The Mackellar Girls Campus of Northern Beaches Secondary College, formerly Manly Vale High School and Mackellar Girls' High School, is a government-funded single-sex secondary day school for girls located in Manly Vale, a suburb on the Northern Beaches of Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.
Mackellar Girls Campus (part of the Northern Beaches Secondary College) | |
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Location | |
Australia | |
Coordinates | 33°46′55″S 151°16′20″E / 33.781979°S 151.272222°E |
Information | |
Former name |
|
Type | Government-funded single-sex comprehensive secondary day school |
Motto | In honour bound |
Established | 1968 (as Manly Vale High School) |
Sister school | Balgowlah Boys Campus |
School district | The Beaches; Metropolitan North |
Educational authority | New South Wales Department of Education |
Principal | Christine Del Gallo |
Staff | ~80[1] |
Years | 7–12 |
Gender | Girls |
Enrolment | ~1,252[1] (2015) |
Campus type | Suburban |
Colour(s) | Blue, red, white |
Website | nbscmgirls-h |
History
editThe exact history of Mackellar as a school is not well-known, but it is believed to have been a school prior to 1967, rather as a co-educational school. Prior to being established at the site in manly vale, it was a co-educational campus at the current location of primary school, Manly Village Public School.[citation needed] In 1968 Manly Vale High School was established, and then became Mackellar Girls' High School, named in honour of Dorothea Mackellar,[1] in 2003.[citation needed] Under the name Manly Vale High School, the school was believed to have been reinvented as a girls home economics school in 1967, with the intention of creating strong and diligent girls to enter the workforce.[citation needed]
The school's unofficial motto, "Mackellar Girls can do anything" was born when the school expanded from a home economics school to include mathematics and science subjects not traditionally taught to girls, and the students were told they could now "do anything".[citation needed]
Overview
editMackellar Girls Campus is a part of the Northern Beaches Secondary College, a five-campus college across Sydney's Northern Beaches, formed in 2003. It is generally considered to be the brother school to Balgowlah Boys Campus, another school within the College.[citation needed] It caters for approximately 1,200 students from Year 7 and Year 12.[1]
The school is operated by the New South Wales Department of Education; the principal[when?] is Christine Del Gallo.[citation needed]
In 2015 it was ranked as the third top comprehensive girls' school in New South Wales.[2] It was 116th in the NSW Higher School Certificate (HSC) rankings in 2015.[3][needs update]
Houses
editMackellar has a house system to facilitate school based competitions and activities. House activities include athletics, swimming carnivals and other sport related events. The school currently has four houses created based on the Aboriginal meanings for Australian native birds:[4]
- Beabau – King parrot
- Gullary – White crane
- Moolgori – Black swan
- Tingee – Black cockatoo
Notable alumni
edit- Layne Beachley – professional surfer, seven-time World Champion[citation needed]
- Elka Graham – Olympic swimmer, television presenter[citation needed]
- Brooke Hanson – Olympic gold medalist in swimming. Former world-record holder[citation needed]
- Keli Lane – former water polo coach; convicted of infanticide, denied parole in 2024 and due for release in 2028.
- Kim McKay – environmentalist[5]
- Debbie Watson – Olympic water polo player, captained the winning Australian Waterpolo team at the 2000 Sydney Olympics[citation needed]
- Pip Williams – bestselling author, of The Dictionary of Lost Words and other works[6]
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ a b c d "Northern Beaches Secondary: College Mackellar Girls Campus". MySchool. Australian Curriculum, Assessment and Reporting Authority. 2015. Retrieved 20 August 2016.
- ^ "Top Public High School Rankings". Better Education Pty Ltd. 2015. Retrieved 20 August 2016.
- ^ "HSC School Ranking". Better Education Pty Ltd. 2015. Retrieved 20 August 2016.
- ^ "Sport at MGC – NBSC Mackellar Girls Campus". Northern Beaches Secondary College Mackellar Girls Campus. Retrieved 1 February 2018.
- ^ Rolfe, John (16 August 2024). "Sydney Power 100: Where the city's most powerful people went to school". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 17 August 2024.
- ^ Abadee, Nicole (2023). "What Pip did next". State Library of New South Wales. Retrieved 11 May 2024.