Parkwood Secondary College

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Coordinates37°47′03″S 145°14′29″E / 37.7841°S 145.2414°E / -37.7841; 145.2414
TypePublic
MottoValues, Choices, Leadership, and Excellence[1]
Established1979
Parkwood Secondary College
Location
,
Coordinates37°47′03″S 145°14′29″E / 37.7841°S 145.2414°E / -37.7841; 145.2414
Information
TypePublic
MottoValues, Choices, Leadership, and Excellence[1]
Established1979
StatusClosed
ClosedDecember 2012
PrincipalBarbara Laidlaw
Staff35
Enrolment306 (2012)
CampusSuburban
ColoursBlue, maroon, white
Websitewww.parkwood.vic.edu.au (archived 21 June 2012)

Parkwood Secondary College (PSC) was a co-educational public secondary school located in the Melbourne, Victoria, Australia suburb of Ringwood North. The school was founded in 1979 as Parkwood High School, and closed at the end of the 2012 school year.[2] In 2014, the land and buildings were re-opened as the North Ringwood Community House.

The school provided high school education for Years 7 through 12, with Year 11 and 12 students undertaking the Victorian Certificate of Education. It formerly offered a range of VCE subjects as well as the Victorian Certificate of Applied Learning program.[3]

In 2008, the then Labor state government announced a $100 million pledge to seven Victorian secondary schools.[4] This resulted in cursory plans in 2009 to merge Parkwood Secondary College with the nearby Norwood Secondary College.[5][6] Several years passed with no action, and after a change in government, the community was uncertain whether the new Liberal government would continue the plan to merge the schools.[7]

On 1 March 2012, the principal Barbara Laidlaw announced that the merger would not proceed, stating that the school had "a strong and dynamic future".[8]

Closure

On 30 July 2012, the school council of Parkwood Secondary College announced its intention to close the school at the end of the year due to falling enrollments.[9][10] This announcement came five months after the confirmation that Parkwood would continue indefinitely.[11] In its final year of operation, there were 306 students enrolled at the school.[10] After the closure, many of the college's students moved to either Norwood Secondary College or the newly merged Melba College.[12] Some students of the school posted pictures, videos, and messages on a Facebook page in its memory.[13][14]

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References

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