MacKillop College, Mornington

MacKillop Catholic College

In Faith and Hope and Love
Location
Mornington, Tasmania
Australia Australia
Coordinates 42°51′28″S 147°24′01″E / 42.8579°S 147.4003°E / -42.8579; 147.4003Coordinates: 42°51′28″S 147°24′01″E / 42.8579°S 147.4003°E / -42.8579; 147.4003
Information
Type Secondary College (7 - 10)
Denomination Roman Catholic
Established 1994
Principal Sally Towns
Enrolment 560
Colour(s) Red, White and Blue               
Website http://www.mackillop.tas.edu.au/

MacKillop Catholic College is a co-educational Catholic school for Grades 7 to 10 in the Hobart suburb of Mornington.[1] The school is named in honour of the Australian educationalist Mary MacKillop. The school also has an association with the Christian Brothers founded by Edmund Rice.[2] MacKillop and Rice are key sources of inspiration for the school community.

The college is a member of the Sports Association of Tasmanian Independent Schools.[3]

History

MacKillop Catholic College was part of a restructuring of Catholic education in the Archdiocese of Hobart during the early 1990s, although moves to establish a Catholic secondary school on the eastern shore of Hobart had begun in the 1960s.[4] During 1993 the Catholic Church purchased the site and buildings of Mornington Primary School, which had ceased operation as a state primary school at the end of 1992. MacKillop was opened on the site on 9 February 1994, with 59 students. By 2009 the enrolment has grown to over 500 students at the College.[5] Over the first ten years of the school's operation a staged building program was implemented, with the eighth stage completed in 2004.[5]

Houses

The school is named in honour of the Australian educationalist Mary MacKillop, and the works of MacKillop are the theme of the school houses: Kirby, Lochaber, Penola and Tenison.[6]

Notes

  1. Tasmania Online > MacKillop College, accessed 2 March 2008
  2. Christian Brothers - Schools, accessed 2 March 2008
  3. SATIS - Sports Association of Tasmanian Independent Schools, accessed 2 March 2008
  4. MacKillop College, accessed 2 March 2008
  5. 1 2 College History, accessed 1 March 2008
  6. Mary MacKillop, accessed 1 March 2008

See also

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Sunday, November 01, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.