 students and their parents and caregivers at City Beach recently. The event is timed for the end of the day, as the sun sets across our beautiful coast and it marks the symbolic departure from childhood to the road of adulthood for our Year 9 students in the Rites of Passage program. In recognising that our students have begun to depart from childhood, we pay respect to, and show gratitude for, the forming moments that childhood have provided; and we do this as family and ÐãÐãÖ±²¥ family. As we moved through the Calling and Departure, watching our parents stand behind their children with a hand on their shoulder was a moving experience. It was a symbol and sign of total love and a commitment to gently pushing their daughter or son towards the next stage of life. The number of families who then took the time to sit and chat with their child showed the gift of presence that a parent is to their young one.

Year 12 Ball

The Class of 2026 and staff gathered at Fraser’s in Kings Park last week for the Ball. Congratulations to all involved! The students certainly enjoyed this time of celebration and connection. They talked and danced the night through, taking the opportunity to capture the moment in Guild and friendship photos. I think they take from the night a cherished moment in their final year of schooling. In this proud milestone moment, I am sure the families of the Year 12 students would have also reminisced about the speed at which it seems life has brought each of them from that little, dependent child to the point of young independent adulthood.

The Season of Swimming

Swim carnivals continued to dominate our sports program in recent weeks, with the Lavalla Swimming Carnival and the NAS Year 7-10 Swim Meet. In the second year of Guild competition, students from Year 3 to 6 gave their all for their Guild. Congratulations to all who competed, the staff for their organisation, the families for their support and our volunteer mums and dads on the barbecue. The NAS meet is the warm-up event for the Division A ACC Carnival in the final week of the term, and we had great competition against Sacred Heart, John XXIII, Chisholm and Servite Colleges.

International Women’s Day Breakfast

We were delighted to host 180 parent guests and their children at the inaugural ÐãÐãÖ±²¥ International Women’s Day Breakfast this morning. Over the past three years, we have made it our aim to grow our celebration and recognition of International Women’s Day. The breakfast was a new addition in 2026, as well as an organising committee of Year 12 students who worked with key staff to plan and run this event. This year’s theme is ‘Balance the Scales,’ and we were treated to guest speakers from three ÐãÐãÖ±²¥ families, whose journeys through life, career and sport provided great food for thought in addressing action to support the theme.

Our Year 12 students sold purple ribbons, and proceeds will be directed to Dress for Success, an organisation that supports women advancing in the workplace. If you would like to donate, please follow this link  

 Thank you to our three guest speakers, ÐãÐãÖ±²¥ parents

  • Anna Snodgrass (Class of 97), HSE Business Partner Rio Tinto,
  • Lisa Webb (past staff member) Fremantle Football Club AFLW Senior Coach, and
  • Jayne Taylor, Director and Owner, Taylor HR Consulting.

Congratulations to the IWD Committee on their fabulous work:

  • Students:
    • Grace Bradshaw
    • Evie Brennan
    • Lulu Brickland
    • Harrison Burrows
    • Oliver Groughan
    • Ruby Hankinson
    • Mia Harris
    • Ella Hills
    • Alice Humbert
    • Alessia Infirri
    • Isabel Jimenez-Fuentes 
    • Olivia McMahon
    • Scarlett Sharp
    • Poppy Vogl
  • Staff:
    • Beth Murphy
    • Anna Scanlan
    • Jenni Vile
    • Donna McFadden
    • Tara Gray
    • Lara Ognenis
    • Megan Guglielmana
    • Kassandra Conway

A Conversation about Communication

In our opening presentations at parent evenings this year, our leaders and I have touched on the importance of respectful communication in our community. It is an opportune time to revisit the messaging and the ‘why’ behind the message of respectful communication in partnership between home and school.

From time to time, there may be challenges that emerge in a child’s schooling life that require parent advocacy. We all want the best for each young person in our care. Some of those challenging moments will come with a great deal of emotion and concern, and the College staff are here to address them in partnership with parents.

What I do ask of each parent is what I expect of myself and our staff, that we communicate concern with respect. We all have a right to be heard. As Leaders of Wellbeing, the College Executive and I mentioned in parent sessions earlier in the term, a short, respectful request to be contacted about an issue or concern will always get our time and attention. There will be occasions where parents are aggrieved and play the important advocacy role. What cannot be accepted is communication that does not meet a standard of how grievances or concerns should be made.

I extend my thanks to the great majority of families who approach communicating in email with respect and courtesy as the basis of raising an issue. What concerns me is what we all, unfortunately, experience in modern life – the communication that does not fit with societal norms and expectations. For us, this commitment to one another is expressed in our .

The why. I hold two important duties of care at once. I have a responsibility not only for the education and safety of children but also, under workplace health and safety legislation, to maintain a safe workplace for staff.

