Timaru Girls' High School | |
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Address | |
Cain Street, Timaru, New Zealand | |
Coordinates | 44°24′19″S 171°14′40″E / 44.4054°S 171.2445°E |
Information | |
Type | State, Girls, Secondary (Year 9-15), with boarding facilities |
Motto | Latin: Scientia Potestas Est "Knowledge is Power" |
Established | 1880 |
Ministry of Education Institution no. | 361 |
Principal | Deb Hales |
School roll | 406[1] April 2023) |
Socio-economic decile | 6N[2] |
Website | timarugirls.school.nz |
Timaru Girls' High School is a secondary school in Timaru, New Zealand, founded in 1880. Timaru Girls' High provides education for girls aged between 13 – 18 years of age (class levels - years 9 to 13). It also has a boarding facility within the school grounds for pupils not living in Timaru itself and also caters for international students. The school motto is Scientia Potestas Est – Knowledge is Power. The school is a stone's throw away from the Catholic Roncalli College.
Houses
The school has 4 colour houses named after New Zealand native flowers and each student is put into one of them to encourage team spirit.
The colours are:
- Yellow = Kowhai
- Blue = Konini
- Green = Ngaio
- Red = Rata
There are several House events per year, Swimming Sports, Athletics, Cross Country, Aitkens and Waters Cup Day and House Choirs
Notable alumnae
- Maria Fahey – cricketer
- Jo Goodhew – MP
- Elizabeth Gunn – paediatrician
- Jean Hay – early childhood educator
- Eva Hill – doctor
Controversy
In September 2011, a school girl wanted to support the country's Blue Friday, a nationwide campaign to raise awareness of prostate cancer. She was banned from supporting it because students were only allowed to support female causes, even though the girl's own grandfather had died from this cancer. This raised issues in the newspapers[3]
References
- ↑ "New Zealand Schools Directory". New Zealand Ministry of Education. Retrieved 12 December 2022.
- ↑ "Decile Change 2014 to 2015 for State & State Integrated Schools". Ministry of Education. Retrieved 12 February 2015.
- ↑ Filipe, Katarina (3 September 2011). "School 'only supports female causes'". The Timaru Herald. Retrieved 22 November 2011.