Spotswood College
Spotswood College is a co-educational state secondary school in Spotswood, New Plymouth, New Zealand. It was founded in 1960 and celebrated its 50th Jubilee in 2010. It was formerly New Zealand's largest school.
Spotswood College | |
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Address | |
Coordinates | 39.0710°S 174.0371°E |
Information | |
Type | State co-educational secondary, years 9–13 |
Motto | High Endeavour |
Established | 1960 |
Ministry of Education Institution no. | 173 |
Principal | Mrs. Nicola Ngarewa |
School roll | 797[1] (March 2020) |
Socio-economic decile | 5M[2] |
Website | spotswoodcollege.school.nz |
It is New Plymouth's only co-educational secondary school, with a current roll of 797 students.[1] The college has a diverse multi-cultural student body and modern facilities for staff and students.
Some of the less common features of Spotswood College include its beach volleyball arena, horticultural facilities, music department complete with recording facilities, and highly rated special education and international departments. A new gymnasium is currently under construction, and two classroom blocks are planned to be demolished to make way for new learning areas to be constructed.
Houses
Spotswood College initially had four houses. In 1969, when the college expanded the education department split the college into two schools, one named East, the other West. In 1980 the college reverted to its original structure and the four house system was re-introduced. The houses were named after the original settlers of New Plymouth. In 2012, the houses were given dual names with the original names added. The house names are based from the Sugar Loaf Islands off the coast of New Plymouth.
1960–1968 and 2012–present
- Mikotahi
- Moturoa
- Motumahanga
- Paritutu
1969–1979
- East
- West
1980–2012
- Darnell
- Atkinson
- Barrett
- Richmond
International
Spotswood College has hosted international students from Italy, Germany, Brazil, Japan, Italy, USA, China, Russia, New Caledonia, Sweden, Switzerland and Thailand. It has specific facilities and staff members to support them during their time in New Zealand.[3]
In 2009, 22 students from Spotswood College's kapa haka group Te Kura Tuarua O Ngamotu were chosen to represent New Zealand at the tenth annual Te Manahua Maori cultural competition in Laie, Hawaii.[4]
In 2013, Spotswood College provided students learning Japanese the opportunity to visit their sister school Hatsukaichi Senior High School in Hiroshima, Japan. In exchange, 8 students and 1 teacher from Hatsukaichi Senior High School visited Spotswood College and were hosted by local families.
Classes and groups from Spotswood College have also visited Japan, New Caledonia, Argentina, Vietnam, Cambodia, Thailand, United Kingdom, Greece and Italy.
Sister school
- Hatsukaichi Senior High School in Hiroshima, Japan
Paritutu tragedy
On 8 August 2012, Spotswood College students Stephen Kahukaka-Gedye and Felipe Melo, both 17, and their Taranaki Outdoor Pursuits and Education Centre instructor Bryce Jourdain, 42, were swept out to sea while climbing around Paritutu rock as part of a TOPEC camp activity.[5] The body of Felipe Melo was later found and identified.[6] The bodies of Bryce and Stephen were never found.
TOPEC plead guilty to three charges. A fourth was dropped. TOPEC was charged $250,000 for the incident.[7] TOPEC still runs camps and activities for secondary schools around the Taranaki region, however Spotswood College have never held camps with TOPEC since the incident. Spotswood College now has a stone monument in memory of them outside the entrance of the college.
Principals
- Mr Alex L McPhail (1960–1977)
- Mr Evan. E Thomas (1978–1987)
- Mr Barry P Finch (1987–2002)
- Mr Graeme McFadyen (2003–2009)
- Mr. Mark A. Bowden (2010–2018)
- Mrs. Nicola Ngarewa (2018–present)
In mid 2018, it was announced that Mr. Mark Bowden would be retiring from his position as Principal at the end of term two. After a selection process, the Board of Trustees selected former Patea Area School Principal Nicola Ngarewa to take over the position at the beginning of term four,[8] and become the school's first female principal. Mr. Daryn Shaw became acting principal for the entirety of term three while Mrs Ngarewa transitioned from Patea Area School.
Notable alumni
- Harry Duynhoven — Previous mayor of New Plymouth and MP for New Zealand Labour Party. Former Associate Minister of Transport. Current New Plymouth councillor.
- Liz Craig - Current member of Parliament for the New Zealand Labour Party
- Mark Crysell - Former TVNZ Europe correspondent and current Sunday reporter
- Peter Jefferies — Musician
- Willie Talau – Rugby League Player
- Abigail Christodoulou – X Factor NZ contestant.[9]
References
- "New Zealand Schools Directory". New Zealand Ministry of Education. Retrieved 26 April 2020.
- "Decile Change 2014 to 2015 for State & State Integrated Schools". Ministry of Education. Retrieved 12 February 2015.
- Archived 2 December 2013 at the Wayback Machine
- Johnston, Kirsty (23 February 2009). "Spotswood group bound for Hawaii". Stuff.co.nz. Retrieved 8 March 2015.
- Charles, Robert. "Paritutu Tragedy", Stuff.co.nz, 27 October 2012. Retrieved on 26 November 2013.
- Smith, Blanton. "Body identified as Felipe", Stuff.co.nz, 20 August 2012. Retrieved on 26 November 2013.
- "Paritutu timeline", Stuff.co.nz, 8 August 2013. Retrieved on 26 November 2013.
- "New principal of Spotswood College is returning to where her career began". Stuff. Retrieved 19 March 2019.
- "Willy Moon was awesome say Mae Valley after X Factor dump". 21 April 2015.