I provide these that can be used to start these very important conversations we necessarily have for the benefit of children and students. Again, I stress that our community, in vast numbers, support respectful and constructive communication, and this piece of information sharing is a topic we are all exposed to in the various community settings in which we live and work.

Mr Andrew Watson

PRINCIPAL

Monty Omodei (1960)

Monty Omodei (1960) is the son of contract miner Remo ‘Ray’ Omodei and Helen nee Stewart, and was born in Wiluna, on the western edge of the Gibson Desert, in 1943. 

By 1947 the Wiluna mine had shut down, and most of the town’s residents departed to find work elsewhere. Monty’s father Ray went on ahead to find work at the Mount Charlotte underground mine (now the Super-Pit, the world’s largest gold mine) and Helen, sons Raymond (now deceased), Monty, and daughter Cathy (now deceased) were among the last to leave Wiluna, walking out of their then-worthless home, leaving most of their belongings behind in the ghost town.

Monty spent the rest of his childhood in Kalgoorlie, attending CBC until 1955 when the family moved to Perth, as Raymond was at Teachers’ Training College, Graylands, and Cathy an announcer at 6KY Radio Station Perth. For the rest of 1955 Monty was at CBC Highgate, but came to St Ildephonsus College, New Norcia, in 1956.

At New Norcia, Monty found another family, the members of which he’s still in touch with today. He was in Sebastian House, played music, and competed ably in athletics, swimming, golf, handball, tennis, cricket, football, boxing and debating. He left New Norcia in 1958, having completed his Junior in English, Arithmetic and Algebra, Geometry and Trigonometry, Geography, History, and Art. 

Monty has very happy memories of his years at St Ildephonsus – the strict discipline (all to an ever tolling bell), of making your bed, attending mass, eating regular meals, a solid routine, school work, varied sporting activities, religion, singing in the choir as well as at Mass, or with the Benedictine monks, the picnics in the bush – and most of all, the mateship. His least favourite memory was having chicken pox one year, and being the only student left there over Easter during which, understandably, he really missed his family.

Monty came back to his parents’ North Perth home in time for Christmas, but it was quite a rowdy, lively home to which he returned as, from 1955, on behalf of the St Vincent De Paul Society, his parents ran ‘Keane House’, accommodating older boys from Bindoon and Clontarf while they completed their apprenticeships. With roughly another dozen boys there, he was just another boy in line. Monty says his years at New Norcia prepared him well though, and toughened him up a bit, making it a little easier to deal with all the boys at home.

In 1959 his parents bought a home in Dianella and Monty returned to CBC Highgate for his final two years of schooling. On school holidays Monty worked as a labourer in a cordial factory, as well as in the timber yards. In 1961 he was fortunate to win the Perth Zone to get into the Grand Final of “Youth Speaks for Australia,” sponsored by Shell Co of Australia Limited, the programme for which he still has!

In 1962 one of Ray’s friends, (later Sir) Laurence Brodie-Hall, was Executive Director of Western Mining Corporation and gave Monty a start as a junior trainee in the Engineering Division at Cavalier Construction Company in Kwinana, a wholly owned subsidiary of Alcoa. 

This allowed him to continue living and working happily in remote areas thereafter, in the mining and resources sector, managing complex engineering operations, and launching new technology into established industries until the early 1990s, when he started his own group of companies, still operating today. 

Now partly retired, Monty still works on major equity funding in the mining and resources sector, both within Australian and international markets.

Famlily-wise, Monty married Janet Stuart in Brisbane in 1985, and they have a son Stuart who, with his wife Lauren, has provided Monty with granddaughters Isla and Sienna to dote on.

Monty says he is a simple man who loves life. With a long family history of mining pioneers, publicans, war, and military service, he is very interested in researching and reading about his family history. Now living in Brisbane, distance prevents him from attending SIC reunions, but he remains close to his classmates from so long ago, and speaks to some of them every week. 

Images above:
Top: St Ildephonsus College First Years, 1956
Back, L–R: Richard Passamani, Gerard O’Callaghan, Anthony Burke, Wally Deller, Kevin Clark, Maurice Jones, Charles Bermingham, Alan Plant, David Rencoule, Gavin Schwarzbach, Michael Jones, Patrick Dullard, Laurie Shervington, Michael Kinshela, John Ferguson
3rd row: Brian White, Noel Jones, Lawrence Thompson, Theo Keeris, Thomas Morley, Terence Shine, John Stott, Eric Hogan, Neville Bugg, Maurice Priest, Frank Collins, Terence Bourke, Kieran Robinson, Peter Ryan, Denis Halligan
2nd row: Brian Farrell, John McPartland, Peter Downey, Clarence Murray, Deryck Brockhurst, Peter Whittle, James Farrell, James Williams, Leo Yellema, Alan Doyle, Edward Smeding, Kevin Heffron, Peter Klarie, John Gianatti
Front: Harry Davies, Peter Beckett, Terence Durkin, Julian Nussey, John Dwyer, Denis Larter, Ronald Ryan, Geffery Barnett, Monty Omodei, Boyden Marinich
Bottom: Monty and Janet Omodei and their family celebrating Janet’s birthday in April this year.

