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Wikipedia

MLC School

MLC School (previously Methodist Ladies' College) is an independent Uniting Church single-sex early learning, primary, and secondary day school for girls, located in the inner western Sydney suburb of Burwood, New South Wales, Australia. The school enrols students from early learning, through kindergarten to year 12.[2]

MLC School
Schofield Hall and the Tower Wing. The hall, to the left, was designed by Harry Kent and the memorial stone was laid by Mrs Schofield on 16 November 1891. The tower, to the right, was designed by Alfred Newman
Address
Rowley Street

, ,
2134

Australia
Coordinates33°52′14″S 151°6′5″E / 33.87056°S 151.10139°E / -33.87056; 151.10139
Information
Former names
  • Wesleyan Ladies’ College
  • Burwood Ladies’ College
  • Methodist Ladies' College
TypeIndependent single-sex early learning, primary, and secondary day school
MottoLatin: Ut filiae lucis ambulate
(Walk as daughters of the light)
DenominationUniting Church
Established1886; 137 years ago (1886)
(as Wesleyan Ladies’ College)
Educational authorityNew South Wales Department of Education
ChairmanPauline Johnson
PrincipalLisa Moloney
ChaplainVanessa Williams-Henke and Viniana Ravatali
Staff142 teaching staff (2014)[1]
YearsEarly learning and K–12
GenderGirls
Enrolment1,161 (2014[1])
Colour(s)Blue and light blue   
Websitewww.mlcsyd.nsw.edu.au

History edit

MLC School was founded in 1886 to prepare students for entrance to the University of Sydney, which had only admitted women to degrees four years before.[3] With the view that much more could be expected of girls’ skills and talents during their school education, MLC School was one of the first schools in Australia to offer girls the same level of education as boys.[4]

In 1889, a kindergarten was introduced, placing MLC School in the forefront of educational practice. Founding principal Charles John Prescott believed in the education of very young children and persuaded the college council to establish a co-educational kindergarten. It is believed that MLC School was one of the first to establish a purpose-built kindergarten building. In 1890, Miss Scheer became the MLC School kindergarten teacher. Scheer had received her training in Germany in the methods developed by Friedrich Fröbel. Miss Scheer, and her training under in the principles of Friedrich Fröbel are mentioned in the school history Walk In The Light but unfortunately her Christian name is not recorded.[5]

MLC School has a long tradition in science education. The school's first science laboratory was built in 1924 and chemistry and physics were promptly added to the curriculum. MLC School became the first school in the state to present girls for the Leaving Certificate in physics.[6]

MLC School was also a boarding school until 1977, when a fire destroyed the sleeping dormitories, dining room, offices and some classrooms. When assessed, it was decided that a significant portion of the affected buildings would have to be demolished. Due to falling demand for boarding accommodation, the school council decided not to rebuild the boarding quarters and to phase out the boarding school, which closed at the end of 1979.

In June 1977, when the Methodist Church was incorporated into the new union of the Methodist, Presbyterian and Congregational Churches, the Methodist Ladies College Burwood became known officially as MLC School. Today, MLC School is a day school that forms part of the Uniting Church of Australia.

Name changes edit

  • 1886 – Wesleyan Ladies' College (opens on 27 January 1886)
  • 1899 – Burwood Ladies' College
  • 1914 – Methodist Ladies' College
  • 1977 – MLC School

School crest, colours and motto edit

In 1886, founding principal Prescott[7] and MLC School's drawing and painting teacher Miss Douglas[who?] designed the MLC School crest. The crest depicts the book of learning and the star of knowledge on the cross of Saint George.

The MLC School motto, chosen by Prescott, is from the Vulgate: Ut filiae lucis ambulate ('walk as daughters of the light').

Prescott also chose the MLC School colours to honour his alma mater Oxford and its rival institution Cambridge: two bands of dark blue (for love of Oxford) with light blue inserted (for love of Cambridge).[8]

School song edit

The MLC School song is Here In This House with music written by Australian composer Lindley Evans[9][10] who was a visiting music teacher at MLC School from 1930 until 1946 and lyrics written by English poet laureate John Masefield.[11]

Recent developments edit

 
A new quadrangle at MLC School

A number of recent facilities at the school have been designed and constructed by architects Ed Lippmann and Associates, starting with the MLC School Aquatic Centre, which was opened by Dawn Fraser in 2003. The Junior School was completed and opened in 2009 by the Governor-General of Australia Quentin Bryce. The facilities available in the junior school include flexible learning spaces, learning studios, small group areas, wet areas, a literature and resource hub, outdoor learning and play spaces, the piazza, the kiss and drop, and the welcome wall.

