Onslow College
Onslow College | |
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File:OnslowCollegelogo.gif | |
Aerial photo of the school grounds | |
Address | |
Burma Road, Johnsonville, Wellington, New Zealand |
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Information | |
Type | State co-ed secondary Year 9–13 |
Established | 1956 |
Ministry of Education Institution no. | 269 |
Principal | Mr. Peter Leggat |
School roll | 1268[1] (March 2016) |
Socio-economic decile | 10Z[2] |
Website | www.onslow.school.nz |
Onslow College is a state co-educational secondary school located in Johnsonville, a suburb of Wellington, New Zealand. The school opened in 1956 to serve the city's rapidly growing northern suburbs. The current principal is Mr Peter Leggat.[3]
Contents
The Onslow Way
The Onslow Way differentiates Onslow College from other schools in that the college does not have prefects, Head Boys or Girls or college houses.
To replace the 'responsibility void' left by lack of a prefect system, Onslow College has championed the peer mediation system, where trained students talk to their peers about incidents that have occurred at school, such as bullying, isolation or drug use. This allows students to feel more comfortable while discussing these issues, without fear of retribution which invariably arises in a staff member's presence.
Students also have a large say in the running of the school. Each form class elects one or two representatives to a year level council, which then in turn appoint representatives to the school student council. Students can also put their own names forward for nomination for the board of trustees. The student members of the board of trustees are appointed by a vote by the entire student body.
Students also sit on panels for job applicants, property matters, and many other facets of the running of the school.
The Onslow Way is also identified by students as a reference to the style in which the school encompasses, of being a liberal school which encourages individuality and self-expression. Because of this, Onslow has strength in the creative arts and supports a very popular music department and high numbers of students taking part in drama, art and photography as NCEA classes.
Uniform policy
Onslow College is one of only two state secondary schools within the Wellington region (the other being Wellington High School) that has no officially enforced dress code.[4] The uniform code was removed after protest by the students during the late 60s and early 70s. Uniforms were seen by the students as a waste of their teachers' time and were slowly but eventually removed in stages; with the gloves and hats being the first to be removed. A school‑wide student strike was the major turning point in the removal of the uniform, an event which was attributed to the college's individuality and its unique 'Onslow Way'. Students only have to abide by the "non offensive rule" in which clothing items must not contain offensive images.
Prefect system
Onslow College has no prefect system as well as no Head Boy nor Head Girl: it was seen as anti‑democratic. Onslow was also one of the first schools to acquire a Student Council; to promote the students' concerns and views onto the Board of Trustees.
History
On 13 February 1997, 18-year-old former student Nicholas Hawker murdered 15-year-old St Mary's College student Vanessa Woodman on the school's grounds. Woodman was strangled, had her throat slit, and was stabbed 32 times. Hawker was sentenced to life imprisonment with a 10-year non-parole period.[5]
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Notable alumni
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Academia
- James Belich – Professor of History and writer
The Arts
- David Beach – poet and winner of the biennial Prize in Modern Letters for his book of poems Abandoned Novel in 2008[6]
- Chris Graham – film director[7]
- Rosemary McLeod – writer
- Emily Perkins (novelist) – author
- Taika Waititi – Oscar-nominated film director, writer, painter, comedian and actor
- Maxwell Apse – Actor on New Zealand soap opera Shortland Street [8]
- Anna-Lisa Christiane – Miss Earth New Zealand 2015 [9]
Broadcasting & journalism
- Tamati Coffey – TVNZ's roving Breakfast weather presenter and 2009 Dancing with the Stars winner
- Andrew Mulligan – television host of The Crowd Goes Wild and SKY TV Sports Presenter
- Warwick Slow – radio DJ
- Ian Wishart – editor Investigate magazine
- Rocky Wood – non-fiction author and freelance journalist
Public service
- Georgina Beyer – the world's first transsexual Mayor and later MP.[10][11]
- Catherine Delahunty – Green Party MP
- Sandra Lee – first Maori woman to win a general seat in Parliament
- Trevor Mallard – current Labour Party politician and former Cabinet Minister
Science
- Stanley Roache – 2009 Prime Minister’s Future Scientist Prize[12]
Sport
- Jeremy Coney – New Zealand cricket player
- Gavin Larsen – New Zealand cricket player
- Richard Ussher – New Zealand multisport athlete & World AR champion 2005/2006
- Alan Isaac – International Cricket Council President
References
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- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.[dead link]
- ↑ Onslow College General Rules
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- ↑ Georgina Beyer
- ↑ The Georgina Beyer story ... how a change for the better came about
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External links
- Articles with dead external links from September 2010
- Pages with broken file links
- Articles containing Latin-language text
- Articles containing Māori-language text
- Articles using small message boxes
- Educational institutions established in 1956
- Secondary schools in the Wellington Region
- Schools in Wellington City