SMK Tinggi Setapak

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Setapak High School
S.M.K. Tinggi, Setapak
Motto
Ilmu Tangga Kemajuan
Established
12 January 1955
School Type
Government-aided Secondary School
Medium of Language
Malay
Principal
Che Azizah binti Saad
Students
All-boys (First - Fifth Form), Co-ed (Sixth Form)
Enrollment
> 1,000
Grades
First Form - Sixth Form
Location
Jalan Air Jernih
Kuala Lumpur, Federal Territory Malaysia
Setapakian
Ministry of Education (Malaysia) Ministry of Education
Flag of Malaysia Malaysia


Setapak High School (Malay: Sekolah Menengah Kebangsaan Tinggi, Setapak) is a secondary school in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. Established in 1955, it is an all-boys school, with the exception of the coed Sixth Form. In the local community, the school is more fondly known as High School and Setapak High. When it was first established, it was located in High Street, Kuala Lumpur (hence its name), before moving to its current location in Setapak in 1963.

The school is very active in the sports arena, especially in the inter-school hockey championships.

Contents

[edit] History

The school was established in 1955 with the name High Street School, which was located at High Street (later Jalan Bandar, now Jalan Tun H S Lee) in the heart of Kuala Lumpur. It was opened on 12 January 1955 by Mr Othman bin Mohamed, the Menteri Besar (chief minister) of Selangor at that time. Sultan Hisamuddin Alam Shah, the Sultan of Selangor, officially opened High Street School on 11 April 1955.

Mr. Luke, the Selangor Education Officer, was instrumental in the formation of the school and he made sure that the school was equipped with the best furniture and equipment available then. The first headmaster was Mr. Herman M de Souza, a former teacher of VI. The school's motto was "Lead By Leading" and the medium of instruction was English.

The school complex, built in 1893, formerly housed Victoria Institution (VI) until 1929 when VI moved to its new premises in Petaling Hill.[1] The Technical College (now known as Universiti Teknologi Malaysia) occupied the complex in 1930 and remained there until 1954 when it moved to Gurney Road (now Jalan Semarak).[2] In 1955, the complex became High Street School.

In addition to normal lessons, the school also had classes in commercial subjects such as Shorthand, Typewriting and Bookkeeping. It also had special lessons on carpentry, metal works and technical drawings. The first batch of students to sit for the Cambridge School Certificate did so in 1959. They also sat for the full London Chamber of Commerce Intermediate School Certificate examination. This was encouraged by the headmaster Mr Herman de Souza who was also the class teacher for the first batch of Form One students and continued teaching them as their class teacher until they reached Form Five in 1959.

In 1962, the school had to move to make way for the construction of an overhead bridge. While waiting for the new school buildings to be completed, the students were placed temporarily in St. John's Institution in the afternoon session for two school terms from April 1962 until the end of that year. According to ex-students' accounts, this was where school's infamous rivalry with St. John's began. It was a clash of two classes of society and with Convent Bukit Nanas nearby, there were several nasty skirmishes that took place.

In January 1963, High Street School moved to it's present location in Setapak, Kuala Lumpur. The new school building was officially opened by the Minister of Education at that time, Mr. Mohamed Khir Johari, on 15 April 1968. The school had also dropped the "Street" from its name to become High School Kuala Lumpur. Since then, it has been affectionately known as 'High School' and is the only school in Kuala Lumpur to use the tag even up until today in the age of Sekolah Menengah Kebangsaan.

The present school badge was the second one since 1968. Mr. Kevin de Souza, Head of Arts in 1968, designed the first school badge.

The school motto was changed to "Ilmu Tangga Kemajuan" (Knowledge is Key to Improvement) in the 1980's. In 2002, it was changed again to "Setapak di Hadapan" (One Step Ahead).

The building that the school first resided on at High Street was utilised by the Kuala Lumpur Traffic Police in the 1980's. However, the building was virtually abandoned when a new multi-storey building for the traffic police was built next to it. In the evening of 29 July 1999, the old school building was razed by fire, believed to have been started by drug addicts hiding in the building that was supposedly locked..[3] It has since been rebuilt on the remaining concrete columns, walls and foundation that survived the fire.

