Ravenswood School for Girls (often referred to as Ravenswood or Ravo) is an independent, Uniting Church, day and boarding school for Prep to Year 12 girls, situated in Gordon, an Upper North Shore suburb of Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.
Established in 1901 by Mabel Fidler (1871–1960),[7] Ravenswood currently caters for over 1400 students from Prep to Year 12, including 50 boarders from Years 7 to 12.[8] The school has been an IB World School since June 2004, and is authorised to offer the IB Diploma Programme.[9]
Ravenswood has been named one of Australia’s most innovative schools[15] for the sixth time in seven years by The Educator.[16] Ravenswood was named on The Educator 5-start Innovative Schools list in 2018, 2019, 2020, 2022, 2023 and 2024 for its work in the areas of Positive Education and STEM.[17]
Ravenswood won the Best Use of Technology award at the 2024 Australian Education Awards[18] and was awarded an Excellence Award for Primary School Teacher of the Year in 2022.[19] Ravenswood also won Excellence Awards at the 2022, 2024 and 2025 Australian Education Awards for Boarding School of the Year, and an Excellence Award for Best Professional Learning Program in 2025. The School achieved its fourth Excellence Award for Best Student Wellbeing Program in five years (also in 2021, 2022,2024 and 2025).[20]
History
Ravenswood was established with eight students on 28 January 1901 by the first Headmistress, Mabel Fidler, as a non-sectarian private day school for girls, with preparatory classes for boys. The first classes took place in a schoolroom erected on the block adjacent to Fidler's home, "Ravenswood", in Henry Street, Gordon. The school remains on this site.[21]
Fidler retired from Ravenswood in 1925, a year after the school was purchased by the Methodist Ladies' College, Burwood, thus becoming a school of the Methodist Church. Subsequently, the school name was changed to Ravenswood Methodist Ladies' College.[21] At this time, Ravenswood was the largest non-residential, private secondary school in Sydney, with an enrolment of 180, and was highly regarded for the quality of its teaching and its achievements in sport.[7] Ravenswood became a day and boarding school in 1935, with the enrolment of the first two boarders.[21]
The 1960s saw the introduction of the school anthem, Kindle the Flame and a fourth school House, all houses being named by the students after Royal Houses of Britain: Stuart, Tudor, Windsor and York.[21] In 1977, as the Methodist, Presbyterian and Congregational churches came together to form the Uniting Church, the school name changed to the current Ravenswood School for Girls. The royal blue and gold uniform was also introduced at this time.[21]
In 2015, the head girl of the school used her end-of-term speech to accuse the school of peddling an "unrealistic image of perfection", and providing some students with more opportunities than others because "schools are being run more and more like businesses, where everything becomes financially motivated, where more value is placed on those who provide good publicity or financial benefits."[22] She claimed that the school had attempted to censor her speech by requiring prior copies.[23]
Campus
Mabel Fidler Building, Ravenswood School for Girls by BVN Architecture
Ravenswood is located on its original site, a single campus in suburban Gordon. The school has progressively expanded since 1901, with the acquisition of new properties and the upgrading of facilities.[24]
The school grounds feature quadrangles and courtyards, a multi-purpose complex with heated swimming pool, gymnasium, a "Strength and Conditioning centre" and an Athletics Field. The Ravenswood Centenary Centre includes a Performing Arts theatre, music centre and exhibition areas.[24] Junior School students are catered for within the Junior School centre with a Resource Centre, playground and play equipment area, adventure playground and Assembly Hall.[24]
The Senior Learning Centre opened to students in 2020 and officially opened in 2021, designed by BVN Architecture. [24]
Ravenswood has a tradition of debating, and students are offered opportunities to participate at competitive or social levels. Ravenswood competes in three inter-school debating competitions: the Independent Schools Debating Association (ISDA), the Archdale Debating Competition and the Independent Primary School Heads of Australia (IPSHA). Girls may also participate in House debating.[25]
Sport
Primary School students may partake in competitive sport through the Ravenswood's membership of the Independent Primary Schools Association of Australia (IPSHA). These competitions are usually held on Saturday mornings and include sports such as: Softball, Tennis, Netball, Cricket, Hockey, and Soccer. Secondary School students compete against 28 other similar type schools in the Independent Girls' Schools Sporting Association (IGSSA) competition. These competitions occur on Saturday mornings or in the form of carnivals and include sports such as: Softball, Swimming, Diving, Cricket, Tennis, Hockey, Soccer and Gymnastics. Students who perform well at IPSHA or IGSSA level may be invited to compete in NSW Combined Independent Schools' (CIS) competitions.[26]
STEM
Both Junior School and Senior School students have access to a range of innovative, state-of-the-art STEM resources and learning platforms including 3D printers, Podcast Studio, VR headsets and Robotics.[27]
Ravenswood has been named a 5-Star Innovative School for six of the last seven years (2018, 2019, 2020, 2022, 2023 and 2024) by The Educator for work in the areas of Positive Education and STEM.[17]
House System
There are four houses at Ravenswood: Stuart and Tudor were both established in 1930, followed by Windsor in 1944 and York in 1967. [28]
The Ravenswood Australian Women’s Art Prize is an initiative led by Ravenswood School for Girls, which aims to address the paucity of art prizes available for female artists in Australia. It has been run since 2017.[30] It is an acquisitive prize, as of 2023[update] offering the following prizes:[31]
Professional Artist Prize — $35,000
Emerging Artist Prize – $7,500 (supported by the Reed Family Foundation)
Indigenous Emerging Artist Prize – $7,500 (supported by the Guardian and Scarborough Foundation)
People’s Choice Award – $2,000 (non-acquisitive, plus an art pack valued at $500)
• Highly Commended Awards (total of 6 - two for each category) – $1,000 (supported by Lindfield Community Bank)
Juanita Nielsen – publisher, anti-development campaigner, heiress to the Mark Foy's retail fortune. Disappeared in mysterious circumstances (believed kidnapped and murdered) from Kings Cross, in 1975. Subject of films, Heatwave (1982) and The Killing of Angel Street (1981)[47]
↑"AHISA Schools". New South Wales. Association of Heads of Independent Schools of Australia. November 2007. Archived from the original on 2 November 2007. Retrieved 17 December 2007.
↑"IPSHA". New South Wales Branch. Junior School Heads' Association of Australia. 2014. Retrieved 30 June 2014.
↑Butler, Jan (2006). "Member Schools". Members. The Alliance of Girls' Schools Australasia. Archived from the original on 19 July 2008. Retrieved 17 December 2007.
↑"Ravenswood School for Girls"(PDF). Case Studies. Equal Opportunity for Women in the Workplace Agency. 2001. Archived from the original(PDF) on 30 August 2007. Retrieved 17 January 2008.
↑"Past Prizes – 2025". Ravenswood Australian Women's Art Prize. Retrieved 5 December 2025.
↑Hull, Andrea, "Helen Rosalie (Ros) Bower (1923–1980)", Australian Dictionary of Biography, Canberra: National Centre of Biography, Australian National University, retrieved 12 September 2024
↑Browne, Elspeth. "Cuthbert Browne, Grace Johnston (1900–1988)". Australian Dictionary of Biography. National Centre of Biography, Australian National University.
↑Knowles, Beth, "Winifred Marion Petrie (1890–1966)", Australian Dictionary of Biography, Canberra: National Centre of Biography, Australian National University, retrieved 22 February 2024
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