St Boniface College

St Boniface College is a private secondary school in the Kavango East Region of Namibia, situated 30 kilometres (19 miles) east of the regional capital, Rundu.[1] It is a Roman Catholic Church boarding school.[1]

St Boniface College
Location

Coordinates17.907°S 20.033°E / -17.907; 20.033
Information
DenominationRoman Catholic
Established1995
PrincipalMary Phillis Yesudasan
Enrolment306

St Boniface was founded in 1995 and named in honour of Bonifatius Hausiku, the first Namibian Catholic bishop in Namibia; he later became an archbishop.[1] St Boniface College is the top performing school in Namibia.

As of 2016, the school had 306 students from grades eight to twelve.[2]

Academic success

In recent years, St Boniface has been the top-performing school in the country.[3] St Boniface students have made up the majority of the ten best performing grade 12 students in the country: nine of the top ten in 2010, five in 2011, seven in 2012,[1] and eight each in 2013,[4] 2014,[5] and 2018.[6]

The success of the school is attributed to its principal, Mary Phillis Yesudasan, who has been described as "very strict, combined with a military leadership style."[1] She emphasises commitment from both teachers and students. Teachers at St Boniface regularly work until 10:30pm.[4] Long hair and romantic relationships are banned among students, and mobile phones are forbidden for students and teachers alike.[1]

All the teachers in the school are from other countries, such as Kenya, Zimbabwe or India: according to Yesudasan, "no Namibian teacher has proven competent enough to comply with the stringent expectations she fosters."[7]

In order to maintain high academic standards, students who fail a grade are not allowed back to the school.[8]

Not all alumni of St Boniface College have had success at university, and the school has been criticised for not preparing students for the self-study necessary at tertiary level.[8]

gollark: The Surfaces use the ultramobile ones, regular laptops mobile ones which run horribly thermally throttled half the time, and gamer™ laptops the high-power ones.
gollark: They have ~5W ultramobile ones (Core M/Core whatever-Y/who even knows at this point and the bad Celeron/Pentiums), ~15W regular-mobile ones (Core whatever-U) and ~45W high-power mobile ones (Core whatever-H/whatever-HQ).
gollark: Basically.
gollark: Tabletty things like yours.
gollark: * now

See also

References

  1. Shinovene, Immanuel (18 January 2013). "St Boniface: The Story Behind the Success". The Namibian. Archived from the original on 21 February 2013.
  2. "Parents want more Kavango pupils at St Boniface". The Namibian. 20 September 2016. Retrieved 25 October 2016.
  3. "State schools continue to finish last". The Namibian. 15 January 2015. Retrieved 25 October 2016.
  4. Immanuel, Shinovene (16 January 2014). "Quality of Education Slides". The Namibian.
  5. Nakale, Albertina (15 January 2015). "Grade 12 results slightly better … St Boniface College again the shining example". New Era.
  6. Ngutjinazo, Okeri (11 January 2019). "Jakob Marengo SS joins top 10". The Namibian.
  7. Kisting, Denver (28 January 2015). "St Boniface laments mediocrity". The Namibian. Retrieved 25 October 2016.
  8. Haushona-Kavamba, Faith (23 January 2014). "Life's challenges after St. Boniface". The Observer. Retrieved 25 October 2016.
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