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The School offers a comprehensive education program with a strong focus on visual arts and design throughout all years and subjects. [1] DHSVAD is affiliated with the National Art School, The Design Centre Enmore TAFE, and The Art Gallery of New South Wales. The School also runs a program called NEO. Year 8-10 Students engage in visual art and ...
The College educates 1700 students from Years 5 to 12, 170 of whom are boarders, and provides wide-ranging programs encompassing academics, the visual and performing arts, sports and service projects. [2] [3] The ethos and mission of the College are influenced by the founder of the Marist Brothers, Saint Marcellin Champagnat. [2] [3]
The Newtown High School of the Performing Arts is a government-funded co-educational comprehensive and specialist secondary day school in the suburb of Newtown in Sydney, New South Wales, Australia. It is among a few performing arts and visual arts schools in Australia. [citation needed] All students must study drama, music, dance and visual ...
The school was named to commemorate John Curtin, the late local federal MP and 14th Prime Minister of Australia.It was built at an estimated cost of £A 430,000, equivalent to A$15.7 million in 2022, to amalgamate the overcrowded Fremantle Boys' and Princess May Girls' schools, the two state secondary schools serving the Fremantle area. [3]
Ashfield Boys High School; Asquith Boys High School; Balgowlah Boys Campus; Blacktown Boys High School; Canterbury Boys' High School; Christian Brothers' High School, Lewisham; Coogee Boys' Preparatory School; Cranbrook School, Sydney; De La Salle College, Caringbah; De La Salle College, Revesby Heights; Edmund Rice College; Epping Boys High School
All students share academic subjects, but follow either a specialised dance, music, theatre arts or visual arts training program for half the day. The school also provides academic classes to secondary students from other institutions including the Australian Ballet School, [2] and Gymnastics Victoria.
The school opened in February 1965 [12] with its first group of Year 7 students. Ku-ring-gai was the first of a second wave of new co-educational high schools built in the Sydney suburbs. The school's first headmaster was Bill Eason, [13] who later went on to found the Australian Independent School at North Ryde.
The college is a member of the Association of Heads of Independent Schools of Australia (AHISA), [4] the Junior School Heads Association of Australia (JSHAA), [5] the Australian Boarding Schools' Association (ABSA), [2] and the Association of Independent Schools of New South Wales (AISNSW). [6]