Gilmore College

Gilmore College
Location
Orelia, W.A. 6167
 Australia
Coordinates 32°14′13″S 115°48′55″E / 32.236984°S 115.815368°E / -32.236984; 115.815368
Information
Type Independent Public High School (IPS)
Motto

Trust (Gilmore College)

Trust & Be Trusted (Kwinana Senior High School)
Established 1956 (61 years ago)
Principal Rohan Smith
Staff ~100
Grades Years 7-12
Gender Co-educational
Enrolment ~1000
Campus Suburban
Colour(s) Sky Blue (7-9); Midnight Blue (10-12); White (Sport); Gold on all uniforms
                   
Website http://www.gilmorecollege.wa.edu.au/

Gilmore College is an independent public mixed-sex educational high school (IPS) in Western Australia that is approx. 32 km SSW of the Perth CBD. The school is located on Dargin Place in the suburb of Orelia. The name Gilmore College has been there for over a decade, it was formerly known as Kwinana Senior High School (1959 to 2007), and originally was called Medina Junior High School (1956 to 1958).

The school was established in 1956[1] and caters for students in Year 7 to 12. Years 7 to 9 in middle school, and Years 10 to 12 in senior school.

The number of student enrolments have been erratic over the last five years. The school enrolled 780 students in 2007, then 1204 in 2008, to 1075 in 2009, then fell to 986 in 2010 and to 957 in 2011. The fall in student numbers from 2010 is a result of the enrolment age changing for students entering high school in Western Australia. Also the fall in student numbers was due to a new school opening nearby in 2007 (Peter Carnley) which also has around 1000 students in years K-12.

Associations

  • Kwinana Industries Council (KIC)
  • Challenger Institute of Technology (TAFE)

The School History

Foundation

The current name Gilmore College, as well as Gilmore Avenue (landmarks in Kwinana) are named in honour of the ship Gilmore or Gillmore 1824 ship which was built in Calcutta, British India in 1824 arrived in a voyage to deliver settlers to the Swan River Colony in 18291830. Its fate was that it got shipwrecked on Hard Lewis on 12 April 1866.

Kwinana Senior High School

In 2003, the minister of education of the day, Alan Carpenter, announced a A$26 million plan to improve educational opportunities for Kwinana youth.

The school was renamed from Kwinana Senior High School to Gilmore College in 2006 following a poll in the local community in 2005. The school's name is taken from the road the school was once located on, Gilmore Avenue. This in turn was taken from the Gilmore, the boat that the early settlers arrived in the area on in 1829.[2]

The middle school was completed by the end of 2007, The senior school was completed later in 2008.

Gilmore College

A fire began in the school under suspicious circumstances in February 2008 causing extensive damage to the school, estimated at A$500,000. Three classrooms and part of a hallway were engulfed and smoke damage occurred in other areas.[3]

The school ranked at the top of the state for school suspensions given to students in 2010 at a top of two per day.[4] The number of suspensions dropped after the arrival of Carolyn Cook from Hedland Senior High School in 2011 to 605 then to 208 in 2012.

The school, situated in the Labor heartland seat of Brand hosted a community forum run by the then Prime Minister Julia Gillard in 2012. Other Labor ministers such as local MHR Gary Gray and Chris Evans also attended the event.[5]

Mobile phones and iPods were banned from the school, and Facebook and YouTube were banned from school computers in 2013 to combat bullying at the school. As a result, student suspensions reduced significantly.[6]

In August 2015, there was a gun scare by a student at Gilmore College, Nine News reported.

A teenage male, who went to Gilmore College, got murdered in a Orelia suburb house in Kwinana from a 43-year-old woman and a 26-year-old friend in June 2016. The 43-year-old lured him to the 26-year-old's house. The 26-year-old murdered him to experience killing someone, which for her was very hard. The 26-year-old wrote a book about a serial killer about the feeling of killing someone. She saw it as fantasy, not reality. Both females are equally responsible for the death of the teenage male.[7]

Principals

Medina Junior High SchoolYears
Hermann Berthold19561958
Kwinana Senior High SchoolYears
Hermann Berthold19591961
George Sherriff19621975
Barnard Quinn 1976
Brian Feld19771984
Graham Bown19851989
Halina Szunejko19901994
Edward Harken19951997
Diane Wood19982004
Graham Butler20052007
Gilmore CollegeYears
Graham Butler20082010
Carolyn Cook20112015
Rohan Smith 2015

Campus

Gilmore College is located in the City of Kwinana in a suburb named Orelia (32km from Perth City) near the coast. It is near the corner of Gilmore Avenue and Sulphur Road.

