St. Peters Lutheran College
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St Peters Lutheran College | |
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Plus Ultra (Latin:"Ever Higher") |
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Established | 1945 |
School Type | Independent, Co-educational, Day and Boarding |
Denomination | Lutheran |
Slogan | "Excellence in Christian Co-education"[1] |
Key People | Mr. Stephen Rudolph (Principal) |
School Fees | AU$8,180–11,600 p.a (Day) AU$24,076–25,796 p.a (Boarding)[2] |
Location | Indooroopilly, Queensland, Australia |
Coordinates | Coordinates: |
Enrolment | ~1,990 (P–12)[3] |
Employees | ~138[4] |
Colours | Maroon and White |
Homepage | www.stpeters.qld.edu.au |
St Peters Lutheran College is an independent, co-educational, Lutheran, day and boarding school, situated on a 21 hectares (52 acres) campus in Indooroopilly, an inner suburb of Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.
Established in 1945, St Peters currently caters for approximately 2,000 students from Prep to Year 12,[3] including 150 boarders from Years 6 to 12.[4] In January 2008, a Springfield campus opened with up almost 100 students from Prep to Year 8 in multi-age classes.
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[edit] Symbolism
There are certain symbolic icons present in the college emblem, including Martin Luther's iconic white rose from his seal, and an inverted cross for St Peter, leader of the Apostles in the early Christian Church, who was crucified upside down.
The School's motto, Plus Ultra, which is Latin for "Ever Higher", is said to emphasise the College's desire for the students to reach their goals in their learning.
[edit] Campus
From the farmhouse "Ross Roy", bought and used as the first building of St Peters in 1945, the College campus has seen significant growth and change over the years.
Theile house, a four storey building comprising of computer labs, classrooms, Year 12 lockers, and the Theile study centre, was recently renovated and extended under instruction from current Head of College, Mr. Stephen Rudolph. The facilities in the new building include a study centre for senior students. The girls' boarding houses have also been renovated, now featuring air conditioning, and a multi-purpose court.
There are three libraries on campus. The Senior School library is a two-storey facility where students and staff can access a collection of fiction and non-fiction. There are approximately 60 computers and students have access to a number of databases to which the school subscribes.
[edit] Ironbark
Ironbark is the outdoor campus of St Peters Lutheran College. Located near the town of Crows Nest, some 50 km north of Toowoomba and 150 km north-west of Brisbane, the property consists of 600 hectares (1,483 acres) of heavily timbered, undulating granite country. The donation of land in 1971, provided the College with an opportunity to develop and implement an outdoor education program. After several years of discussion and planning, a pilot program was run in 1974. Following the success of the pilot program, Ironbark has been part of the College curriculum since 1976. Ironbark was named for the Eucalyptus Crebra, the narrow leaf Ironbark, which grows across the property.
Students from the College spend five weeks at Ironbark in Year 9. During their stay, students experience community living, help to run the farm and maintain the property, and undertake a range of outdoor adventure activities. The students have no formal academic lessons during their stay. Facilities on site include two dormitories, staff accommodation, a well-equipped workshop, a garden, and a mixed farm. Much of the food consumed by the students is produced on the property.
In 2004, a group of Year 9 students faced Ironbark's first ever bushfire evacuation. The fires scorched much of the property, and students were evacuated to a church hall in Crows Nest, and eventually sent home.
[edit] Heads of College
Period | Details |
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1945–1954 | Mr W C Schneider |
1955–1970 | Mr H W A Lohe |
1971–1993 | Dr C Dron |
1994–2002 | Mrs Sally Chandler |
2003–present | Stephen Rudolph |
Appointed in 2003, the current Head of College, Mr Stephen Rudolph, has had 25 years of experience in administering Lutheran schools (including a position as principal of Luther College, Melbourne, Australia). He has initiated change and overseen several projects throughout the college, including the refurbishment of Theile House and the Refectory. The most notable changes the current Head of College has made include, significant changes to the Ironbark program (including making it open to Year 9 only), and the establishment of a "Junior High" for students in Years 8 and 9.
[edit] Co-curriculum
[edit] Music
Tuition is available through the school on most instruments, as well as vocal lessons and musical theory (AMEB). Music is an elective course in Years 8 to 12, while music is compulsory for students in Year 7 or below. Touring forms a significant part of the College's music program. Student ensembles have toured throughout the Asia-Pacific region, Russia, USA, Europe China and Tasmania.
[edit] Chorale
St Peters Chorale is a youth choir regarded by some as one of Australia's leading youth vocal groups.[5] Composed of students from grades 10 to 12, it frequently performs pieces of music from various composers, especially supporting Australian artists. The chorale, which has toured overseas numerous times in the past, toured through Europe in 2007.
[edit] Orchestra
The St Peters Youth Orchestra is an orchestral group open to all brass, strings, woodwind and percussion students from Years 8 to 12. The ensemble has performed a number of concerts in 2006, including a tour to New Zealand in September.
[edit] Symphonic winds
The St Peters' Symphonic Winds is the College's highest level concert band. It has an integral part of the bands program since its inception, integrating many brass, woodwind and percussion students from Years 9 to 12.
[edit] Other ensembles
In addition, St Peters offers other ensembles, including:[citation needed]
- Singing groups
- The Year 4 choir
- The Year 5 and 6 Choir
- The Year 7 Choir
- Songmakers, Year 8 choir
- Cantique, The Senior Girls' Choir
- Saints and Singers, The Senior Boys' Choir
- Bands and ensembles
- The Years 6 and 7 Concert Band
- The Year 8 Concert Band
- Junior Stage Band
- Intermediate Stage Band
- Senior Stage Band
- The Middle School Strings
- The Senior Strings
- The Wind Ensemble
- The Percussion Ensemble
- The Guitar Ensemble
[edit] Sport
The co-curricular sporting program provides opportunities for students to participate in a variety of sports and physical pursuits. The school's sporting facilities include an indoor sports hall and weights room, a 50-metre and a 25-metre heated pool, six tennis-specific courts, eight additional multi-purpose outdoor courts and three ovals, two of which have turf cricket wickets.
