Blacktown Girls High School

Blacktown Girls High School (abbreviated as BGHS) is a government-funded single-sex academically partially selective secondary day school for girls, located in Blacktown, a suburb of western Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.[2]

Blacktown Girls High School
Location
Blacktown Girls High School
Blacktown Girls High School
Blacktown Girls High School (New South Wales)
Blacktown Girls High School
Blacktown Girls High School (Australia)
Blacktown, Western Sydney, New South Wales

Australia
Coordinates33.7616°S 150.9107°E / -33.7616; 150.9107
Information
TypeGovernment-funded single-sex academically partially selective secondary day school
Established
  • January 1956 (1956-01)
    (as Blacktown High School;
    co-educational)
  • January 1959 (1959-01)
    (as Blacktown Girls High School)
Sister schoolBlacktown Boys High School
School districtBungarribee; Metropolitan North
Educational authorityNew South Wales Department of Education
OversightNSW Education Standards Authority
PrincipalJeff Lumb
Teaching staff57.3 FTE (2018)[1]
Years7-12
GenderGirls
Enrolment753[1] (2018)
Campus typeSuburban
Colour(s)Maroon and white         
Websiteblacktownb-h.schools.nsw.gov.au

Established in 1956 as the co-educational Blacktown High School, the school enrolled approximately 750 students in 2018, from Year 7 to Year 12, of whom three percent identified as Indigenous Australians and 85 percent were from a language background other than English.[1] The school is operated by the NSW Department of Education in accordance with a curriculum developed by the New South Wales Education Standards Authority; the principal is Jeff Lumb.

The school's brother school is Blacktown Boys High School.

History

The school was originally established in January 1956 as Blacktown High School. However, owing to a growing local population and in accordance with government policy, it was decided that the schools would be split into two single sex schools: Blacktown Boys and Blacktown Girls High Schools. Both were fully split by 1959.

See also

References

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