MLC Burwood, particularly the main school site bounded by Rowley and Grantham Street and Park Road, is listed on the local government heritage register.[12]

Principals edit

From 1886 to 1972, MLC School operated under a dual control system with the principal connecting the school to the church and performing religious instruction, and the headmistress administering the day-to-day running, general education and discipline. In 1972 the system changed to single control with the Principal overseeing all the leadership duties. MLC School's principal is Lisa Moloney.

Principal Headmistress
1886–1899 Charles John Prescott 1886–1887 E. Shiels
1900–1914 E.J. Rodd[13] 1887–1909 M.F. Wearne[14]
1915–1922 L.H.Kelynack 1909–1912 [15]
1922–1933 T. Frederick Potts[16] 1912–1940 Miss M.H. Sutton
1933–1939 H.C. Foreman 1941–1959 G. Wade
1940–1947 W. Deane[17] 1960–1972 Alice Whitley
1948–1959 R.B Lew
1960–1964 Winston D'Arcy O'Reilly
1965–1969 E.A. Bennett
1973–1989 K. Cornwell
1990–2011 B. Stone
2011–2016 D. Scala
2016–2017 L. Robert-Smith
2018–present L. Moloney

Curriculum edit

Higher School Certificate (HSC) edit

MLC School is registered and accredited with the New South Wales Board of Studies, and therefore follows the mandated curriculum for all years. In Year 12, the Higher School Certificate (HSC) or the International Baccalaureate (IB) curriculum are followed.

International Baccalaureate (IB) edit

MLC became an IB World School in August 1999 and offers the International Baccalaureate (IB) to all students in Years 11 and 12[18] as an alternative to the HSC.

Students undertaking the International Baccalaureate Diploma Programme in their final two years at school select one subject from each of six core study areas, ensuring a breadth of subject choice through humanities, experimental sciences, mathematics, arts and compulsory language study. The IB Diploma also requires a CAS component (hours dedicated to creativity, action and service), Theory of Knowledge classes and an Extended (5,000 word) Essay in a subject area of the student's choice.

The International Baccalaureate is offered as an international / global alternative to the NSW Higher School Certificate. It has been offered at MLC School since 2001 and is chosen by 30% of MLC School's graduates. MLC School's 2010 IB Diploma results included four perfect scores, converting to the maximum Australian Tertiary Admissions Rank (ATAR) of 99.95. The School's IB Diploma median rank was 98.80. The combined 2010 HSC and IB Diploma scores also resulted in 55% of candidates receiving an ATAR of 90.00 or above, with 14 candidates scoring 99.00 or above.

Co-curriculum edit

Sport edit

Primary school students may partake in competitive sport through MLC School's membership of the Junior School Heads Association of Australia (JSHAA). These competitions are usually held on Saturday mornings and include sports such as: tee-ball/softball, tennis, netball, cricket, minkey/hockey and soccer.

Secondary school students compete against 28 other similar type schools in the Independent Girls' Schools Sporting Association (IGSSA) competition. These competitions occur on Saturday mornings or in the form of carnivals and include sports such as: netball, softball, swimming, diving, cricket, tennis, athletics, fencing, cross country, rowing, hockey, soccer, water polo, basketball, touch football and gymnastics.

Students who perform well at JSHAA or IGSSA level may be invited to compete in NSW Combined Independent Schools' (CIS) competitions.

From its inception, MLC School has valued academic and co-curricular achievements equally. MLC School was the first school to give girls equal access to sports when on 3 November 1906 the first Athletics Sports Carnival for girls in Australia was held at MLC School. “At first other schools seemed to wonder if it was quite the correct thing, but next year some of them followed suit, and eventually all who had held up hands of horror, put them down and joined in too.”[19]

Music edit

MLC School offers instrumental music lessons in over twenty instruments to both current MLC students and external students. Lessons are conducted by professional musicians. Students interested in music are offered the opportunity to perform on a number of levels, including at studio concerts and smaller groups. Performance opportunities are available every year in the Sydney Town Hall and biennially at the Sydney Opera House.[citation needed]

From the beginning, music has held a special status at MLC School. The school's founding principal Prescott wanted his students to achieve tangible recognition for their achievements through examinations in music theory. MLC School was integral in the establishment of the Trinity College (London) musical theory examinations in Australia – the first board to examine candidates in music in Australia. The first MLC School Trinity College results are noted in the School's Examination Results in 1887, just one year after the School was established.[citation needed]

