It acknowledged evidence given in court that his actions resulted from a flare up in his obsessive compulsive disorder, which sparked a deterioration in his mental health.
He became "fixated" with McPherson, the decision said, and when he was discovered by police on her property appeared "somewhat confused".
Bargh was censured by the disciplinary tribunal, and a number of conditions placed on his practising certificate, including a requirement he inform any employer of his obsessive compulsive disorder.
He was also ordered to continue to work with his doctor to address and manage his medical issues, and report to the Education Council quarterly on his progress.
Bargh, who has worked as a teacher for 25 years, claimed there was no malicious or menacing intent, or sexual motivation for his actions.
He has accepted his conduct was illegal.
He was convicted of four charges in April last year and fined $1000.
In her harrowing victim impact statement, McPherson described how the "prolonged" and "calculated" stalking took a toll on her life, and how she attempted to protect herself from an unknown prowler.
"I was, and still am, forever flinching at every noise, knocks at the door and constantly looking behind myself both in and outside," she said.
McPherson said she felt "anxious and violated" by the stalking and had been "living in constant fear".
"I have been a prisoner in my own home," she said.
McPherson described the abuse of trust she felt at the hands of her own principal, and how he used the school's computer system to gain confidential and personal information on her "to fulfil his perverted feitsh".