ST TERESA'S - Key Persons


Caroline Archer

Job Titles:
  • Foundation Member

Fr Alfred Osamor

Job Titles:
  • Foundation Member

Gareth Scott

Job Titles:
  • Co - Opted Member

Gemma Jones

Job Titles:
  • Parent Member

Jeffrey Khalil

Job Titles:
  • Foundation Member

Kieran Geary

Job Titles:
  • Foundation Member

Mark Walsh

Job Titles:
  • Foundation Member

Miss C. Robertson

Job Titles:
  • Class Teacher

Miss H. Ireland

Job Titles:
  • Class Teacher

Miss H. Kleinman

Job Titles:
  • Member of the Senior Leadership Team
  • Deputy Headteacher

Miss P. Jones

Job Titles:
  • Class Teacher

Miss S. Hughes

Job Titles:
  • Class Teacher

Miss V. Moffet

Job Titles:
  • Member of the School Support Team
  • Night Owls Assistant

Mr. P. Duggan

Job Titles:
  • Member of the School Support Team
  • Caretaker

Mr. S. Lines

Job Titles:
  • Class Teacher

Mr. T. Maillard

Job Titles:
  • Higher Level Teaching Assistant ( HLTA )

Mrs. A. Kerr

Job Titles:
  • Member of the Senior Leadership Team
  • Pastoral Leader

Mrs. C. Alldis

Job Titles:
  • Teaching Assistant

Mrs. C. May

Job Titles:
  • Class Teacher

Mrs. C. Nixon

Job Titles:
  • School Secretary

Mrs. D. Sullivan

Job Titles:
  • Member of the School Support Team
  • Midday Supervisor

Mrs. H. Bennett

Job Titles:
  • Head Teacher
  • Member of the Senior Leadership Team

Mrs. J. Ingleton

Job Titles:
  • Teaching Assistant

Mrs. J. Lategan

Job Titles:
  • Teaching Assistant

Mrs. J. Mukuze

Job Titles:
  • Member of the School Support Team
  • Maths Specialist Teacher

Mrs. J. Rossiter

Job Titles:
  • Higher Level Teaching Assistant ( HLTA )

Mrs. K. King

Job Titles:
  • Member of the School Support Team

Mrs. L. Hind

Job Titles:
  • Teaching Assistant

Mrs. L. Judd

Job Titles:
  • Finance Assistant & Midday Supervisor

Mrs. M. Allen

Job Titles:
  • Student Teacher

Mrs. N. Drage

Job Titles:
  • Business Manager

Mrs. R. Reene

Job Titles:
  • Class Teacher

Mrs. S. Simmonds

Job Titles:
  • Member of the School Support Team
  • Language Link Specialist Teaching Assistant

Mrs. S. Smythson

Job Titles:
  • Member of the School Support Team
  • Early Birds and Night Owls Provision Manager

Mrs. S. Twort

Job Titles:
  • Teaching Assistant

Mrs. V. Wraight

Job Titles:
  • Teaching Assistant

Oscar Romero

The children and staff at St Teresa's are working hard to try and earn the developer level of the Oscar Romero Award. This award acknowledges the commitment the school has shown in developing Catholic Social Teaching. Please read below to find out more about Oscar Romero and why he is important for us to learn about and learn from. Who was Oscar Romero? Archbishop Oscar Romero is a 20 th century martyr of the Church. He was the archbishop of San Salvador in Central America. On 24 March 1980, in the chapel of the cancer hospital where he lived, he was shot dead at the altar by a death squad marksman as he was about to offer the bread and wine in the middle of Mass. He was canonised (recognised as a saint) on 14 October 2018 by Pope Francis in Rome, having been beatified on 23 May 2015. Born on 15 August 1917 in humble circumstances, which he never forgot, Romero was ordained priest in April 1942. For 25 years he served as a dedicated pastor and became a popular preacher. He was a surprisingly shy and self-effacing man who had a deep prayer life and was devoted to Our Lady Queen of Peace. He lived very simply and invariably responded with genuine compassion to the poor and needy. He was loved by his people. When years later, in 1977, he became archbishop, his country was embroiled in social and political conflict. Great wealth came to the country's landowners from coffee, sugar cane and cotton exports but for the landless peasants there was ever more desperate poverty and hunger. The rich were getting richer and the poor poorer. Every effort at change was rebuffed by massive electoral fraud and the violent repression of peaceful protest. From his cathedral pulpit Archbishop Romero became the voice of the voiceless poor. He made an ‘option for the poor' - they were at the very centre of his concerns. His love of God and his love of the poor were inextricably entwined. In his preaching and teaching he set out and explained Catholic Social Teaching, simply and eloquently. He then sought to make real in the lives of his people that challenging teaching of compassion, love, reconciliation and justice. He looked at the world from the point of view of the suffering poor communities and he tried to generate meaningful solidarity that would actually transform their lives. Every Sunday he spoke the horrible truth of what was happening in the countryside. With great courage he denounced the killings, the torture and the disappearances of campesino leaders; he sought justice and recompense for the atrocities committed by the army and police and he set up pastoral programmes to provide food, shelter and support for the victims of the violence. In advocating for their cause he gave them hope and encouragement. With the emergence of armed guerrilla groups, civil war loomed. Archbishop Romero rejected the violence whether perpetrated by the left or the right. He strained every nerve to promote peaceful solutions to his nation's crises, insisting to the wealthy classes that serious reforms were imperative. "It is only a caricature of love when we try to patch up with charity what is owed in justice, when we cover with an appearance of benevolence what we are failing in social justice" he said. He was vilified in the press, his homilies were denounced as communist-inspired, missionary priests were expelled from the country, churches were occupied with tabernacles smashed and the Blessed Sacrament desecrated, six of his priests were assassinated and he himself received regular death threats - on one Sunday dynamite was placed behind the altar for his Mass but failed to go off. The atmosphere became so charged Archbishop Romero realised he was going to be killed. And he came to accept it. At 6.26pm on 24 March 1980, he was assassinated with a single marksman's bullet. He gave his life for his people. He died a martyr to the option for the poor, a martyr to the social teaching of the Church which he proclaimed and lived with absolute fidelity to his very last breath. Every year on his Feast Day, 24 March, we will remember and celebrate his life and martyrdom. For us he is the model of a gospel-inspired teacher and practitioner, who seamlessly combined his deep prayer life with a courageous commitment to the poor. For the Romero Award, he guides us on our way as we strive to develop an authentic spirituality of justice and to become, in the words of Pope Francis, ‘a poor Church for the poor'.

Rory McShane

Job Titles:
  • Foundation Member

Thomas Jury

Job Titles:
  • Parent Member

Tricia Enefer

Job Titles:
  • Foundation Member