The college offers a variety of sports from primary to senior, including:[6]
- Athletics (Track and Field)
- Australian rules football
- Badminton
- Basketball
- Chess
- Cricket
- Cross Country
- Equestrian
- Football (Soccer)
- Golf
- Gymnastics (Rhythmmic and Artistic)
- Hockey
- Mooting
- Netball
- Rowing
- Rugby Union
- Sailing
- Softball
- Swimming
- Tennis
- Touch Football
- Volleyball
- Water Polo
Students in Years 4 to 7 compete in The Associated Schools Junior (JTAS), while boys in Years 8 to 12 compete in the Associated Independent Colleges (AIC) competition and girls in Years 8 to 12 compete in the Queensland Girls' Secondary Schools Sports Association (QGSSSA).
[edit] St Peters Combobularity club
St Peters Combobularity Club is a Gavel Club, which is a program for under 18s organised through Toastmasters International. The club has been operating since 2005 and its public speakers have won several notable awards during that time.
[edit] Other activities
St Peters students participate in a range of other co-curricular activities, including Opti-MINDS, Debating, Mooting, Public Speaking, Robocup, Theatre Sports, Drama Access, Future Problem Solving, Bee Keeping and various outside competitions.[citation needed]
[edit] Curriculum
The St Peters curriculum is designed to provide a continuum of experience and knowledge acquisition from Prep to Year 12. To this end, St Peters offers programs within four separate sub-schools; the Junior School (P–4), Middle School (5–7), Junior High (8–9) and Senior School (10–12). Each sub-school operates semi-autonomously with its own Head of Sub-School and administration. The Senior School offers the International Baccalaureate Diploma Program.[7]
[edit] Gifted education
In 2005, St Peters introduced a program for gifted and talented Middle School students. The program takes the three years of Middle School and condenses them into two whilst recognising and addressing that gifted children have special intellectual and emotional needs that cannot be addressed in a normal classroom setting. The name Infinity is an acronym for Integrating Needs with Feelings by Igniting, Nurturing and Inspiring Talented Youth.
Since 2004, the school has also been running an exchange program in conjunction with sister school, Immanuel college, in Adelaide, South Australia. The focus of the exchange program, or "Mind Change" as it is known, is to allow gifted students from both schools a chance to meet students their age who they can relate their interests to.
[edit] Publications
The school has a number of publications that are made available to the school community, including:[8]
- The Rock, the school's weekly newsletter
- Plus Ultra, a magazine printed three times a year
- The Review, an annual publication reviewing the previous year
- Maroon and White, a publication circulated to boarding families
[edit] Alumni
Alumni of St. Peters Lutheran College are known as Old Scholars, and may elect to join the school's alumni association, the St Peters Old Scholars Association (SPOSA).[9] Notable St. Peter's Old Scholars include North Queensland indigenous leader, Noel Pearson, Olympic athletes Maxine Seear, Chris Noffke and Shane Gould, and musicians and actors Sigrid Thornton, Lisa Gasteen, James Cuddeford, Anna Starr and Sam Atwell.
Other well-known past students include Brisbane author Rebecca Sparrow; ex-Brisbane Lions (now Essendon) football player Mal Michael; 1986 Commonwealth Games 1500m Freestyle Gold Medalist Jason Plummer; 2002 Commonwealth Games Women's Marathon Bronze Medalist Jacqui Gallagher; Director of the Queensland Conservatorium of Music Professor Peter Roennfeldt; Federal MHRs Steven Ciobo and Michael Johnson; one-term Queensland State MLA Ted Radke; TV sports reporter Stephanie Brantz; Australian Financial Review journalist (and Walkley Award winner) Tom Iggulden; criminologist Tim Prenzler; historian Dr Dirk Moses; Larvatus Prodeo blogger Brian Bahnisch; romance novelist and former Brisbane Broncos cheerleader Ally Blake; co-founder of clothing label Sass & Bide, Heidi Middleton; Channel 9 weather reporter Joseph May; and 2007 Rhodes Scholar, Anna Jane Kloeden (University of Queensland)[10]
[edit] References
- ^ Welcome Message. About Us. St. Peters Lutheran College (2007). Retrieved on 2007-10-04.
- ^ 2008 Fee Schedule: Australian Residents (PDF). Fee Information. St. Peters Lutheran College (2008). Retrieved on 2008-01-24.
- ^ a b Introduction & School Details (PDF). School Report 2007. St. Peters Lutheran College (2007). Retrieved on 2007-10-04.
- ^ a b Staff (PDF). School Report 2007. St. Peters Lutheran College (2007). Retrieved on 2007-10-04.
- ^ Humann, Joel (2004-12-18). Announcing St Peters Lutheran College Chorale Brisbane Tour of England. Retrieved on 2006-08-19.
- ^ Sport (2007). Retrieved on 2007-06-12.
- ^ St. Peters Lutheran College, from ibo.org, retrieved 2008-04-19
- ^ Publications (2007). Retrieved on 2007-06-12.
- ^ About SPOSA. Old Scholars (SPOSA). St. Peters Lutheran College. Retrieved on 2008-05-07.
- ^ Queensland Rhodes Scholars (doc). Rhodes Scholarships - Information for Queensland applicants. University of Queensland. Retrieved on 2007-12-17.
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
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