Dance edit

In 2008, MLC School won the Rock Eisteddfod Challenge NSW Open Division with a performance titled 'The Shades of Grief'; a story about the Beaumont children who went missing from a beach in Adelaide and have never been found. They won eight awards at the heats and another eight awards at the finals plus the overall 1st place.[citation needed]

In 2009, MLC School was a grand finalist in the Rock Eisteddfod Challenge NSW Premier Division; their performance titled 'The Private Life of a Masterpiece' depicted the story of Edgar Degas' sculpture 'Little Dancer of Fourteen Years'.[citation needed]

In 2011, MLC School won the Rock Eisteddfod Challenge NSW Premier Division with an entry entitled 'Granville'; a highly sophisticated and emotional piece that recalls the circumstances of how the Granville Train Disaster occurred and then explores how the accident impacted on Sydney's Western Suburbs. They also had previously won the NSW Regional Championships with the piece, winning nine awards to take 1st place at the Wollongong event.[citation needed]

In 2019, MLC School competed in the Wakakirri Secondary School Story Dance Challenge with the piece 'The Price of Low Cost', following the story of a catastrophic sweatshop fire in Bangladesh. The performance was nominated for the National Story of the Year Award and placed 2nd.[citation needed]

House system edit

MLC School's senior school has ten houses. Four were created in 1942, and the other six were added in 1992. MLC School's primary school still utilises the original four houses.[citation needed]

Each House has a staff Head of House and House Tutors. Spirited inter-House competition takes place every year as Houses vie for honours in debating, chess, literature, athletics, cross-country racing and swimming to take out the Spirit and Points Trophies on Speech Night at the end of the year.[citation needed]

Original house names (1942) edit

The first four houses were established by Headmistress Dr Gladys Wade in 1942.[20] The House names were chosen from Aboriginal words commencing with the letters MLCB to fit the first letters of Methodist Ladies’ College Burwood, and their emblems were drawn from the MLC School Crest.

Mooramoora means "good spirit", its emblem is the book and its colour is light green (emerald) representing initiative.
Churunga means "sacred place or thing", its emblem is the cross and its colour is yellow (gold) representing worship.
Leawarra means "uprising", its emblem is the shield and its colour is purple (violet) representing conviction.
Booralee means "an ideal to which we must aspire", its emblem is the star and its colour is red (scarlet) representing chivalry.

These house colours, when combined with the indigo and light blue of the school colours, create white light, which echoes the school motto: "Walk as daughters of the light".

Six additional houses (1992) edit

In MLC School's 1986 centenary history Walk in the Light, G. Wade (in 1942) described the aims of the original house system as: “giving students interests wider than those of their own class or age group and creating a greater feeling of belonging to the school as a whole. It also allowed more students to become involved in organising and decision making... The system would permeate almost every aspect of school life, providing a basis for friendly, but nevertheless intense competition”.[21]

As the school population grew, Wade's vision began to erode as each of the four Houses grew to over 200 students. At this level, the house system had little meaning other than as a convenient way of dividing the school for sporting and debating competitions.

In 1992, the addition of six new houses was an attempt to restore the system to its original intent. Expanding the house system strengthened the pastoral care program,[22][failed verification] and provided students with more leadership opportunities and greater encouragement for participation in the wider life of the school.

With ten houses, each student was able to operate within a unit of about eighty students and participation becomes a necessity rather than an option. The impact of this was immediately evident with greater involvement in swimming, sports and gymnastics competitions held during Term 4 1992.[citation needed]

New house names (1992) edit

 
Mabel Sutton, 1940

The six new houses introduced in 1992 were named after people and places of significance in the history of MLC School.