[edit] Traditions

The first batch of students consisted of about 100 students from the feeder schools viz the Pasar Road Government English School and the Batu Road Government English School. The students who passed the Standard Six Government Examination and who were not selected for the Victoria Institution were enrolled here. The first batch of students had the luxuary of small classes (25 per class) and ample space for Science Labs, workshops and resource centres. The headmaster and teachers took special efforts to the extend that school hours were extended up the 4 pm to enable the students to learn extra skills, use the resource centre and the headmaster can be approached any time for advice.It was the first school to use colours to name the classes instead of Class "A" "B" "C". The best student were in one class identified by a colour and the rest divided equally in the other classes. Thus there was no "feelings" of being in the "D" class. A particular colour was not a reference to any class. This was also the one of the first schools to have a school uniform with a coloured pants and the school badge sewn on to the shirt. Another first was to made all students wear the red school neck tie daily.In the other schools only the Prefects wear the neck tie.

Contrary to belief, gangsterism is not a tradition of the school! But since the beginning, students who went to High School have always been edgy and colourful. The move from the inner city area to the suburbs affected the student makeup as such. The early 1970s saw many students from poor or impoverished families attending classes at High School.

The result was a clear and quick build up to the pack mentality. Students who went to school in the 1970s and 80s almost had to join group (or gang) to be accepted as part of the 'in' crowd. But much to their credit, Prefects of the school maintained a very strong hold on the student population. This ended in the mid-90s when the in coming principals with no understanding of the school culture or mentality allowed 'outsider' students who had just joined the school for their STPM or Sixth Form education to become school captains.

Gangs in the glory days of the 1970s and 80s numbered over a hundred students. The gangs were almost always drawn along racial lines and clashes were limited as a very strict code of honour had developed along with the gangs. So between the prefects and the relative calm of the students, High School was a hard but interesting place to study at. In fact, many students from that era have gone on to become low-profile but highly successful men.

In the middle of all this, there were sports and the long standing Pipes and Drums of Setapak High. The school's most persistent sporting team would have to be the hockey team followed closely by the football team. High School has almost always played a free flowing form of hockey. But most of the great teams of the 1970s and 80s fell to rivals St. John's in the Dato Keramat zone finals. The major difference being discipline and training methods. With very rarely a coach or teacher in their midst, High School hockey was all about individual ability. But still, some trophies came the way of the school.

One very prevalent incident occurred in 1983, when St. John's visited High School for a hockey match. Witness accounts do vary with blame being put on High School students, St. John's supporters and outsiders watching the match. One thing for certain is that a massive brawl broke out at the final whistle and the St. John's bus was set on fire. Such was the fury of High School back in the day. This was only matched in 1995 when after a High School basketball student was stabbed by a St. John player/ supporter, the student body mobilised en masse and several bus loads visited St. John's at high noon.

If the hockey team was the scene of highs and lows of the school, the Pipes and Drums have seen mostly ups. Set up in the 1970s by the Canadian Pioneers which in turn were a spin off from the Scottish Highlanders, the Pipes and Drums were the pride and joy of the school as it epitomised almost military discipline with artistic ability. In almost all activities, the school band led the way. And while there is still the joy of waking up to a Piper's Call even today, the dream of many Drum Majors of the past of 100 pipers has never come close to being realised.

One tradition of the school that has died is the School Bus. This was the hard work of many students during the heady days of Chakaravarthy, without doubt the most famous and best principal the school has had. The money raised by the students eventually got them a bus in the mid-1980s. This vehicle was rightly considered an intimidating chariot. School teams rode it to venues and opposing schools would see the school crest on the side and the words 'SMK Setapak High' and cringe. Sadly, the bus was sold due to reasons that were never made clear to either students or alumni that had raised the money in the first place.

But the most forthright tradition of the school has to be the 'Never-say die' attitude that is impressed on the students who attend there. While other schools enjoy a higher profile or networked contacts, most Setapakians are highly independent, resourceful and typically loyal to whatever cause they fight for. Hopefully, as the 21st century plods on, this will continue as the school evolves under closer contact with the Ministry of Education and its master plans.

