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Encyclopedia > Scotch College, Melbourne

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Scotch College
Motto Deo Patriae litteris
'to God, for country, and for learning'
Established 1851
Type Independent all-male primary and secondary
Chairman Mr David Crawford
Principal Dr F.G. Donaldson AM
Founder Rev. James Forbes
Chaplain Rev. Graham Bradbeer
Students 400 Junior, >1,400 Senior
Grades Prep-12
Location Hawthorn, VIC, Australia
Campus Suburban
Colours Cardinal (Gold & Royal Blue)           
Website www.scotch.vic.edu.au
For other schools named Scotch College, see Scotch College.

Scotch College, Melbourne is an independent school for boys located in Morrison Street, Hawthorn, Victoria, Australia and is usually referred to as Scotch. The school is a member of the Associated Public Schools of Victoria. Image File history File links No higher resolution available. ... A motto (from Italian) is a phrase or a short list of words meant formally to describe the general motivation or intention of an entity, social group, or organization. ... Educational institutions are often categorised along several dimensions. ... A principal is generally the chief administrator in an elementary school, middle school, or high school. ... Hawthorn is a residential suburb of Melbourne, Australia, in the state of Victoria. ... Capital Melbourne Government Constitutional monarchy Governor David de Kretser Premier Steve Bracks (ALP) Federal representation  - House seats 37  - Senate seats 12 Gross State Product (2004-05)  - Product ($m)  $222,022 (2nd)  - Product per capita  $44,443/person (5th) Population (End of September 2006)  - Population  5,110,500 (2nd)  - Density  22. ... The Universitätscampus Wien, Austria ( details) Campus (plural: campuses) is derived from the (identical) Latin word for field or open space. English gets the words camp and campus from this origin. ... School colors are the colors chosen by a school to represent it on uniforms and other items of identification. ... A website (alternatively, Web site or web site) is a collection of Web pages, images, videos and other digital assets that is hosted on one or several Web server(s), usually accessible via the Internet, cell phone or a LAN. A Web page is a document, typically written in HTML... Scotch College is the name of several schools affiliated with either the Uniting Church or Presbyterian Church in Australia: Scotch College, Adelaide in Torrens Park and Mitcham, South Australia Scotch College, Melbourne in Hawthorn, Victoria (Presbyterian) Scotch College, Perth in Swanbourne, Western Australia Scotch College, Launceston in Launceston, Tasmania amalgamated... An independent school is a school which is not dependent upon national or local government for financing its operation and is instead operated by tuition charges, gifts, and perhaps the investment yield of an endowment. ... Hawthorn is a residential suburb of Melbourne, Australia, in the state of Victoria. ... Motto: Peace and Prosperity Other Australian states and territories Capital Melbourne Governor HE Mr John Landy Premier Steve Bracks (ALP) Area 237,629 km² (6th)  - Land 227,416 km²  - Water 10,213 km² (4. ... The Associated Public Schools of Victoria (APS) are a group of eleven prestigious independent secondary schools in Victoria, Australia. ...


Scotch was established in 1851 by Reverend James Forbes, of the Free Presbyterian Church of Victoria, and was originally located in a house in Spring Street and known as the Melbourne Academy. Scotch is the oldest secondary school in Victoria and celebrated its sesquicentenary in 2001. James Forbes (1813-1851) was a Presbyterian minister and educator from Melbourne, Australia. ... The former John Knox Free Presbyterian Church, now the Lygon Street Church of Christ The Free Presbyterian Church of Victoria, also known as the Free Church of Australia Felix, was an Australian Presbyterian denomination founded in Melbourne, Victoria in 1846 as a result of the Disruption of 1843 in the... Spring Street is a major street in the central business district of Melbourne, Victoria, Australia. ... Capital Melbourne Government Constitutional monarchy Governor David de Kretser Premier Steve Bracks (ALP) Federal representation  - House seats 37  - Senate seats 12 Gross State Product (2004-05)  - Product ($m)  $222,022 (2nd)  - Product per capita  $44,443/person (5th) Population (End of September 2006)  - Population  5,110,500 (2nd)  - Density  22. ... Designation which marks an organisation, institution or countrys 150 year existance. ...

Contents

Governance

Although people may mistakenly associate Scotch with the Uniting Church, in 1977 when the majority of the Presbyterian Church of Australia and its constituent state churches participated in the forming of this new denomination, legal action was taken to try and overturn the allocation by the Property Commission of Scotch to the Presbyterian Church which continued outside the Uniting Church under the Presbyterian constitution adopted in 1901. The Property Commission decision was not overturned. Logo of the UCA The Uniting Church in Australia (UCA) was formed on June 22, 1977 when the Methodist Church of Australasia, Presbyterian Church of Australia and Congregational Union of Australia came together under the Basis of Union document. ... The Presbyterian Church of Australia is the largest Presbyterian denomination in Australia. ...


