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Rongotai College

Coordinates: 41°19′S 174°48′E / 41.317°S 174.800°E / -41.317; 174.800
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Rongotai College
Address
Map
170 Coutts Street
Rongotai
Wellington 6022
New Zealand
Coordinates41°19′S 174°48′E / 41.317°S 174.800°E / -41.317; 174.800
Information
Funding typeState
MottoLumen Accipe et Imperti
(Receive the Light and Pass it on)
Established1928; 96 years ago
Ministry of Education Institution no.277
PrincipalKevin Carter
Years offered9–13
GenderBoys
School roll723[1] (August 2024)
SongNon Nobis Domine
Websitewww.rongotai.school.nz

Rongotai College is a state single-sex boys' secondary school in the southeastern suburb of Rongotai, Wellington, New Zealand. Serving Years 9 to 13 (ages 12 to 18), the school has 622 students as of July 2015.[2]

About 40 per cent of the students are of European heritage, 20 per cent identify as Pasifika, and 15 per cent Maori, and there are various Middle Eastern, Asian and African students.

A highlight for the school is the annual McEvedy Shield athletics event.

Location

The school stands on the Rongotai isthmus which separates Lyall Bay and the Cook Strait to the south from Evans Bay on Wellington Harbour to the north. Having the sea on two sides gives it a particularly bracing microclimate, with gusty winds from the north and, in winter, icy blasts from the south. It is bounded to the east by Wellington Airport, and residential Rongotai to the West. Wellington's city centre is a few kilometres to the north-west.

History

Rongotai College was opened in 1928 with Mr Fritz Martyn Renner as its first headmaster and a teaching staff of seven. It was started as an "overspill" for Wellington College, which was overstretched, and Rongotai became the new school for Wellington boys in the eastern suburbs.[3]

Rongotai College originally accepted enrolments from students of Intermediate School age. However, when Evans Bay Intermediate School opened its doors in 1964, the school became purely a secondary school, catering for young men in what are now called years 9 to 13.

The Assembly Hall, known as the Renner Hall, was opened in 1966 and is named after the founding headmaster.

Achievement

The 2013 ERO report was favourable whilst pointing out areas for improvement, for example in monitoring achievement and attendance levels.[4]

School leadership

Principals

Period Principal
1928–1945 Mr Fritz Martyn Renner
1946–1951 Mr H.A. Heron
1951–1962 Mr A.E. Lock
1963–1982 Noel Mackay[5]
1982–1991 Mr A.D. Powell
1991–2009 Mr Graeme Jarratt
2010–present Mr Kevin Carter

Houses

The four houses at Rongotai College are named after the school's first four headmasters,[6]

  • Renner (Red)
  • Heron (Blue)
  • Lock (Green)
  • Mackay (Yellow)

Notable alumni

Dates denote period enrolled as student

The Arts

Science

  • Dr Barry Dent (1973–1977) – CEO of BDG Synthesis, ( organic chemistry)
  • Professor Alex Malahoff (1951–1956) – pioneered use of submersibles to explore submarine volcanoes, CEO of GNS Science 2002–2012
  • Tony Mahon (1947–52) – built a reputation for his extensive research on geothermal energy; awarded Joseph Aidlin Award
  • Dr Campbell Nelson FRSNZ (1957–61) – ex-Professor of Earth Studies at Waikato University, awarded 2004 Hutton medal by the Royal Society

Business

Politics and public service

Sport

Basketball

Cricket

Football

Hockey

Rugby League

Rugby Union

Running

  • Derek Froude (1973–1977) – represented New Zealand in the men's marathon, at the Olympics in 1984 and 1992
  • Paul Lloyd (1979–1984) – represented New Zealand in the men's 110m Hurdles, at the Commonwealth Games, Auckland in 1990

Wrestling

  • Al Hobman dec. – former professional wrestler, trainer and promoter

Yachting

  • Greg Wilcox (1974–1978) – former New Zealand world champion yachtsman OK Dinghy class

Notes

  1. ^ "New Zealand Schools Directory". New Zealand Ministry of Education. Retrieved 17 September 2024.
  2. ^ "New Zealand Schools – Education Counts". Ministry of Education. Retrieved 16 May 2013.
  3. ^ "Rongotai College History". Rongotai College Website. Retrieved 7 February 2009.
  4. ^ http://www.ero.govt.nz/Early-Childhood-School-Reports/School-Reports/Rongotai-College-30-05-2013
  5. ^ Vance, Andrea (14 April 2019). "'It was a horror story': Education chiefs ignored historic school abuse, victim claims". Stuff.
  6. ^ "Rongotai College Parent and Caregiver Guide" (PDF). Rongotai College. 2018. p. 16.