Drouin Secondary College

Drouin Secondary College is a large secondary school in Drouin, Victoria, located outside of Melbourne, Australia. It was established in 1956.[2] Drouin's mottos are "Achievement, Respect, Commitment, Community" and "Finem Respice", which means "look to the end". There currently are 103 staff members at the school.

Drouin Secondary College
Location
Drouin, Victoria

Australia
Information
TypePublic, co-educational, secondary
MottoFinem Respice
Established1956
Years7 to 12
Number of students950[1]
Websitehttp://www.drouinsc.vic.edu.au/

Staff[2]

Principals
Name From Until
Roy Barnes 1956 1965
Clarrie Wilson 1966 1979
Tom McGrath 1980 1987
Kevin Jenkins 1988 1993
Rod Dunlop 1994 2007
Shane Wainwright 2007 2015
Deb Gentle[3] 2015 (present)

History of the School

2011

The laptop program was once again extended throughout the school.

The English block planted a new portable classroom.

The school curriculum program was improved.

The "Parent Bulletin" was introduced.

All role-calls were now on e-Workspace.

2012

By this year, this college had over 950 students.

Drouin Secondary College introduced a "Progress Report" program, coming out every six weeks of a semester.

2013

The "Parent Bulletin" is now available online, instead of paper.

The "Progress Report" program is now every five weeks, making three progress reports, then an end of semester report.

This year there were 208 new year 7 students, the most in Drouin Secondary College history.

'Little Shop of Horrors' was the school production. Directed by Bri Brooker

2015

'High School Musical' was the school production. Directed by Bri Brooker and Jennifer Rolls. Principal Shane Wainwright announced his retirement from Drouin Secondary College.

Deb Gentle became Drouin Secondary College's new principal.

2017

Year 9 camp Tasmania trip was cancelled.

Year 12 Muck Up Day was changed to "Celebration Day."

ARCC Scores were initiated, to work alongside Progress Scores.

'Popstars - The 90s Musical' was the school production.

2018

Programs Moondah, Woorngan and Karrobran were cancelled.

References

  1. "Drouin home page". www.drouinsc.vic.edu.au. Retrieved 28 October 2018.
  2. "history". www.drouinsc.vic.edu.au. Retrieved 14 September 2018.
  3. "staffleaders". www.drouinsc.vic.edu.au. Retrieved 28 October 2018.

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