Scotch is separately incorporated with a Council which is made up of three groups; Old Boys (1/3) nominated by the Old Scotch Collegians' Association, Presbyterian Church of Victoria nominees (1/3) and "members of the Scotch family" nominated by council members from associations including the Scotch Parents' Association and Scotch Foundation.


Members of the School Council currently include

  • David Crawford (Chairman of Lend Lease Corporation and National Foods, Director of BHP Billiton, Westpac and Fosters)
  • Dr David Kemp (former Federal Minister for Education, Training and Youth Affairs)
  • Professor Ian Harper (Chairman of the Australian Fair Pay Commission)
  • Craig Drummond (CEO of Goldman Sachs JB Were)

Fees

Tuition fees range between $16,000 per annum and just over $20,000 per annum (P-12) for day boys. Fees for boarders are up to $36,000 per annum.


Academic

Memorial Hall
Memorial Hall

Scotch is consistently ranked as one of the top performing schools academically as measured by Victorian Certificate of Education indicators.[citation needed] In 2006 it achieved a median ENTER of 90.40. Thirty students (11.9% of the class) scored above 99.00 with two students scoring the maximum 99.95, five scoring 99.90, two scoring 99.85 and another two scoring 99.80. Thirty students also scored between 98.00 and 98.95, meaning that 23.8% of students were ranked in the top 2% of all Year 12 students in the state. 129 boys (51.0%) scored 90 or more, 195 boys (77.1%) scored 80 or more and 222 boys (87.7%) scored 70 or more. Image File history File links No higher resolution available. ... Image File history File links No higher resolution available. ...


Extracurricular activities

The school has many extracurricular activities, ranging from a wide variety of sports to other various services. The school competes in the APS league in Athletics, Badminton, Basketball, Cricket, Cross Country, Australian Rules Football, Hockey, Rowing, Rugby, Soccer, Squash, Swimming and Diving, Table tennis, Tennis, Volleyball and Water Polo. The Associated Public Schools of Victoria (APS) are a group of eleven prestigious independent secondary schools in Victoria, Australia. ...


Scotch has also achieved much success in debating, competing in the Debaters Association of Victoria Schools Competition. In 2006 the First Debating Team were the State A Grade Runners Up, in addition to being runners up in the State British Parliamentary Debating Competition. Each season, the school hosts the Hawthorn region of the Schools Competition, the largest region in the entirety of Victoria. The school has also achieved representation on the Victorian Schools Debating Team for two consecutive years and in 2005 commenced a biennial debating tour to the United Kingdom where Scotch College competed in debates against schools including Eton College, The Leys School and Dulwich College. The Debaters Association of Victoria (also known as the DAV) is a not-for-profit incorporated association dedicated to facilitating effective debate in Victoria, Australia. ...


"Services", extracurricular activities which are compulsory for students in Years 9-12 are held on thursdays, and include Cadets, Scouts, Sea Scouts, Sports First Aid, Pipe Band, Military Band, Outdoor Program, Outdoor Expedition Group, Social Services as well as Junior Sport.


The school's cadet unit is the oldest military unit in Australia, formed in 1851, even before the Australian Army. It is broken down each year into two or three recruit companies, then broken down again into three or four platoons (subject to the number of enrollments,) support company consisting of Mountaineering, Boating, and Engineering and then HQ which includes the Signals platoon. Every year, there is a 3 day bivouac and a 5 day main camp in the Grampians with nearly 400 people attending. The annual tattoo is a formal ceremony at the end of the year which includes all members of the unit. The tattoo rehearsal goes for most of term four as it includes rifle drill. Thousands come to watch the tattoo, which is always presided over by a high-ranking member of the Australian Defence Force. Every year, members of the unit march in the Anzac Day parade through Melbourne. The Pinnacle offers stunning views of the surrounding park, this photograph just one example. ... ANZAC Day is commemorated by Australia and New Zealand on 25 April every year to remember members of the Australian and New Zealand Army Corps (ANZAC) who in the Battle of Gallipoli landed at Gallipoli in Turkey during World War I. ANZAC Day is also a public holiday in the...


Every year the Senior School undertakes a 24 hour hike to raise money for charities. The record for the 24 hour period stands at 150.8 kms, although many people do reach 100km's. This raises in excess of $15,000 every year.