[edit] Anthem

The school anthem titled Ilmu Tangga Kemajuan was composed by Loo Siew Kuan and Rozita bt. Ramli whom were Sixth Form students.

Ilmu Tangga Kemajuan

Cita-cita yang tinggi
Kami sematkan di hati
Demi untuk memenuhi
Hasrat ilmu pertiwi

Sekolah Tinggi Setapak
Bimbingan mu dibangga
Mari kita perjuangkan
Ilmu tangga kemajuan

Disiplin tetap dijaga
Semangat teguh sentiasa
Majulah sekolah kita
Untuk selama-lamanya

Sekolah Tinggi Setapak
Bimbingan mu dibangga
Mari kita perjuangkan
Ilmu tangga kemajuan

[edit] Principals

Period of Service Name
Jan 1955 – May 1966 Herman M de Souza
Jun 1966 – Dec 1966 S.M. Ponniah
Jan 1967 – Dec 1970 N. Rajendra
Jan 1971 – Apr 1971 Michael Loh
Apr 1971 – Jun 1981 Peter Tay
Jun 1981 – Jan 1988 V. Chakaravarthy
Feb 1988 – Sep 1988 Jun bin Jais
Oct 1988 – Aug 1992 Abdul Manaf bin Mohamed
Aug 1992 – Jan 1994 Muda @ Ibrahim bin Aki
Feb 1995 – Mar 1996 Abdul Rahim bin Mohamad
Mar 1996 – Jun 1998 Aziz bin Said
Jan 1998 – Feb 2000 Mohd. Kasim bin Wan Abu Bakar
Feb 2000 - Oct 2005 Mohd. Nor bin Rajikin
Nov 2005 - Che Azizah binti Saad

[edit] Administration

  • Academic staff
  • Non-academic staff
  • Prefects
  • Librarians
  • Prefects for Self-Access Centre (SAC)
  • Yearbook Editorial Board
  • Board of Class Monitors
  • Co-operative
  • Sixth-Formers Board
  • Guidance and Counselling Unit
  • Abdul Rahman Talib Hostel

[edit] School Captains

Year Name
1955-1957 Harun bin Abdul Rahman
1958 Mohammad Ismail
1959 Yap Yoke Chong
1960 Allen Yap
1961 Wong Yuen Kean
1962 James Chow
1963 Lee Kow Kan
1964 Chew Wiman
1965 Chiew Fook Cheong
1966 Lim Jit Chew
1967 George John
1968 Wong Hin Soon
1969 Eko Muhatma Kartodirajo
1970 Mohamed Ishak
1971 Yeun Sow Mun
1972 Chandrasegaran
1973 Mohammad Aris
1974 Loh Koon Leong
1975 Wong Kim Hooi
1976 Md Mochtar Shariff
1977 Theodore Wong Kit Cho
1978 Lee Thim Fook
1979 Mohd. Suhaimi
1980 Charles Duncan
1981 Ramesh Singh
1982 Suresh Vasudevan
1983 Tee Lin Keong
1984 Teh Seng Hin
1985 Tie Choon Men
1986 Vijaya Kumar Viramuthu
1987 Oh Guan Han
1988 Choong Kien Thiam
1989 Ravinder Singh
1990 Lim Yoke Long
1991 Yoo Jay Ron
1992 Bernard Lee Wah Toh
1993 Ungku Hamdan
1994 Govin Junior Lim
1995 Tay Mun Kit
1996 Dunstan Gerald Maurice
1997 Chong Lai Cheong
1998 Sandana Karuppiah
1999 Lim Siow Peng
2000 Chong Keat Wah
2001 How Ann Kee
2002 Oh Kok Heng
2003 Danny Lim Chin Beng
2004 Tee Kean Huei
2005 Lim Kim Hui

[edit] Co-Curriculum

[edit] Uniform Bodies

[edit] References

  1. ^ The Victoria Institution - The School at the River Bend - paragraph 15
  2. ^ Wikipedia - Universiti Teknologi Malaysia - History Section
  3. ^ The Victoria Institution - The School at the River Bend - paragraph 20