John Paul College (Brisbane)
John Paul College is an independent, non-denominational Christian early learning, primary, and secondary day and boarding school, located in the Logan City suburb of Daisy Hill, Queensland, Australia.
John Paul College | |
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Location | |
John Paul College Location in Queensland | |
Australia | |
Coordinates | 27°38′S 153°09′E |
Information | |
Type | Independent, early learning, primary, and secondary day and boarding school |
Motto | Unity · Christ · Learning |
Religious affiliation(s) | Ecumenical |
Denomination | Non-denominational Christianity |
Established | 1982 |
Principal | Karen Spiller OAM |
Years | Early learning; K-12 |
Enrolment | 1,711[1] (2018) |
Campus size | 33 hectares (82 acres) |
Campus type | Subruban |
Colour(s) | Burgundy and blue |
Newspaper | Burgundy + Blue |
Affiliation | The Associated Schools |
Website | jpc |
Established in 1982, the school enrolled 1,711 students in 2018, from early learning and Year K to Year 12, of whom two percent identified as Indigenous Australians and 24 percent came from a language background other than English. John Paul International College provides English Language Studies for international students keen to engage in study in Australia.[1]
The principal is Karen Spiller OAM. The school is located on a 33-hectare (82-acre) campus; and is a member of The Associated Schools.[1]
Overview
The foundation principal was Cec Munns, who was also a member of the steering committee which had urged the Brisbane Catholic Education Office to establish a Catholic secondary school in the area. This request was denied, so the committee worked with the local Catholic, Anglican, and Uniting parishes to establish the school, which opened on Australia Day 1982 with 144 students in Years 8 and 9.
John Paul College has twice been judged as one of the best ten schools in Australia in a nationwide series conducted by The Australian newspaper in both 2002 and 2003.
John Paul provides group or private instrumental, vocal, dance and drama lessons on a weekly basis.
Organisation
The College comprises three schools:
Primary School | Childcare to Year 6 |
Senior School | Year 7 to Year 12 |
International College | Assists international students with the English language |
Primary school is broken down into an additional three schools:
- Early Learning (childcare, kindergarten and prep)
- Junior Primary (Years 1, 2 and 3)
- Senior Primary (Years 4, 5 and 6)
History
The college was founded through the collaborative efforts of four clergymen from three different denominations: Roman Catholic, Anglican and Uniting. All four were strong believers in ecumenism, which continues to guide the College ethos to this day.[2]
Father Rollo Enright, Catholic parish priest at St Peter's, Rochedale, had a strong commitment to ecumenism and was the driving force behind the push for the ecumenical concept of the college when it became clear that the proposal to build a Catholic College at Daisy Hill was rejected by the Catholic Education Office. Father Leo Burke was the founding Catholic parish priest of St Edward's, Daisy Hill and remains involved with the College to this day as its patron. Another ecumenist, Patrick Doulin, was parish priest of St Mark's Anglican community, Slacks Creek and the official representative of the Anglican hierarchy. Reverend Bryan Gilmour, pastor of Logan Uniting Church, was a prominent leader of the ecumenical movement within his own Church and, with the others, enthusiastically supported the establishment of John Paul College as an ecumenical school. It was indeed, he who, when it appeared all avenues to establish the college were exhausted, suggested that the founders pray that, "not our will, but God's, be done".
Houses
Students are allocated to one of the four houses and will remain in that house for the duration of their time at JPC. Siblings are assigned to the same house.[3]
House | Colour |
---|---|
Gilmour | blue |
Burke | red |
Doulin | green |
Enright | white |
Boarding
JPC offers accommodation for students in Years 7 to 12. The boarders are housed in a "village-style" environment called Fenton Village. Vegetable gardens surround individual residential homes, which accommodates eight boarders each. The Director of Boarding, Assistant Director of Boarding, House Mother and four Tutors live on-site.[4]
Notable alumni
- Yassmin Abdel-Magied – Sudanese-Australian mechanical engineer
- David Baxby – CEO, Virgin Management Asia Pacific
- Tim Coenraad – basketball player, Illawarra Hawks (NBL)
- Fletcher Dyson – rugby union player; represented the Queensland Reds and the Australian Wallabies
- Renee Gracie – V8 Supercars Dunlop Series Australian adult film actress
- Sarah Graham – Sydney Flames (WNBL)
- Gong Hyo Jin – South Korean actress
- Shaun Hampson – Australian rules football player with Carlton
- Dami Im – South Korean-born Australian singer, winner of the fifth season of The X Factor Australia in 2013
- David Ki (Ki Sung-Yueng) – soccer player with FC Seoul (2006–2009), Celtic F.C. (2010–2012), Swansea City A.F.C. (2012–) South Korea national football team (2008–), 2010 FIFA World Cup starting player (No. 16), 2011 AFC Asian Cup starting player (No. 16)
- Genevieve LaCaze – long-distance runner specialising in the steeplechase, finished ninth at the 2016 Olympics
- Mitch Larkin – swimmer, silver and bronze medallist at the 2016 Olympics
- Rhys Martin – basketball player with the lllawara Hawks
- Keryn McMaster – swimmer, bronze medallist at the 2014 Commonwealth Games
- Taj Pabari – CEO and founder, Fiftysix Creations. 2017 Young Queenslander of the Year (2017)
- Michael Turnball – soccer player; goalkeeper A-League Melbourne Victory, Australian Olympic Team (Sydney 2000)
- Jesse White – Australian rules football player with Collingwood
- Harrison Edwards (Cricketer) - Australian Cricket Player, has 7 hundreds under his belt.
- Laura Scherian - netballer.
- Maddy McAuliffe- netballer.
References
- "John Paul College, Daisy Hill, QLD: School Profile". MySchools. Australian Curriculum, Assessment and Reporting Authority. 2019. Retrieved 6 September 2019.
- "About Us: What is ecumenism?". jpc.qld.edu.au.
- "Co-Curricular Activities: School Houses". jpc.qld.edu.au.
- "Boarding@JPC". jpc.qld.edu.au.