Scotch College has a successful sporting history. In 2006 the school jointly won the APS Australian Rules Premiership, First VIII Rowing (Head of the River (Australia)) and VSRU Open Grade Rugby. It is 5th time in the last 6 years Scotch has won the Rugby first XV's and the third consecutive year it has won the Head of the River. The Head of the River is a name given to six annual Australian rowing regattas held in New South Wales, Victoria , Queensland , Tasmania , Western Australia and South Australia each year. ...


Several players from the school's First XVIII have been drafted by AFL clubs in recent years. Such players include Campbell Brown, Nathan Djerkurra, Edward Barlow and Nicholas Smith.


Cordner-Eggleston Cup

This a football match that is played every year between Melbourne Grammar and Scotch. This match is a tradition for both schools as it commemorates the first game of Australian Rules Football, which was played between the schools in 1858. In the year 2007 Scotch won the match. High marking is a key skill and spectator attribute of Aussie Rules Precise field and goal kicking using the oval shaped ball is the key skill in Aussie Rules Football Australian rules football, also known as Australian football, Aussie rules, or simply football or footy is a code of football...


Facilities

The Quad
The Quad

The school's main 27 hectare campus is located in Hawthorn. Image File history File links Size of this preview: 388 × 600 pixelsFull resolution (436 × 674 pixel, file size: 78 KB, MIME type: image/jpeg) Author: Stephen Spicer Date: 1975 File history Legend: (cur) = this is the current file, (del) = delete this old version, (rev) = revert to this old version. ... Image File history File links Size of this preview: 388 × 600 pixelsFull resolution (436 × 674 pixel, file size: 78 KB, MIME type: image/jpeg) Author: Stephen Spicer Date: 1975 File history Legend: (cur) = this is the current file, (del) = delete this old version, (rev) = revert to this old version. ... Hawthorn is a residential suburb of Melbourne, Australia, in the state of Victoria. ...


Sporting facilities include 3 cricket/AFL fields, 1 rugby field, 18 tennis courts, 1 outdoor basketball court, 2 soccer field, 1 synthetic surface hockey field, 1 climbing wall, 25 m heated indoor swimming and a diving pool, 3 gymnasiums, 3 squash courts, an observatory, a rifle range and a weights room. Since the school is situated on the banks of the Yarra River, the school has rowing and boating facilities located within its grounds including a Fours shed, and an Eights shed as well as a club room, changing rooms, and weights and Ergo rooms. The Yarra River is a river in southern Victoria, Australia. ...


The school also has a very large music and drama building called the James Forbes Academy, the first stage of which was opened in 2002, which includes two computer music rooms, many rooms for private music lessons and an orchestra room and other recital rooms. The second stage was opened last 2005, and includes two professional standard theaters seating over 500 with one built for music and the other for drama which includes a sky walk, as well as three other drama and communication studies rooms. This facility, built at a cost in excess of $30 million, houses one of the finest music and drama departments of any Australian school.


In addition to the Hawthorn property, the School has about 80 hectares of forest in the hills at Healesville east of Melbourne and a residential seaside property at Cowes on Phillip Island. The property at Cowes is the site of a one week orientation camp for all Year 7 students early in the year and numerous other camps. A lodge for the use of boarders has been built near Mansfield, 130 km northeast of Melbourne. Healesville is an outer-eastern suburb of Melbourne, Victoria, Australia, 52km from the Melbourne centre and situated on the Watts river, a tributary of the Yarra River. ... Named after Governor Arthur Phillip, Phillip Island in Victoria (Australia) forms a natural breakwater for the shallow waters of Western Port Bay. ... For other uses, see Mansfield (disambiguation). ...


Principals

Scotch College has had a total of eight Principals with the retirement of Gordon Donaldson at the end of 2007.

  • Robert Lawson (1851-1856)
  • Alexander Morrison (1857–1903)
  • William Still Littlejohn (1904-1933)
  • Colin Macdonald Gilray (1934-1953)
  • Richard Selby Smith (1953-1964)
  • Colin Healey(1965-1974)
  • Philip Anthony Vere Roff(1975-1982)
  • Dr F Gordon Donaldson AM (1983-2007)

Alexander Morrison (3 February 1829 – 31 May 1903) was headmaster of Scotch College, Melbourne, Australia, for 47 years. ...

House System

The school has 12 senior school houses. Both boarders and day boys are mixed into houses after joining the school. The houses are named after people such as ex-headmasters and distinguished ex-teachers. The houses are: Bond, Davidson, Eggelston, Field, Fleming, Forbes, Gilray, Lawson, Littlejohn, Monash, Morrison, Selby-Smith. Each year the twelve houses compete for the prestigious "Cock House" trophy by partaking in various events including Summer and Winter house sports days, house chorals, house swimming and diving, house cross country, as well as chess, debating, and public speaking tournaments. The sporting competition ends with the athletics events held on Family Day, however house points can also be earned via fund raising and other such activities.


