Methodist Ladies' College, Melbourne | |
---|---|
Address | |
207 Barkers Road , , 3101 Australia | |
Coordinates | 37°48′49″S145°2′19″E / 37.81361°S 145.03861°E |
Information | |
Type | private school, single-sex, day and boarding school |
Motto | Latin: Deo Domuique ("For God and for Home") |
Denomination | Non-denominational |
Established | 1882 |
Principal | Julia Shea |
Gender | Girls |
Enrolment | ~2,200 (ELC–12) [1] |
Colour(s) | Green & silver |
Affiliation | Girls Sport Victoria |
Website | mlc.vic.edu.au |
Methodist Ladies' College (commonly referred to as MLC) is a non-selective, non-denominational private day and boarding school for girls, located in Kew, an eastern suburb of Melbourne, Victoria, Australia. The school has two additional outdoor education campuses known as "Marshmead" and "Banksia".
Established in 1882 on its current campus by the Methodist Church of Australasia, MLC caters for approximately 2000 students from the Early Learning Centre (MLC Kindle) to Year 12, including more than 100 boarders. [2]
The College is a member of Girls Sport Victoria, [3] the Australian Boarding Schools' Association, [4] the Junior School Heads Association of Australia (JSHAA), [5] the Association of Heads of Independent Schools of Australia (AHISA), [6] and the Alliance of Girls' Schools Australasia. [7]
MLC offers students both the Victorian Certificate of Education and the International Baccalaureate. [8]
Fees are up to $36,000 per student per year. [9]
William Henry Fitchett was secretary of a committee formed in 1879 to start a secondary school for girls. [10] MLC was founded on its current campus in Kew on 14 February 1882 as a modern school of the first order, with buildings that formed a collegiate institution for girls unsurpassed in the colonies.[ citation needed ] It was the first Australian girls' school established by the Wesleyan Methodists and Fitchett was the first principal. The goal of its founders was to provide a high-class Christian education for girls, comparable with that provided elsewhere for boys.[ citation needed ] As the first Australian girls' school established by the Wesleyan Methodists, MLC attracted boarders from all Australian colonies.[ citation needed ]
In 1990, MLC became the first school in the world to introduce laptop computers for all students from Year 5 to Year 12. [11] In 1991, MLC Marshmead opened, providing Year 9 students with an eight-week residential experience with a focus on outdoor education.[ citation needed ]
In 2001, The Sun-Herald reported a 1988 study which ranked MLC third in Australia's top ten girls' schools, based on the number of its alumni mentioned in the Who's Who in Australia (a listing of notable Australians). [12] [a] In 2002, MLC won the title of 'Australian School of the Year', as published in The Australian newspaper. [4]
There have been a total of nine principals, or formerly headmasters, of MLC since the school was founded in 1882. [13]
Period | Principal |
---|---|
1882–1928 | Rev. Dr William H. Fitchett |
1929–1938 | Rev. John W. Grove |
1939–1966 | Rev. Dr Harold A. Wood, OBE |
1967–1978 | Rev. Ron A.W. Woodgate |
1979–1996 | David Loader |
1997–2012 | Rosa Storelli |
2012–2013 | Debbie Dunwoody |
2014–2022 | Diana Vernon |
2023–present | Julia Shea |
As with most Australian schools, MLC has a house system through which students partake in inter-house competitions and activities. The college currently has five houses:
In the past, there was a Tiddeman house (colour red), which was specifically for boarders.
MLC offers a range of VCE and Vocational Education Training (VET) courses, as well as the IB Diploma Programme. It has one of the largest VCE subject selections in the state. The school's success with the IB Programme is internationally renowned, with students achieving in the top global percentile each year.[ citation needed ] Its physical education program includes summer and winter sports. It participates in the Girls Sport Victoria competition.
The music school has an auditorium, and a department for woodwind, strings, keyboard, percussion and brass, with ensembles including a concert orchestra, senior strings, choirs and bands. The music school is known for its excellence.[ citation needed ]
The school offers a speech and drama program from early years and theatre arts and drama at VCE level, as well as studio arts subjects.
MLC is a member of Girls Sport Victoria (GSV).
MLC has won the following GSV premierships. [14]
MLC has worked with the Yalari scholarship programme to support Indigenous girls from regional, rural and remote communities to study and board at MLC. Yalari is a not-for-profit organisation that offers secondary education scholarships at leading Australian boarding schools. [15] MLC includes Indigenous issues in its mainstream curriculum, maintains a student Aboriginal Reconciliation Committee, grows an Indigenous garden, and appoints a senior Year 12 prefect to an Indigenous portfolio. MLC holds annual sporting and cultural exchanges with Worowa Aboriginal College at Healesville, Victoria. [16] [17]
This article's list of alumni may not follow Wikipedia's verifiability policy.(September 2018) |
Alumnae of the Methodist Ladies' College are known as 'Old Collegians' and automatically become members of the 'MLC Old Collegians' Club' upon graduation. The club was established on 29 October 1904 for the purpose of providing an ongoing relationship between the college and its alumnae. [18]
Some notable "Old Collegians" include:
In September 2012 the school board sacked the then principal of 15 years, Rosa Storelli, leading to calls by Storelli plus many parents and Old Collegians for the board's dismissal. [30] There were also protests outside the school by parents and students. The action by the board was made possible by changes to the school's constitution. This became a cautionary tale for other independent schools in Australia about the relationship between principals and the boards of those schools and the power-sharing relationships among the various stakeholders. [31] [32] Rosa Storelli subsequently joined La Trobe University as an adjunct professor. [33]
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