Thomas Carr College

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Thomas Carr College
Thomas Carr College crest
"They Will Shine"
Address
35 Thomas Carr Drive
Tarneit, Victoria, 3029
Australia
Coordinates 37°50′50″S 144°42′1″E / 37.84722°S 144.70028°E / -37.84722; 144.70028Coordinates: 37°50′50″S 144°42′1″E / 37.84722°S 144.70028°E / -37.84722; 144.70028
Information
School type Independent, Roman Catholic, co-educational, day school
Founded 1997
Enrolment 1200 (7-12)[1]
Campus Suburban
Campus size 10 Hectares[1]
School colour(s) Navy Blue, Red and White
              
Song "We Will Shine"
Publication The Beacon
School fees A$4,400 p.a [2]
Affiliation Roman Catholic Church, ACS
Website thomascarr.vic.edu.au

Thomas Carr College is a co-educational Roman Catholic day school in Tarneit in the western suburbs of Melbourne, Victoria, Australia. It is named after Thomas Joseph Carr, the second Roman Catholic Archbishop of Melbourne. In 2006, the principal since the college's founding, Paul D'Astoli, was transferred and was succeeded by Bruce Runnalls.

Sport

Thomas Carr College joined the Association of Co-educational School (ACS) sporting competition in 2003.

The sports involved are:

Boys Summer Girls Summer Boys Winter Girls Winter
1 - Soccer Soccer Basketball
2 Cricket gobbies Softball Table Tennis
3 Softball Tennis Tennis Hockey
4 Table Tennis Volleyball Volleyball Netballs
5 Hockey - Football -

Houses

There are four houses at Thomas Carr. They are the Galway Tigers (yellow), the Moylough Muscle (blue), Maynooth Bulls (red) and Westport Roos (green). All are named after towns in Ireland and are significant places in Thomas Carr's life.

Three house sport carnivals take place annually, the swimming carnival, athletics carnival and the cross country. Galway have won 10 events, Maynooth and Westport have won eight each while Moylough has won four events.

Controversy

The school has not been without controversy. In 2003, a year nine student committed suicide after being bullied at school camp. The resulting controversy lead to wide spread bullying awareness and the state government introduced various reforms.[3][4]

In 2005 the school establish a "wireless bully button" system which alerts teachers by SMS when students push the button and records incidents via a network of 20 video cameras.[5]

See more

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Thomas Carr College- Principal (accessed:10-09-2008)
  2. Thomas Carr College Fees 2012. Accessed 12 Feb 2012.
  3. Howe, Alan (16 April 2007). "Bullying is cruel not cool". Herald Sun (www.news.com.au). Retrieved 2008-05-31. 
  4. "Alan Howe: Evil loves a child of the worry free". Herald Sun (www.news.com.au). 8 November 2007. Retrieved 2008-05-31. 
  5. "Snarl, you're on bully camera as schools act". The Age (Melbourne: www.theage.com.au). 5 December 2007. Retrieved 2008-05-31. 

External links

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