Weruweru Secondary School
Weruweru Girls Secondary School (formerly known as Assumpta College) is a government secondary school in Moshi, Tanzania.[2]
Weruweru Secondary School Shule ya Sekondari Weruweru (Swahili) | |
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Location | |
, | |
Coordinates | 3°18′41″S 37°16′4″E |
Information | |
School type | Public |
Established | 1963 |
Founder | Sister's of Assumption of God |
School number | S0221 |
Headmistress | Rosalia Frimin |
Teaching staff | 53[1] |
Gender | Females |
Sixth form students | 570 |
Education system | Tanzanian |
Medium of language | English |
Campus type | Rural |
Colour(s) | Blue, Red, Green, Yellow, Purple |
Song | Weruweru Yetu |
Sports | Netball, Basketball, Football, Badminton, Volleyball |
Alumni | Irene Tarimo |
Website | www |
History
The school was established in September 1963 as Assumpta College and was officially inaugurated by Julius Nyerere, Tanganyika's first president on 22 October 1963. In 1970, the school was renamed to its present name after it was handed over to the government.[3]
Headmistresses
- Maria Kamm (1970–1992)
- Flaviana Msuya (1993–2001)
- Anna Devota Sambaya (2001–2009)
- Rosalia Frimin
Notable alumni
- Asha-Rose Migiro, former Deputy Secretary-General of the United Nations
- Mary Nagu, Tanzanian politician
- Mwanaidi Sinare Maajar, former Tanzanian Ambassador to the United States
- Anne Malecela, Member of Parliament for Same East constituency
- Dr Mwele Macelela, former Director General of the National Institute for Medical Research (NIMR) in Tanzania, now Director in the Office of Africa Regional Director at the World Health Organisation.
- Irene Tarimo, Researcher and Lecturer at OUT
gollark: But then reduced it to only *one* of the exercises after people had already done quite a bit.
gollark: They also told us to do the entire set of exercises in the first chapter of the textbook for... I think next week... so quite possibly.
gollark: They talked about how excited they were about... doing a hundred past exam papers in their spare time, or something?
gollark: I got a weird teacher quite like that this year, but fortunately managed to transfer away from having them quite soon.
gollark: These seem like perfectly reasonable questions.
References
- Zephania Ubwani (22 September 2013). "Weruweru: We'd like our O'Levels back please". The Citizen (Tanzania). Retrieved 23 September 2013.
- "Weruweru 'girls' deserve high respect, Prime Minister notes". The Citizen (Tanzania). 23 September 2013. Retrieved 23 September 2013.
- Peter Temba (23 September 2013). "Pinda calls for conducive learning atmosphere". Daily News (Tanzania). Retrieved 23 September 2013.
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