St Paul's International College
St. Paul's International College caters to Australian and overseas students from Year 7 to Year 12 and University Foundation Studies, with the majority of students coming from Asian countries.
History
Built in 1878, Elm Court House was purchased in 1891 by the Dominican Nuns of West Maitland, who opened an all girls school on 2 February 1891 known as Mount St. Mary's Convent School. Later becoming known as the Dominican Convent school. On 22 October 1984 it was purchased by the Sisters of St Paul de Chartres opening in 1986 as Aurora College. In 1997 Sister Angelina Fong arrived as School Director and changed its name from Aurora College to St Paul's International College.
St Paul's was initially a senior secondary school catering for years 11 and 12 (ages 17 and 18). In 2009 enrolment was open for years 9 and 10 (aged 15 and 16), and in 2012 for years 7 and 8 (ages 13 and 14).
In January 2020, about 35 international students who had returned to school after visiting China were put into lockdown. The move was made following growing concerns about Coronavirus.
Campus
St. Paul's International College is situated on 8.1 hectares (20 acres) of landscaped gardens in the central township of Moss Vale, approximately 1.5 hours south of Sydney.
Subjects
The college has a range of subjects:
- Religion
- English
- Mathematics
- Science
- History
- Language (Chinese)
- Geography
- Commerce
- Technology and Applied Studies
- Creative Arts (Visual Arts & Music)
- Personal Development, Health & Physical Education
- Economics
- Business Studies
- Legal Studies
- Information Technology
- Physics
- Chemistry
- Biology
- Visual Arts
- Chinese for Background Speakers
- Chinese for Beginners
See also
- List of Catholic schools in New South Wales
- List of boarding schools in Australia
- Catholic education in Australia
References
- ^ "History". St Paul's International College. Retrieved 30 January 2020.
- ^ Meyers, Jackie (29 January 2020). "Moss Vale college international students in isolation amid to coronavirus concern". Illawarra Mercury. Retrieved 30 January 2020.
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