Gladstone Park Secondary College

Gladstone Park Secondary College is a public state school in Melbourne, founded in 1974.

Gladstone Park Secondary College
Location
,
Australia
Coordinates37°41′19″S 144°53′29″E
Information
TypeCo-educational public comprehensive secondary school
MottoKnowledge is Power
Established1974
PrincipalVeronica Hoy
Years offered7–12
Enrolment1644[1] (2018)
CampusTaylor Drive
Colour(s)Dark green, white, grey & black
    
Websitewww.gladstoneparksc.vic.edu.au

Introduction

The school has around More than 1600 students, a figure which has remained roughly constant for over a decade. When it first opened, Gladstone Park Secondary School (GPSC) quickly became the largest school in terms of matriculated students within a 10 km radius, a position which it still holds today.

School life

The school has a special disability partnership with the local TAFE institutes, where most GPSC graduates enrol to do apprenticeships or diplomas.

Facilities

The school grounds contain many sports facilities including a football and soccer oval, outdoor basketball and netball courts, cricket nets and an outdoor hockey/ futsal pitch. There is an indoor sports centre with two basketball courts, squash courts and gym facilities. The school library is open to students and the public.

A joint senior school office and year 12 study centre building opened in 2017.

Incident

On 1 March 2017, an intruder broke into the school in the early hours of the morning. They broke into forty Year 12 students' lockers and stole textbooks, scientific calculators and other objects. However, the school decided to not compensate the students for the theft of their valuables because the school was not "entirely at fault". This caused major uproar among students & parents, especially because students had "hours and hours of notes" that had been prepared for their VCE subjects.[2]

Notable alumni

Sport
Australian Defence Force

References

  1. "9th February 2018 Newsletter" (PDF). GPSC. Retrieved 23 February 2018.
  2. "School insurance won't cover locker raid". Retrieved 1 February 2018.
  3. Lange, Greg. (15 August 2007). "Carlton’s secret weapon: extra homework", Carlton Football Club. Retrieved 26 September 2018.
  4. Wright, Tony (14 February 2014). "VC for hero who died storming Taliban compound". The Age. Retrieved 18 February 2014.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.