Wellington Secondary College

(Learn how and when to remove this message)

State school in Mulgrave, Victoria, Australia
  • Wellington Journal (fortnightly)
  • The Wellington Way (each term)
YearbookVanellusWebsiteWellington Secondary College

Wellington Secondary College is a co-educational state high school in Mulgrave, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.

The college is divided into three sub-schools and six year levels: junior school (7–8), middle school (9–10) and senior school (11–12). Distinguished former Victorian Bushrangers cricketer Brendan McArdle is a teacher at the school.[citation needed]

Coat-of-arms and motto

The emblem was updated in 2002 to have a more contemporary feel than the old design, but while still retaining key elements.[1]

The school motto is "Caring, Striving, Learning".

History

Wellington was established in 1972 as Dingle Area High School. Its name changed to Mulgrave High School, then to Wellington High School in January 1973. Wellington was originally intended for the Dingley area, but was relocated by the Education Department to the Mulgrave area.

Principals

Founding principal of the school was A.M. (Gus) Fogarty, from 1973 to 1977. M.B. (Max) Peters was appointed principal in 1978 after the death of Forgarty in 1977. Max Peters retired in July 1982 and Jack Landvogt was appointed in 1984, then retired in 1986. John Coulson was appointed in 1987, and introduced the school motto (Caring, Striving, Learning) and the college crest. John Coulson retired in 2004 and the principal, Mary-Jo Putrino, was appointed. In mid 2012, Putrino retired, and a new principal, Edward "Hugh" Blaikie was appointed. He has been the principal since 2012.

Houses

The House System commenced in 1988 and the titles are derived from the names of four ships from the historic First Fleet that landed the first permanent European settlers from Great Britain in Australia two hundred years earlier in 1788 under the command of the Governor, Captain Arthur Phillip.

Each house is led by two senior house captains (year 12) and six vice house captains (years 8, 10 and 11):

The most recent houses, designed by Year 7s in 2022.

Students participate in a number of sporting and non-sporting activities during the year to gain points towards the M.B. Peter Cup for their house. There are three major house sporting carnivals in a year. They are the Swimming, Athletics and Cross-Country carnivals.

School layout

The school has two large courtyards surrounded by blocks of classrooms. After opening the E.H.Blaikie Vanellus Centre in 2019, the school has recently upgraded B-Block and C-Block, and it also has G, J, M, R, and K Blocks. The school also has six basketball courts and a large open area which is referred to as the "oval", the oval is now a square due to having M-Block built over most of it. There are two gyms. There was a $7.0 million upgrade to the school's facilities in 2010 to build a new junior school centre, and an upgrade to the halls that included a new performing arts centre and relocation of the school's "R" Block.[4]

Building program

On Monday 13 July 2009 the new junior school centre (replacing "P" Block) or also referred as the "M" Block was opened, the new gymnasium is almost complete and "R" block has been relocated to make space for "M" Block. The first Gymnasium has been completed and work is currently progressing on the second gymnasium. J block and G block are currently under lock-down as renovations are taking place. Term 4 witnessed the whole of the western courtyard demolished to make way for a designer landscape courtyard complete with brick work seating and shade sales. Work is beginning on the new state of the art performing arts centre complete with 288-seat theatre. Funding has been allocated for further improvements in 2018.

The original layout of the school was a government design from the mid-1970s. this was implemented and built at various schools around the state. Brentwood Secondary Colleges original layout was that of Wellington Secondary Colleges. And a gym identical to Wellington's Original gym can be found at Mount Waverley Secondary College.

Term 2, 2019 saw the opening of the E. H. Blaikie Vanellus Centre.[5] The new building houses the administration and front offices, the school library and classrooms, as well as a lecture space.

Term 4, 2021: A new senior school, well-being centre and international building opened.

Curriculum

English

English is compulsory for all year levels, with the exception of students studying ESL (English as a Second Language). Students undertake many varied activities in developing their skills in this subject area. At the VCE level, mainstream students can choose to study either English, Literature or English Language.

Languages other than English

The foreign languages studied at Wellington Secondary College are Mandarin and French. It was French and Indonesian that students could study but later on Indonesian was removed making the only foreign language students could learn was French.

Students undertake French, Mandarin and English as a second language. Only for international students) from years 7 to 8, and have the choice to study it in years 9 and up.

Uniform

Uniform is compulsory at the college. Student leaders wear a distinctive blazer with a special pocket that denotes their appointment. Students in Years 7–10 wear a royal blue jumper that features the College emblem while the senior students wear a similar navy blue jumper. During winter clown[clarification needed] suits are worn, with the girls wearing a shirt and skirt or slacks and boys with shirt with trousers. During summer girls wear summer dress while boys wear the same for winter excluding the tie. There is also a sports uniform.

Media

In the 2017–18 State Budget, it was announced that $5.5 million was allocated to the school to build a new library, technology and administration area.

Amber Truong's story and her outstanding 2017 VCE performance were covered by "The Age".[6]

References

  1. ^ "The College Emblem". Wellington Secondary College. Retrieved 14 March 2012.
  2. ^ [1]
  3. ^ "Sport & Houses - Wellington Secondary College". www.wellingtonsc.vic.edu.au. 28 February 2013. Retrieved 24 February 2023.
  4. ^ Annual Report to the School Community
  5. ^ "Our College". Wellington Secondary College. 3 September 2019. Retrieved 10 June 2020.
  6. ^ Butt, Henrietta Cook, Craig (19 December 2017). "VCE & ATAR Results 2017: Amber's bittersweet success". The Age. Retrieved 10 June 2020.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Wellington Secondary College.

37°56′01″S 145°10′11″E / 37.93361°S 145.16972°E / -37.93361; 145.16972

Authority control databases Edit this at Wikidata
  • ISNI