Princes Hill Secondary College
Princes Hill Secondary College | |
---|---|
Address | |
Arnold Street, Princes Hill[2] , 3054 | |
Information | |
School type | co-educational Public Government School[1] |
Motto | Template:Lang-la |
Established | 1889[3][4] |
Principal | John Stone |
Enrolment | 850[2] |
Website | www.phsc.vic.edu.au |
Princes Hill Secondary College is a state, coeducational secondary school, located in Carlton North, an inner suburb of Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.[1] The school is 2 kilometres from the Melbourne City Centre.[2]
The school was formerly known as Princes Hill High School.[5] Princes Hill Secondary College is non-selective and accepts students from over 30 primary schools in the City of Yarra, City of Melbourne, City of Moreland and City of Darebin.[6] The school has a no-uniform policy.[7]
History
The school was opened in 1889 by the acting headmaster.[3][4]
Ivor Evans, a 13-year-old student at Princes Hill, won the 1901 Australian flag design competition. It was displayed over the Royal Exhibition Building.[8]
A fire destroyed the original structure on the 8th of February 1970.[4] Teachers at the school sent a telegram to the then Prime Minister, John Gorton, to ask for financial aid for the school. 410 pupils were left without classrooms.[9]
The school was rebuilt in 1973 by Daryl Jackson in a Brutalist architectural style.[10] New wings have been added since 1983, and a gym in the 2000s[5]
Princes Hill Secondary College students have not worn uniforms since 1971, at variance with the surrounding schools (University High, Northcote).[11]
In the late 1980s the school provided Irish language classes, but these were later cancelled.[12]
Campus
Princes Hill Secondary College is one of the few late-20th-century buildings on Arnold Street.[13]
In 2005, parts of the school were refurbished: the performing arts centre, textiles and food facilities, year 11 and 12 classrooms and science laboratories. A gymnasium was established in 2006.[14]
The school has 400 seat theatre and a camp in Mirimbah, located at the foothills of Mount Buller in the Victorian Alps.[2]
Academics
VCE studies offered by the school:
Art, Australian and Global Politics, Biology, Business Management, Chemistry, Classical Studies, Drama, English, English (EAL), Foundation Mathematics, French, Further Mathematics, General Mathematics, Global Politics, Health and Human Development, History: 20th Century (1900-1945), History: 20th Century (since 1945), History: Revolutions, Italian, Literature, Mathematical Methods (CAS), Media, Music Investigation, Music Performance, Philosophy, Physical Education, Physics, Product Design and Technology, Psychology, Specialist Mathematics, Studio Arts and Visual Communication Design.[15]
In 2008 and 2012 VCE Media and Art work was selected for Top Arts Exhibition at the National Gallery of Victoria.[16][17]
Princes Hill Secondary College was ranked in the top 200 public secondary schools (equal 9th) in Australia based on academic results in 2009.[18]
In 2013, 32 of 111 students achieved an Australian Tertiary Admission Rank over 90 (29%), almost 50% of students achieved over 80, and 67% achieved over 70.[19]
In 2014, the Victorian Certificate of Education median study score was 33. 16.4 percent of students achieved over 40 study scores.[20]
Notable alumni
- Attila Abonyi, Australian association football player, member of the Australia national association football team for the 1974 FIFA World Cup[21]
- Rupert Balfe, Australian rules footballer
- John Bluthal, British film and television actor[21]
- Jack Brake, Australian football player[22]
- Arnold Briedis, Australian rules footballer[21]
- Lily Brett, Australian novelist, essayist and poet[21]
- Joseph Brown AO, OBE, Australian artist and art collector[21]
- Sir William Brunton, Australian politician, and Lord Mayor of Melbourne
- Vin Catoggio, Australian rules footballer[21]
- Kelvin Coe OBE, Australian ballet dancer of the Australian Ballet[21]
- Alan Crawford, Australian rules footballer[21]
- Matt Day, Australian actor
- John Dugdale, Australian rules footballer[21]
- Geoffrey Edelsten, Australian medical entrepreneur, philanthropist, former owner of the Sydney Swans
- Ivor Evans, Australian co-designer of the Australian flag[21]
- Fred Freer, Australian cricketer[21]
- Jack Hale, Australian rules footballer[21]
- Bob Heatley, Australian rules footballer[23]
- Russell Hitchcock, Australian singer[21]
- Ben Lewin, Australian-American film director and screenwriter[21]
- Sam Lipski, Australian journalist[21]
- Ian Macfarlan, Australian politician, deputy leader of the Liberal Party of Australia in the state of Victoria, and the 35th Premier of Victoria[24]
- Paul Meldrum, Australian rules footballer[21]
- Adam Richard, Australian comedian, actor and media personality
- Sir David Smith KCVO, AO, Australian public servant[21]
- Victor Smorgon AC, Australian businessman and philanthropist[21]
- Maria Vamvakinou, Australian politician, ALP member for Calwell in the Parliament of Australia
- Frank Warne, Australian cricketer[21]
- Arnold Zable, Australian writer[21]
References
- ^ a b "Princes Hill Secondary College". vrqa.vic.gov.au. State of Victoria, Department of Education and Training.
- ^ a b c d "Right School Right Place - Victorian Government Schools". State of Victoria, Department of Education and Training.
- ^ a b "The Argus". The Argus. Trove. 23 May 1939.
- ^ a b c "The Age". The Age. Trove. 24 Nov 1971.
- ^ a b "Princes Hill High School, former". Victorian Heritage Database.
{{cite web}}
: Missing or empty|url=
(help) - ^ The National Education Directory Australia
- ^ "Students enter school uniform debate". The Australian. 17 July 2010.
- ^ "Shape: Designs for life". The Age. 29 Nov 2013.
- ^ "Aid plea". The Canberra Times. Trove. 11 Feb 1970.
- ^ Jackson, Daryl (1996). Daryl Jackson: selected and current works. Images Publishing. ISBN 1875498524.
- ^ Parliament of Victoria - Dress Code Submissions
- ^ The Irish Language Association of Australia
- ^ "Best streets: Princes Hill". The Sydney Morning Herald. 15 July 2012.
- ^ Princes Hill Secondary College website
- ^ "School Studies Search". Victorian Curriculum and Assessment Authority.
- ^ "Young Starlets - Minnis Journals". Education Today.
- ^ "Top Arts 2012". National Gallery of Victoria.
- ^ "National Top Public High Schools - 2009". Better Education.
- ^ "2013 Annual Report". vrqa.vic.gov.au. State of Victoria, Department of Education and Training.
- ^ "Top state high schools boost property prices". News.com.au.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t Vlahogiannis, N. (1989). Prinny Hill: The State Schools of Princes Hill, 1889-1989.
- ^ "Biography - John Brake". Australian Dictionary of Biography.
- ^ "Personalities" (PDF). Melbourne University Football Club.
- ^ "Biography - Ian Macfarlan". Australian Dictionary of Biography.