Download - Colaiste Eanna - Farwell to Class of 2011
�Class of 20��
Coláiste ÉannaFarewell to Class of 20��
2 Class of 20��
Message from principal
This evening we mark the transition of the class of 2011 from second-level schooling into further education, apprenticeship or directly into the world of work. This is a big occasion, perhaps the biggest in your lives to date. It is formal recognition of your move into the world of manhood – a world in which many, if not all
of you, will be extremely successful.
You could, I suppose, compare Coláiste Éanna to a shipyard where, over time, a vessel is prepared. The end product, a magnificence, enhances the harbour in which it is launched. When the ship sails off on its maiden voyage there is a great sense of loss at its departure. Ships, as magnificent and all as they are, were not built to remain in harbours. And so it is that you now leave Coláiste Éanna, and set sail on your voyage through the sea of life.
It is unlikely you will ever all be together again as a group. You will, however, remember the bonds formed, the problems shared, the jokes enjoyed, the teams that played, the support extended. These memories will forever be part of what you are and will become more cherished with the passage of time. Friendships made in Coláiste Éanna will be friendships that you will carry with you throughout your lives.
Graduation is a major watershed in your lives. It serves to remind you and all of us here that you have successfully made it through a demanding stage in your development - a stage at which many other counter attractions could so easily have diverted you. To you all I say `Well Done! ` You can feel justifiably proud of your commitment and perseverance – qualities that augur well for future success and fulfilment in life.
You say goodbye to Coláiste Éanna, where you have spent such an important part of your formative years. We hope you remember us kindly - your years with us will be remembered long after this evening. Roosevelt noted that “we cannot always build the future for our youth but we can build our youth for the future.” I hope that we, as a staff, have contributed in no small measure to your capacity to face the future with competence and confidence.
You now stand at a crossroads in life. For some decisions come easily, for others, less so. Choose carefully and be happy. Never confuse happiness with material well-being. Always strive to do your best – no greater can be expected of any individual. “There is nothing noble about being superior to some other man. True nobility is in being superior to your previous self.” (Samuel Johnson).
Let me conclude by wishing you all the very best of success in your examinations in June and in your future lives.
Le gach dea-ghui
John F. O’ Sullivan (Principal)
Contents
Page 2: Message from the Principal
Page 4: Letter from the Year Master,
Page 5: Most likely to…
Pages 6-��: Student Photos, ‘then and now’
Page �2: Farewell speech from Class of 20��
Page �4-�5: Memories
Page �6-�7: Hopes/Wishes/Successes
Page �8-�9: Awards and Students of the Year
Page 20: Class of 20��
�Class of 20��
4 Class of 20��
Message from Mr McManus
Tonight as we mark the formal end of your time in Coláiste Éanna I’m sure that you’re wishing for the end of the examinations themselves and then bring to a close this chapter of your lives. However, just as we reminded you in September that the last year of school goes very quickly so
too will the remaining weeks to pass and my hope is that you will remain focused on that challenge and keep up the effort right up to the finishing line. It might be worth while at this point to reflect on your coming to Coláiste Éanna 5 or 6 years ago, and the changes that have occurred over this period. It is worth reflecting on why you chose Coláiste Éanna—was it because your friends were coming here, was it the local school, was it that your parents thought that it would be the right school for you or was it because there was an opportunity to play your favourite sport? Whatever that reason it is certain that the time you have spent here will have a major influence on the rest of your life. While you were growing into big men, maturing and doing some learning, the entire country was going through major changes. When you arrived our economy, we thought was the envy of all other European countries, our desires as citizens were ever more demanding and a journey on the M50 was a nightmare.
