Mill Park Secondary College

Mill Park Secondary College is located in Victoria, Australia with its Junior Campus located on Moorhead Drive Mill Park and its Senior Campus located on Civic Drive, Epping. The high school was built in the early 1990s for the residents of Mill Park, however due to population growth, a Senior campus was established around 1997 for students entering the years of 10, 11 and 12. In the current day, Mill Park Secondary College has approximately 1,820 students.

Mill Park Secondary College
Location
, ,
3082 & 3076

Australia
Coordinates37°38′45″S 145°3′46″E
Information
TypePublic state-run high school
StatusOpen
Staff175
Teaching staff130
Years offered7–12
Enrolment1696 (2011)
SloganCreate Your Future

Education

The school provides many levels of education ranging from a S.E.A.L. (select entry accelerated learning program) program to an "Extension" program (an advanced class that provides higher education to children who are not eligible for S.E.A.L. but are too advanced for mainstream) and Main Stream (normal classes for the standard of students).[1]

Of students who left the school at the end of 2010 at least 98% of students found employment, while 100% of students went on to further education.

Houses

All houses are named after horses that were raced in the twentieth century, and were owned by the owner of the Mill Park Stables.

  • Redleap (Red House): All grades ending with the letter R (7AR 8BR 9CR)
  • Eaglet (Yellow House): All grades ending with the letter E (7AE 8BE 9CE)
  • Studley (Green House): All grades ending with the letter S (7BS 7AS 8BS 9CS)
  • Whernside (Blue House): All grades ending with the letter W (7AW 8BW 9CW)
gollark: I think there's a thing called PiFS.
gollark: I think the calculators we have for school store numbers as either rationals, surds (multiples of square roots, or something like that), or multiples of pi.
gollark: You miss out on those pesky infinitely long numbers.
gollark: Correctness is correct. Floats are mostly okayish.
gollark: I think you mean "5 haskell programmers".

References


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.