Aberfoyle Park High School

Aberfoyle Park High School is a large public secondary schools in the southern suburbs of Adelaide, the capital of South Australia. Its facilities include the Community Library, Performing Arts Centre, Gymnasium, and the Information and Communication Technology facilities. The school focuses on extending gifted students through the Ignite (formerly SHIP) programme.

Aberfoyle Park High School
Location
Aberfoyle Park
,
Australia
Information
TypePublic
Established1984
PrincipalMarion Coady[1]
Enrolment1130[2]
CampusSuburban
Colour(s)Year 8–11: maroon, black and white               
Year 12: white and black          
NicknameThe Hub
Websiteintra.aphs.sa.edu.au

Aberfoyle Park High School has become a centre for international students, resulting in strong relationships with a number of schools in other countries.

History

Aberfoyle Park High School was built in 1983 and opened in 1984 to service the growing suburbs of Aberfoyle Park, Happy Valley, Flagstaff Hill and other surrounding suburbs. An extra two buildings were completed in 1984 for Science and English / Computing studies at the school. In 1986, Elizabeth II visited the school inspecting the facilities and meeting the students. In 1987 a new Computing Facility was opened providing computers for the students. The school grew throughout the 1990s to a peak of over 1500 students and in the late 1990s the school expanded to include the former primary school site, south-east of the original site.

Aberfoyle Park High School celebrated its 20th anniversary in 2004.

Partnerships

In 2008, Aberfoyle Park High School entered into a partnership with defense contractor, Raytheon Australia to provide $450,000 funding over the next 3 years for purchase of new computers for IGNITE, Science and Maths students at the school. The partnership was launched at the school in November 2008 by the Premier Mike Rann and Raytheon Australia managing director, Ron Fisher.[3]

Notable alumni

Sport

Music

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gollark: But *how did a turtle 0 get there* and where did the potatOS installation come from?!
gollark: Disks, usually.
gollark: The licensing terms explicitly say so.
gollark: If people install my code on things, they are responsible for the consequences.

References

  1. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2009-02-15. Retrieved 2009-02-12.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  2. "APHS Context Statement 2008". Archived from the original on 2008-12-16. Retrieved 2008-11-25.
  3. http://hills-and-valley-messenger.whereilive.com.au/news/story/future-engineers/
  4. "2003 Draft Full List". Archived from the original on 2011-05-24. Retrieved 2008-11-25.
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