As you prepare to leave, our future looks far more challenging, our ambitions a bit more realistic and that motorway a bit more manageable. There is no doubt that many challenges lie ahead for you, the class of 2011, and for the entire country. But was it really any different for other graduation groups? Ask your grandparents, your parents what it was like for them as they graduated. Then, just as now there were economic and other challenges, but solutions did emerge, to which your parents and previous generations contributed. Remember class of 2011; no kite ever flew except against the wind. It would be appropriate for me to assure you before you leave; your many sporting, academic and cultural achievements will long be remembered in the school. As your year master I will always recall your good humour, your many innovative excuses and that another year has passed in Coláiste Éanna, with the teachers’ team un-beaten in the annual football tournament. I wish you the best of good fortune in your examinations, your choice of college course and your career paths in the years ahead. Thank you for flying Coláiste Éanna, P. McManus
Letter from Year Master
5Class of 20��
Most Likely To
Be famous - Neil & Ian Lynch
Win the lottery, but lose the ticket - Paul Stuart-Trainor
Give all their money to charities - Mark Dunn
Release a “one hit wonder”- Joe Thomson
Become a priest - Cillian Murphy
Go to jail - Ross Callery
Write a best seller - Liam Dunne
Live alone - Lee Brassil
Join the army - Sean Egan
Join a boy band - Aaron Twamley
Start a new religion - Sam Giffney
Invent a new word - Stephen Fagan
Be a talk show host - Mikey Bradshaw
Discover a cure for cancer - Darragh Egan
Win the worst attendance award - Graeme Elliott
Become an underwear model - Mark Donovan
Become Taoiseach - Emmet Wilkinson
Still get asked for ID then they’re �0 - Ian Jones & Shiba Poudel
Become a hairdresser - Conor Dunne
Live with their parents until they’re 40 - David Coleman
Join the Gardai - Conor Dooley
Marry a supermodel - Ciaran Leigh
Become a crooked banker - Darragh Mowlds
Be the next Bill Gates - Kevin Cardiff
Return to Colaiste Eanna as a teacher - Shane Price
Cry on Graduation - Ryan Basquel
Ask “Do you want fries with that?”- Alex Timmins
Be covered in tattoos - Andrew Harding
Aaron Twamley
Now
Then
Alan Ryan
Now
Then
Alex Timmins
Now
Then
Ali Javed
Now
Then
Andi Domnulete
Now
Then
Andrew Harding
Now
Then
Brian Kennedy
Now
Then
Carl O’Donovan
Now
Then
Christian Ngomba
Now
Then
Ciaran Leigh
Now
Then
Cillian Murphy
Now
Then
Connor Hollywood
Now
Then
6 Class of 20��
Class of 20�� - Then & Now
Then
Then
Conor Dooley
Now
Then
Conor Dunne
Now
Then
Daniel Flanagan
Now
Then
Darragh Egan
Now
Then
Darragh Mowlds
Now
Then
Darragh Waters
Now
Then
Then
David Coleman
Now
Then
Emmet Wilkinson
Now
Then
Emmett Mooney
Now
Then
Then
Eric Tyrrell
Now
Then
Gavin Corrigan
Now
Then
Graeme Elliott
Now
Then
7Class of 20��
Class of 20�� - Then & Now
8 Class of 20��
Hassan Ahmed
Now
Then
Hussein Ahmed
Now
Then
Ian Jones
Now
Then
Ian Lynch
Now
Then
James McDonnell
Now
Then
Joseph Brennan
Now
Then
Class of 20�� - Then & Now
Joseph Thomson.
Now
Then
Kevin Cardiff
Now
Then
Kevin O’Connor
Now
Then
Laurence Scally
Now
Then
Lee Brassil
Now
Then
Liam Dunne
Now
Then
9Class of 20��
Then
Then
Louis Rwego
Now
Then
Malachy Burke
Now
Then
Mark Donovan
Now
Then
Mark Dunn
Now
Then
Michael Bradshaw
Now
Then
Michal Szymczak
Now
Then
Class of 20�� - Then & Now
Then
Mindaugas Evstifejevas
Now
Then
Neil Brehony
Now
Then
Neil Lynch
Now
Then
Then
Niall O’Mahony
Now
Then
Niall Ryan
Now
Then
Nils Conway
Now
Then
�0 Class of 20��
Noel McNamara
Now
Then
Omar Hamed Rashid
Now
Then
Paul Stuart-Trainor
Now
Then
Philip Marshall
Now
Then
Robert Doyle
Now
Then
Ronan Murray
Now
Then
Ross Callery
Now
Then
Ryan Basquel
Now
Then
Sam Giffney
Now
Then
Class of 20�� - Then & Now
Shane Brien
Now
Then
Shane Conlon
Now
Then
Shane Oglesby
Now
Then
��Class of 20��
Shane Price
Now
Then
Shiba Poudel
Now
Then
Stephen Chambers
Now
Then
Stephen Fagan
Now
Then
Tim Hogan
Now
Then
Now
Class of 20�� - Then & Now
Then
Then
Then
Then
Don’t undermine your worth by comparing yourself with others;
It is because we are different that each of us is special.