It is divided into three parts: Physical Education, Middle School, and Senior School.

There are a whole range of facilities including, a Performing Arts Centre, a Visual Arts Centre, a Design and Technology Centre, Science Laboratories, and Computer Laboratories. All students have online access via classroom computers to the School Library along with the internet. The facilities support a balanced learning experience.

There is a large gymnasium in the centre for indoor sport activities such as badminton, basketball, and volleyball; as well as large ovals, basketball courts, and cricket nets in the Sports Program. Nearby the school is the Kwinana Recquatic centre where people do swimming or fitness.

There is a cafe in the centre of the campus opening Monday to Friday, on school days. A variety of healthy, yummy, and other foods are sold in break times.

The library is a student community part of the campus. Many types of books are found here. It is important for staff in a professional environment, as it is opened Monday to Friday, daily.

The health centre in the Administration building is where the school nurses perform in emergency and accident managements, and health communications for the school. The nurses cooperate with the students parents/guardians on their health status if any change has been made.

Administration at Gilmore College has a school uniform shop as all students should wear the school uniform and the sport uniform, and it can also loan uniforms if needed via Student Services.

Academic

Programs

In Gilmore College, there is an academic extension program for each year level for gifted students and for those willing to learn more.

A large number of students do Vocational Education and Training (VET) courses as a pathway after high school.

The curriculum organises seven learning areas:

English, Mathematics, Science, Humanities and Social Sciences, The Arts, Technology and Enterprise, and Health and Physical Education.

School Executive

The current school principal is Rohan Smith since 2015.

The three current associate principals are: Dean Gurr, George Sekulla, and Mario Tufilli.

The business manager is Tracy Hughes.

College Emblem

The key elements are the star, and the figure striving upward. The points of the star each represent the Department of Education and Training; Challenger TAFE; Murdoch University; Kwinana Industries Council (KIC); and the City of Kwinana. The blue shade is the school colours, and the gold shade means strength, courage, and victory.

House System

In Gilmore College, Sport events are divided into four equal houses: Amity (Red), Cygnet (Gold), Scindian (Green), Challenger (Blue). The houses compete in Sport Carnivals and Athletics throughout the year.

Alumni

WA Gilmore Clontarf Academy

Established in 2008 out of Gilmore College in Medina the academy serves years 7-12. The academy has great importance on outcomes such as: Employment, Well-Being, and Sport.

Gilmore College is one of the locations of the Clontarf Foundation, an not for profit organisation for young Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander men.

The academy staff presently includes, operations officers: Ash Collard, and Jarrod Chipperfield; and director, Stephen Davies.

See also

References

  1. "Department of Education Schools online". 2010. Archived from the original on 29 March 2012. Retrieved 25 September 2011.
  2. "Gilmore College - Latest News". 2010. Archived from the original on 1 March 2011. Retrieved 25 September 2011.
  3. "Fire causes extensive damage to Gilmore College". Australian Broadcasting Corporation. 2008. Retrieved 26 September 2011.
  4. John Dobson (10 February 2012). "Principal defends school". Weekend Courier. Inmycommunity. Retrieved 14 March 2013.
  5. "A warm reception for Gillard in Labor stronghold". The West Australian. Yahoo7. 6 September 2012. Retrieved 23 July 2013.
  6. Bethany Hiatt (18 May 2013). "Facebook ban lifts high school". The West Australian. Yahoo7. Retrieved 23 July 2013.
  7. Joanna Menagh (2 October 2017). "Perth teen Aaron Pajich murdered so woman could feel 'euphoria' of killing: court told". ABC News (Australia). ABC News (Australia). Retrieved 2 October 2017.
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