Skip to content
Education Training

Surf safety focus as parents hit the waves

NSW Department of Education 2 mins read

Parents from Homebush West Public School were taught to be safe in the surf ahead of the summer holidays.

When the father of a student from Homebush West Public drowned last year, the close school community was devastated.

The man was rescuing his niece and nephew from a rip on the NSW south coast when he got into trouble.

It was Christmas Eve, but principal Estelle Southall remembers it like it was yesterday.

“It shook us to our core,” she recalled.

“I was on a beach myself when I found out. My heart broke for the family involved, but I also thought, ‘we have to do everything we can so nothing like this happens again to our families again’.”

Ninety-five percent of students from Homebush West Public School are from culturally and linguistically diverse backgrounds, a group sadly overrepresented in Australia’s annual drowning statistics.

“In Australia we grow up on the beaches. Beach culture is common, but our families at Homebush West generally don’t grow up around the water and many have a great fear of it,” Ms Southall said.

Homebush West recently started a surf safety program for parents, with the first practical session on Manly Beach.

Among the participating group was Manash Sudhea, who has a son in Year 3.

“In my country, Nepal, we have lots of rivers but no beaches, so I have no idea what to do. This will help me survive in the surf,” Manash said.

“I learned many things today. I’ve got many ideas that I can now share with my children to keep them safe as well. My sons love going to the beach, so this is a great thing to do.”

Joyce Kong has a daughter who has just finished Year 6.

“I never went in the surf before coming to Australia, so I have a lot to learn,” she said.

“We learned how to look for rips, how to be safe in the water, how to stay on the board, how to float. With some more practice I will feel much more confident going in the water this summer.”

Ms Southall said the smiles on the faces of the parents said it all.

“They’re having the loveliest time, but they’re also doing something brave,” she said.

“We call them our change-makers these parents, because next year we expect to have double the number of parents out here on the water.”

Media

More from this category

  • Education Training, Medical Health Aged Care
  • 13/02/2026
  • 08:00
Australian College of Nursing, Australian Catholic University, Ausmed, Monash Health

New PhD scholarship program to advance nursing leadership in digital health

The ACN Foundation is proud to announce the launch of a PhD scholarship program in partnership with Australian Catholic University (ACU), Ausmed, and Monash Health, designed to advance nursing leadership in digital health and drive innovation in electronic health records. The ACN Foundation scholarship will be named theCynthea Wellings PhD Scholarship – Advancing nursing research and building Australia’s digital health capabilities. The $90,000 top-up scholarship, to be delivered over three years, has been kindly supported by sponsorship from leading healthcare education provider Ausmed, demonstrating the industry’s commitment to advancing nursing research and digital health capabilities. Cynthea Wellings, pictured, founded Ausmed…

  • Contains:
  • Education Training
  • 12/02/2026
  • 13:11
FPT Corporation

FPT Recognized in GartnerĀ® Market Guide for Microsoft 365 Implementation and Support Services 2026

HANOI, Vietnam–BUSINESS WIRE– FPT, a global technology and IT services provider, has been listed among 14 Representative Vendors in the GartnerĀ® Market Guide for…

  • Contains:
  • Education Training, Government Federal
  • 12/02/2026
  • 13:10
National Tertiary Education Union

National survey finds high levels of stress and overwork among university staff

A shocking new report shows Australia’s universities are living a tale of two workplaces where senior leaders say they experience relatively low levels of psychological risk while staff at every university in the study are working in conditions that put them at high risk of psychological harm. The findings, released today as part of the 2025 Australian University Census on StaffWellbeing, lay bare the deep disconnect between management and frontline staff at institutions which educate more than a million students and employ hundreds of thousands. National Assistant Secretary of the National Tertiary Education Union (NTEU) Gabe Gooding said the alarming…

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.