Don’t set your goals by what other people feel important.
Only you know what is best for you. Don’t take for granted the things closest to your
heart. Cling to them as you would to life,
For without them life is meaningless. Don’t let your life slip through your fingers,
by living in the past or in the future. By living your life one day at a time, you live all the
days of your life. Don’t give up when you still have something to give.
Nothing is really over ...... until the moment you stop trying.
Don’t be afraid to admit that you are less than perfect;
it is a fragile thread that binds us to each other. Don’t be afraid to encounter risks.
It is by taking chances that we learn how to be brave. Don’t shut love out of your life by saying it’s
impossible to find. The quickest way to receive love is to give love;
the fastest way to lose love is to hold it too tightly, and the best way to keep love is to give it wings.
Don’t dismiss your dreams. To be without dreams is to be without hope; to be without hope is to be without purpose.
Don’t run through life so fast that you forget not only where you’ve been
but also where you’re going. Life is not a race, but a journey to be savoured
each step of the way.
A Creed to Live By
�2 Class of 20��
Class of 20�� - Farewell Speech
By Mikey Bradshaw
Good evening everybody. I’d like to thank everyone for coming here tonight. When I look around this church I don’t see individual people, I see the year as a whole. After the six years that we spent together that’s what we’ve become, going to Coláiste Éanna is something that we will
always have in common.
Having spent so much of our lives in this school, it will be surreal to find ourselves elsewhere come September - whether it’s college or the dole or wherever it is I think Coláiste Éanna has prepared us for it. After six years, it has all come down to these last few weeks and to be honest there isn’t one moment of this epic journey through secondary school that I would change. It’s going to be strange in September not having to get up out of bed and start another school term; instead we will be starting a new chapter in our lives. Although we are all delighted to be finished the Coláiste Éanna chapter, I think that we have taken the past couple years for granted. When we look back on it, we won’t really understand just how great the years were but we will always have the memories; like the best dressed colours day ever which we renamed “Jersey Shore” day, or the dreaded sound at the lockers when you hear that unmistakable voice saying “get to class”, or even that day recently when we found out that the teachers weren’t ‘over the hill’ and beat us at soccer. These are memories nobody can ever take away from us.
I feel because our class was so close that we will all stay in touch with each other and that there will be regular reunions, whether it’s in Tramco, or possibly somewhere a bit classier as we get older!!!
When I got asked to write this speech, I was very hesitant about taking it on but then I realised I would have the chance to speak to all of you today about the funniest and greatest group of lads that has ever been in Coláiste Éanna and that was an opportunity I could never have passed up. Whether you were the lad who often struggled to find his full uniform (Oggy), or you were the baby of the year (Aaron), or you really just wanted to graduate and launch your jam-making empire (Mark), everyone had their own identity and it was all these different people that made the class of 2011 what it is. I have no doubt that our time in this school has helped mould us into the people that we are today; it will have a deep impact on how the rest of our lives will pan out.
We have to thank all the teachers, past and present, for helping us find our way in life and for showing us our potential, both in education and sport. I don’t want to name them all or we would be here all night but thanks must go to Mr.Glennon for the never ending amount of pointless questions he has answered for us over the years. Particular thanks also go to Mr.McManus, our year head, for two great years of pursuits to get notes and the epic one liners he came out with, that we will remember for years to come.