Miranda Barker (coney 1983)

In 1981 Miranda Barker (Coney 1983), at the age of just 15 in Year 10 at ÐãÐãÖ±²¥ Siena
auditioned for, and was accepted into the Victorian College of the Arts Secondary School and, in 1982, entered The Australian Ballet School. David McAllister AC (1980) knew Miranda from growing up in Perth, and also from ÐãÐãÖ±²¥, and had entered The Australian Ballet School a year ahead of Miranda, after finishing Year 12 here. He became a Principal Dancer with The Australian Ballet in 1989.

In 1991 Miranda also became a Principal Dancer and was said to light up the stage, to take flight upon it, and to bring a breadth and depth to each role she danced. She caught the eye of then Music Director Charles Barker, who trained at the Manhattan School of Music and was with The Australian Ballet from 1997 to 2001.

Charles picks up the story: ” … Let me set the scene.

“The Australian Ballet opened in Perth last night [at His Majesty’s Theatre] with a performance of the Merry Widow with Miranda in the title role. I had planned to propose to Miranda after the opening night performances in Perth, for about six weeks. She has family in Perth, she was the Widow, it all seemed to fit. I had told my plans to no one except Ross Stretton, Artistic Director of Australian Ballet, who incidentally slyly engineered some of the technical parts. Extreme secrecy had to be maintained because there are no secrets in this company!

“Just before the performance Ross and I spoke to the stage manager to alert her that she needed to make an announcement over the PA just before the final curtain to get the audience’s attention and that she had to fit me with a body microphone because I was going to ‘make a presentation’. Then we swore her to secrecy for the next 2-1/2 hours.

“After the performance finished (which, by the way, was quite good) the bows followed as usual – corps, soloists, principals, all forward and back, the Widow (Miranda) gets the conductor [Charles], all bow, curtain down, bows for principals in front of the curtain, … curtain up, all (except conductor) down and back. This is usually when the curtain falls for the last time for the evening. However, tonight, with the curtain still up and the audience still applauding, the stage manager spoke over the PA and said, ‘Ladies and gentlemen, may we have your attention’.

“The audience became quiet immediately and I walked out onto the stage, faced the audience, and spoke to them … saying, ‘Ladies and gentlemen, my name is Charles Barker, Music Director of the Australian Ballet. I have a question to ask tonight’s Widow.’ At which point I turned and walked a few steps toward Miranda, went down onto one knee, held out an engagement ring to her and said, ‘Miranda Coney, will you be my wife?’

“Miranda had no idea that this was about to happen and the look on her face was priceless. She was quite overcome and came to me, nodded yes, took the ring and gave me a hug and kiss. At the same moment the stage and audience erupted with a deafening ovation, a type of which I had never heard before. Men were yelling their bravos and women were shouting through their tears – especially the ballerinas on stage. An usher brought Miranda some red long stem roses I had gotten for her, more applause, then the curtain came down. It was quite a scene. I couldn’t have hoped for a better scenario. Everything went my way.

“The next morning the press began to phone at 9:30am. We gave interviews and had photos taken until about 2pm. We are both still pretty high from the evening. It was fun and perhaps most important, it was successful! The amount of media coverage after the fact was surprising. We did dozens of newspaper and radio interviews including the BBC from London. I guess people like happy endings.”

Oh, they definitely do!

Miranda concluded an extraordinary 20-year career with The Australian Ballet when she and Charles left the company at the end of 2001. They then married and moved to New York, where Miranda is now a professional ballet coach and Charles has just celebrated 30 years conducting for the American Ballet Theatre. Their sons Riley and Max are both prodigiously talented; Riley has followed Charles into music and is a collaborative pianist, composer and teaching artist, while Max has followed Miranda into dance and is a rising star with the American Ballet Theatre Studio Company.

Images above:
Top left: Miranda as The Merry Widow, 2000 (after the opening night performance of which, Charles Barker proposed)
Top middle: Miranda in Year 10 at ÐãÐãÖ±²¥ Siena, 1981
Top 3rd from left: Miranda and David McAllister AC (1980) after performing Coppélia, 1992
Photo courtesy Ronald G Bell and The Australian Ballet Archive.
Top right: David McAllister AC (1980) and Miranda Barker (Coney 1983), Principal Dancers with The Australian Ballet
Bottom middle: The Barker family, January 2025

L-R: Riley, Miranda Barker (Coney 1983), Ch
arles and Max Barker

Craig Hollywood (2000)

Craig Hollywood (2000) was born in Glasgow, Scotland, and came to Western Australia in 1994 when his father, an electrician, found work here in Perth. The family was looking for a better life than could be had in Glasgow at the time, and came to live in Woodvale, where Craig attended the local primary school.