On 'The Hill', as the boarding precinct is known, boarders are divided into three houses which are called Arthur Robinson, McMeckan and School. The boarding houses also participate in an interhouse tournament during the year, the Wedderburn Cup. Activities include cycling, tennis, swimming, diving, Australian Rules, soccer, tug o'war, touch rugby.


Alumni

Academic research of Who's Who in Australia (a listing of notable Australians) showed that Scotch College alumni were listed more often than those of any other school.[1][2] Image File history File links No higher resolution available. ... Image File history File links No higher resolution available. ...


Scotch is the only school whose alumni have held each of the offices of Governor-General, Prime Minister, Chief Justice of the High Court, Head of the Australian Defence Forces, Governor, Premier and Chief Justice of a Supreme Court.


Scotch has educated more Governors-General of Australia (three) and Australian State Premiers (eight Premiers of four different States) than any other Australian school.


Former Students of the Scotch College, Melbourne are known as "Old Scotch Collegians". For a list of notable "Old Scotch Collegians", see List of notable alumni of the Scotch College, Melbourne. This is a List of notable alumni of the Scotch College, Melbourne, they being notable former students - known as Old Scotch Collegians of the Presbyterian Church school, The Scotch College in Hawthorn, Victoria, Australia. ...


References

  1. ^ Mark Peel and Janet McCalman, Who Went Where in Who's Who 1988: The Schooling of the Australian Elite, Melbourne University History Research Series Number 1, 1992
  2. ^ Ian Hansen, Nor Free Nor Secular: Six Independent Schools in Victoria, a First Sample, Oxford University Press, 1971

An editor has expressed a concern that the subject of the article does not satisfy one of the guidelines for inclusion on Wikipedia on one of the following topics: If you are familiar with the subject matter, please expand the article to establish its notability, citing reliable sources. ...

See also

Please note that this list is incomplete. ... This is a list of high schools, also known as secondary colleges, in the state of Victoria, Australia. ... This article does not cite any references or sources. ... The Victorian Certificate of Education (VCE] is the credential given to students who have completed Year 11 and Year 12 of their secondary schooling, in the state of Victoria, Australia. ...

External link

  • Scotch College, Melbourne website
  • Scotch College, 1970-1975 website
Presbyterian Church of Australia Schools

Belgrave Heights Christian School | Covenant College, Canberra | Fairholme College | King's College, Warrnambool | Presbyterian Ladies' College, Sydney | Presbyterian Ladies' College, Armidale | Presbyterian Ladies' College, Melbourne | St. Andrew's Christian College | Scotch College, Melbourne | The Scots College | The Scots School, Bathurst The Presbyterian Church of Australia is the largest Presbyterian denomination in Australia. ... Belgrave Heights Christian School is a independent Christian school, owned by the Presbyterian Church of Victoria. ... Fairholme College is an independent girls school in Toowoomba, Queensland. ... Kings College, Warrnambool, is an independent Christian school located in Warrnambool, Victoria. ... The Presbyterian Ladies College, Sydney (P.L.C Sydney), is a private day and boarding, Presbyterian school for girls in Croydon, New South Wales, Australia. ... For other schools of the same name, see Presbyterian Ladies College. ... Presbyterian Ladies College (P.L.C), Melbourne, is an independent girls school in Burwood, Victoria, Australia. ... St. ... For other schools with a similar name see Scots College. ... The Scots School, Bathurst, is an independent school with campuses in Bathurst and Lithgow, New South Wales. ...


  Results from FactBites:
 
Scotch College, Melbourne - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (802 words)
Scotch was established in 1851 by Reverend James Forbes, and was originally located in a house in Spring Street and known as the Melbourne Academy.
Scotch is the oldest school in Victoria and celebrated its sesquicentenary in 2001.
Scotch College has received criticism as being overfunded by governments for receiving around $3 million per year (2005) from government sources, and was featured in an Australian Labor Party television advertisement during the 2004 federal election aimed highlight the need for a proposal to reduce independent school funding from the federal government.
Melbourne - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (5614 words)
Melbourne's overwhelming dominance of the state of Victoria's population and economy means the Victorian state government is also effectively the city government of greater Melbourne.
A panorama of the Melbourne skyline from the Melbourne Docklands.
Melbourne is seen as an international educational hub, with many students from Hong Kong, Singapore, Korea, India, Sri Lanka, Malaysia, China and other parts of Asia choosing to study at one of the city's many high schools and universities.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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