Finally, I have to thank the lads of the class of 2011...if I was going to do it all over again, I wouldn’t pick anyone else to share the journey with. I’d like to wish everyone the best of luck in the Leaving Cert exams.
I hope that the old phrase “Schools out, memories past. Don’t ever doubt, our friendship will last” will symbolise the Class of 2011.
Thank you.
��Class of 20��
�4 Class of 20��
Memories
�5Class of 20��
Memories
Mr Durney dancing in front of the class…..Ciaran Leigh stood on the
barrier and the pillar it was attached to came out of the ground…..
Going to Istanbul for Basketball World Championships, the laughs and
memories…..Movember when Tim Hogan grew handlebars…..2nd Year trip
to Barcelona…..moving lockers into the bathrooms and watching people
looking for them…..Mr Brady telling me he doesn’t like messers…..being
an hour late back for the bus in Portaventura and Mr Nunn dragging us to
the bus in a headlock…..went to school with my trousers on backwards,
wearing odd shoes and on the wrong feet
Best/Funniest Things that Happened
Achievements/Successes
�6 Class of 20��
Going to India…..All Ireland Basketball champions…..great Junior Cert
results…..Dublin Intermediate Boxing Champion…..surviving school…..
arriving to school on time twice in one week…..most improved basketball
player and under 16 League MVP…..playing in Basketball World
Championships in Turkey…..winning the Dublin Basketball Cup 6 times…..
organising things throughout the years and being known for it…..being
the only person to have long hair for all 6 years…..winning the Basketball
All Ireland League and Cup in 3rd, 4th and 6th year…..Leinster hurling…..
Student of the Year in 3rd year…..attendance awards…..1st Year Woodwork
Award…..Best debater in 2nd Year…..hurling medals…..wearing full school
uniform once in 3 years…..winning Student of the Year twice…..winning
under 14 Gaelic Championship by 6 points in extra time
Get a good job…..make loads of money…..be happy…..go to college…..play
Senior hurling…..have a good life…..go to college in America…..become a
composer…..travel the world…..make a difference…..get all A grades in the
Leaving Cert…..opportunities…..to watch the Lion King, again…..to play for
Dublin Senior Football Team…..get a degree…..join the Garda…..get the
course I want…..to stay in touch……to own Tesco…..have a great family with
amazing children…..become a teacher of Spanish and English…..to get a
degree in Physics…..that everyone does well in the Leaving Cert
Hopes
Earliest School Memories
Class of 20�� �7
Introducing myself to the class in 1st year and realising that I had a deeper
voice than everyone else…..Mr Durney giving us an essay for talking without
permission…..playing football at the break…..Mr O’Ceallaigh chasing 1st years
out to the yard at break time…..staying in bed and missing my first day…..
introducing ourselves on the first day and Joe Thomson forgets what Primary
school he went to…..playing marbles with Darragh Egan in Junior Infants…..
walking through the main door…..Mr Conway showing us around the school…..
going home for lunch…..Mr Fallon showing A2 around the school…..James
McDonnell cracking bad jokes…..Getting lost on the first day…..watching Student
Council members walking around in their black jumpers and thinking ‘one day
I will wear one of those’…..Conor Dunne crying 3 times in one day and Mr
Merriman helping
�8 Class of 20��
Awards & Student of the Year
Awards & Students of the yearStudent of the Year:
Academic Excellene:
Merit Awards:
Mark Dunn
Kevin Cardiff Darragh Egan Darragh Mowlds Cillian Murphy
Ryan Basquel James McDonnell Alan Ryan Emmet Wilkinson
�9Class of 20��
Awards & Student of the Year
Attendance Awards:Mark Dunn Daniel Flanagan Cillian Murphy
Shiba Poudel Shane Price
Sport Awards:Hurler of the Year:
Conor DooleyFootballer of the Year:
Ryan BasquelSenior Golfer of the Year:
Nils Conway
Principal’s Award: Niall Ryan
20 Class of 20�� Printed by Lettertec [email protected] www.lettertec.com
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