Kardinia International College
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Kardinia International College |
|
Motto | Wisdom leads to Respect and Friendship |
Established | 1995 |
Type | Independent co-educational secondary; primary |
Principal | John Goodfellow |
Founder | Yoshimaro Katsumata |
Grades | Pre-school - Year 12 |
Location | Bell Post Hill, Victoria Australia |
Colours | Navy blue and maroon |
Website | www.kardinia.vic.edu.au |
Kardinia International College is an independent school located in Bell Post Hill, Geelong, Victoria, Australia. It is a single campus college, residing on the site of the former Morongo Girls' College.
Contents |
[edit] College history
Kardinia International College was founded by Yoshimaro Katsumata who purchased Morongo's buildings, grounds, facilities and resources in mid-1995. It first opened in 1996 with 31 secondary students and 42 kindergarten children. [1] This would grow to around 1500 students by 2006. The International Baccalaureate has been implemented at the primary school years level and at the Diploma level.
The word Kardinia is a Tasmanian Aboriginal word which means sunrise or new beginning. [1]
Gotemba Nishi High School, also owned by Katsumata, is a sister school to Kardinia International College.
[edit] Structure
The college into four distinct sections.
- The Early Learning Centre incorporates a three and four year old kindergarten, in addition to a pre-school. [2]
- The Lower Primary Centre caters for prep, as well as grades one and two. [3]
- The Upper Primary Centre contains grades three, four, five and six. [3]
- The Senior School, for years seven to twelve.
[edit] Senior School
The Senior School utilises a vertical curriculum for years seven to ten. This system is based upon the individual choices of a student. At the beginning of each semester, students are issued with a unique timetable of seven subjects, based upon their preferences. This allows for students to focus heavily on one particular area, or elect to persue one or more languages. This system does not allow free reign however, with a minimum number of subjects which must be undertaken in each learning area. An addition benefit of this is that each student's abilities can be catered for, as they are not restricted to just undertaking classes in their year level, but can move to higher or lower levels if it is felt to be beneficial.
For years 11 and 12, there are two options to undertake. The Victorian Certificate of Education (VCE) was first implemented in 2000, and is the main high school certificate for year 11 and 12 students in Victoria. In 2005, Kardinia offered the alternative of the International Baccalaureate Diploma. 33 students completed the International Baccalaureate in 2006. The school also implemented the International Baccalaureate Primary Years Program into the junior school. VET (Vocational Education and Training)courses are also available to willing students.
[edit] Houses
Kardinia International College has four houses to which students are allocated, each having a historical meaning.
- Cowie House was named after the first squatter to settle on the college site. The house colour is green. [4]
- Morongo House was named after the historic homestead originally built on the site in 1859. The house colour is red. [6]
- Thomson House is named after the first mayor of Geelong who brought the name Kardinia to the region. The house colour is yellow/gold. [7]
[edit] Controversy
- Several students were involved in the creation and distribution of a controversial DVD first seen in the media in October 2006. One student was expelled, with at least two other students having "some involvement" according to the college principal. These two students have since left the school.[8]
- Former music teacher Nicholas Frampton, 25, was struck off the Victorian teachers register for having sexually explicit online conversations with a year 8 student in 2004[9]. The college principal previously told students and parents that Frampton had left the college in early 2005 due to poor health. Frampton was immediately fired by the college after his actions were reported by a VCE student, but was subsequently re-hired at another school and continued with similar actions, leading to his eventual dismissal from the teachers register.
- Despite the president of the Victorian Principals Association citing benefits, the college banned all electronic devices. [10]
[edit] References
- ^ a b College History.
- ^ The Kindergarten and Pre-School.
- ^ a b Junior School Curriculum.
- ^ Cowie house information.
- ^ Gotemba house information.
- ^ Morongo house information.
- ^ Thomson house information.
- ^ "Video nasty DVD maker expelled", The Herald Sun, AAP, October 24, 2006.
- ^ The Age, Friday September 8, 2006
- ^ "A boon or banned", The Age, March 4, 2007.