Craig readily admits he was a rascal, and his parents recognised his need for a fuller and more focused education. They chose ÐãÐãÖ±²¥, and he started at ÐãÐãÖ±²¥ Siena, Doubleview, in Year 8, 1996. Getting there from Woodvale involved a bus, a train, and another bus, and the same in reverse to go home. Having walked to school for most of his life until then, Craig says it was a bit of an culture shock! But he settled quickly and, that year, was one of two Catherine Guild Representatives. 

From Year 10 in 1998 he attended our Churchlands campus, and signed up for Dario Bottega’s (ICT teacher 1995-2000) Computer Aided Drafting class. Without that, he says, he honestly doesn’t know where he’d be today. 

When he was in Year 11, his grandfather, his mother’s father, died back in Glasgow. Craig’s mother was an only child and needed to look after her mother, so the family returned to Scotland. Craig finished his schooling in Glasgow, but he believes his four years at ÐãÐãÖ±²¥ were pivotal to the man he is today, and credits the successes he’s made in life with his parents’ decision to send him here.

After school, Craig put Mr Bottega’s teaching to good use and pursued engineering. In around 2004, when Craig was 21 and qualified, he returned to live in Perth and began establishing his career in civil engineering. The whole family eventually came back, and they even brought his gran to live here!

In 2015 Craig had the seemingly simple idea of offering free haircuts to Perth’s homeless people. In the busy lives most people lead, and the tendency to let ideas be just that, Craig’s idea could well have remained unrealised. Instead, Craig sought the help of some barbering friends and set up a charity called Short Back & Sidewalks in one of Northbridge’s carpark laneways. The first time, he thought they might sit there all day with no customers, but that wasn’t what happened.

After a few times and word began spreading, there was a steady stream of people who travelled long distances to be there – not just for the free haircut and barbering, but for the opportunity to be seen and heard without judgement. The simple service made a huge difference in these people’s lives, and to Craig himself, who was humbled by some of their stories.

In 2022 Craig won an Australian of the Year award as Western Australia’s Local Hero. In 2023 he was awarded the City of Perth Active Citizenship Award and, in 2024, was both a finalist for Volunteer of the Year, and winner of the Australian Hair Industry Award’s Vidal Sassoon Humanitarian of the Year. Most recently Craig was presented with the 2025 Western Australian Council of Social Services (WACOSS) Outstanding Contribution: Going above and beyond award. He is a regular and inspiring motivational speaker and brings smiles to listeners when he recounts talking to (then) Prime Minister Scott Morrison – not so much about securing $450,000 in federal funding for Short Back & Sidewalks, which he did – but more about their mutual love of dogs. 

Craig now holds a Non-Executive Board position at Short Back & Sidewalks which, alongside having three paid staff members, has more than 350 skilled barbers and hairdressers in their volunteer workforce, and offers services throughout remote and regional WA as well as in NSW, South Australia, Victoria, and in the Northern Territory. This year, the goal is to deliver 15,000 haircuts. As of early June, they were at just over 10,000 haircuts, so will most likely exceed expectations. 

As Craig says, â€œGiving a free haircut to a person makes more of an impression than you could imagine. An individual truly stands taller when they have received a fresh haircut.â€

Outside of Short Back & Sidewalks, Craig continues working in civil engineering. He’s currently the WA Defence Lead at AECOM, a global company which designs infrastructure with a focus on sustainability, the supporting of communities, and the building of a better, more climate-resilient future.

Craig visited us at ÐãÐãÖ±²¥ recently and, in addition to being central to planning the celebration of his cohort’s 25th Reunion this year, hopes to inspire our students to pursue their own journeys in future; to not dismiss, and to always embrace their ideas. 


Top left: Catherine Guild, Mrs Marie Grace’s Group, 1998
Back, L-R: Sara Ceccarelli, Tristan Raison, Samantha Mitchell, Sarah See, Nicole Mancini 
Middle: Bree Blakeman, Kate Mercer, Craig Hollywood, Daniel Berrigan, Ferdinand Tamara, Christine Arnold, Lauren Bowler
Front: Matthew Dermody, Sarah Miller, Adam Corrigan, Adam Quigley, Michael Barns, Erin Mill, Joel Adams
Middle : Craig and his partner Jo, May 2025
Right: Craig at ÐãÐãÖ±²¥, June 2025
Bottom left: Craig at work with AECOM aboard the USS Minnesota