Chisholm Catholic College (Cornubia)

Chisolm Catholic College
Crest of Chisholm Catholic College
Location
Cornubia, QLD
Australia  Australia
Information
Type Private, co-educational
Motto Live Christ's Challenge
Denomination Roman Catholic
Established 1992
Principal Martina Millard
Enrolment ~700
Colour(s)      Green
     Maroon
     Silver
     White
Website www.chisholm.qld.edu.au

Chisholm Catholic College is a single campus co-educational Catholic high school in Cornubia, 32 kilometres (20 mi) south-east of Brisbane, Australia, with approximately 950 year 7−12 students. Established in 1992, it is administered by Brisbane Catholic Education.

Background

Situated on an 11 hectare site in Cornubia, Chisholm Catholic College opened in 1992, with an initial enrolment of 60 Year 8 students and eleven staff housed in three buildings, and become one of the first private schools in the district. The school now caters for over 950 students.

Chisholm Catholic College's founding principal was Mr Mike Ashton. The College's current principal is Ms Martina Millard, who took the reins from Mr Christopher Leadbetter in 2014. Mr Trevor Goodwin was appointed as Deputy Principal for 2012.

Caroline Chisholm

Caroline Chisholm inspired many people through her charity work and her kind nature. Her focus was on the education and employment of female immigrants. It is because of her efforts that she was selected to become the patron of the college.

Houses

Chisholm Catholic College students are allocated to one of five houses, each named after a notable Australian. Originally, there were only four houses, but Oodgeroo became the fifth House, voted by students and beating Dunlop (Australian war hero Edward Dunlop). The houses are:

Buildings

Chisholm Catholic College has 14 buildings, most named after Australian native flora.

  • Acacia was one of the school's original buildings and is now the school's administration block.
  • Banksia is a general use block with four classrooms.
  • Cassia was the second of Chisholm's original buildings and now houses four science labs.
  • Caroline Chisholm Centre is a multipurpose air-conditioned building complete with kitchen. It is used for hospitality functions, form meetings and liturgies. The board room forms part of the building.
  • Dianella is a recent addition, better known as the 'Dining Room' and is a restaurant style kitchen which is used for hospitality-based events and functions, plus a dining room where students often present and serve food.
  • Eucalyptus was the third of Chisholm's original buildings. It now houses two art rooms and a computer lab, with a hospitality kitchen, dining room and textiles room.
  • Flindersia is a new building encompassing the latest in learning tools. Almost all surfaces in the room are able to be used to draw or write on.
  • Grevillea is a general use block. It houses the learning enrichment room, the computer maintenance room and also general classrooms.
  • Hakea contains three computer laboratories, the business room and the Responsible Thinking Classroom or RTC for short.
  • Ixora is the school's library and resource centre. It has an AV Viewing Room, two class sets of laptops and 20 computer workstations.
  • Jasminium is a general use block, containing the school counsellor's office.
  • Canteen is a new stand-alone building with a self-select area and two cash registers.
  • Melaleuca is a large undercover area. It is used for PE classes and sporting activities. Recent building works have expanded this building considerable, and it now houses two PE classrooms, Two full-size courts, a stage area, change rooms and a gymnasium.
  • Father Gary Russell Centre another new building, houses music and drama classrooms equipped with the latest technology, including a music recording studio and a drama stage with the latest lighting equipment.
  • Westringia is the school's manual arts block, featuring two manual arts rooms and a graphics room/computer lab.

References

Coordinates: 27°39′59.02″S 153°12′15.38″E / 27.6663944°S 153.2042722°E / -27.6663944; 153.2042722

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.