  • Abbeythorpe was a two-storey Italianate building located across Park Road from the school, between the sports field and Burwood Park (where the 2003 Aquatic Centre now sits), where classes were held and early boarders were housed for almost 50 years from 1923 when it was purchased by the College Council. Abbeythorpe was demolished in 1972, and in 1978 the Gymnasium (still located within the Aquatic Centre) was built on the site.[23]
The colour for Abbeythorpe is dark green.
  • Lester is named after Sarah Eliza Lester, who ran one of the earliest private colleges for girls.[24][25][26]
In 1879, she established a ladies college (her fifth) in the 1855-built "Kent House" on the corner of Park Road and Rowley Street, Burwood. This became the Wesleyan Ladies' College in 1886 and would later become Burwood Ladies' College in 1899, Methodist Ladies’ College in 1914, and MLC School in 1977.
The colour of Lester House is orange.
  • Prescott is named after the founder and first principal-headmaster of the Wesleyan Ladies’ College, Charles Prescott.[7][27]
In the seven weeks from the time, he was offered the position of Headmaster, Prescott had almost single-handedly organised the school into existence, and he stayed for 14 years, during which the school gained a reputation for sound academic teaching and fine examination records in both academia and music.[citation needed] He left to become the headmaster of Newington College at the end of 1899.
The colour of Prescott is royal blue.
  • Sutton is named after Mabel Sutton,[28] an MLC School Old Girl (cohort approx. 1896) joined the staff of Burwood Ladies' College as first assistant in 1910 and was appointed headmistress in 1912. In 28 years, she left her mark on education both at the school and in the community. She retired in 1940.
In the 1920s, she was instrumental in introducing Physics to the MLC School curriculum, thus making MLC School the first school in NSW to have girls sit the Leaving Certificate Physics exams.[citation needed]
The colour for Sutton is pink.
  • Wade is named after Gladys Irene Wade, headmistress of MLC School from 1941 until 1959. Earlier in her academic and teaching career, she had been a form mistress at MLC School (1918–24). Wade instigated many of the traditions of the school, such as the house system and the school community service.
The colour for Wade is turquoise (blue-green).
  • Whitley is named after Alice Whitley, MLC School's last headmistress from 1960 to 1972. A former student of MLC School (Dux in 1930), Whitley made a lasting contribution to science education across NSW.[29][failed verification] Altogether, she devoted over 50 years of her life to the school.
The colour for Whitley is maroon.

Early MLC School architecture edit

Miss Lester's Kent House edit

 
Kent House circa 1892

Sarah Eliza Lester moved her ladies’ college (for the fifth and last time prior to her retirement in 1885 when she moved across the road to 47 Park Road) to a large two-storey house on the Park Road / Rowley Street corner called ‘Kent House’ which stood on part of the ‘Burwood’ estate of 750 acres granted to Thomas Rowley by Governor John Hunter in 1799. (Until 1886, Park Road was known as River View Terrace and Rowley Street was known as Rowley Place.)

The Kent House estate consisted of 2.5 acres, about 1 acre being grassland on the opposite side of Park Road from the school. (Separating this field from Burwood Park was ‘Abbeythorpe’ which was built by the Starling family in the mid 1800s and acquired by the school in 1923 to be used as the Junior School.)

On 22 May 1885, the Wesleyan Conference Committee considered Lester's school at the Park/Rowley corner as a possible site for the Wesleyan Ladies College that they wished to establish to complement Newington College.

The main building consisted of four ground floor rooms and several bedrooms upstairs. A cottage (where Schofield Hall / the Chapel now stands), a stable, a coach house, a fowl house and a paddock on the other side of Park Road were included, bringing the area of purchase to one hectare. The Sydney Morning Herald advertisement on the 23 January 1886 stated that “the premises (Kent House) have been occupied as a school by Miss Lester for many years past and are consequently well-known.”

Schofield Hall (now MLC School Chapel) edit

As student numbers rose, plans were made for a significant extension to the buildings. The Kent House cottage, which had been used mainly for sleeping accommodation, was to be demolished and replaced with a two-storey building with dining hall and suite of bedrooms above.

The early days of MLC School were plagued by financial problems. Unlike other schools at the time, it had not started with a personal endowment. Prescott appealed for donations, stating that the school “started in faith, perhaps in the hope that some generous friend might come forward and do something to lighten the debt incurred by the buying of the College.”

The first ‘generous friend’ was Ellen Schofield, the wealthy widow of W. Schofield, a Wesleyan minister. Schofield provided the sum of £2,000 (approx $1 million in today's money) to the new Wesleyan Ladies College (as MLC School was then known), to build the Boarder's dormitory hall and dining room.

The new Boarder's dormitory hall and dining room (foundation stone laid in 1891) was named Schofield Hall. It was designed by Harry C. Kent (a leading Sydney architect who was President of the NSW Institute of Architects for two terms) who also made provision for two towers. Years later Schofield donated another £800 towards the construction of the northern Tower Wing.

In 1977 a fire destroyed the upstairs sleeping dormitory of Schofield Hall. The ground floor survived and is now the MLC School Chapel.

Tower Wing edit

The Tower Wing (foundation stone laid 1918) was designed by Alfred Newman in a Tudor Gothic style to harmonise with the existing architecture of the Schofield Hall which it adjoins. A prominent feature in the new building was the large tower, 24 feet square, and four stories in height. This tower, which was fitted as the residence of the Principal, was covered with a flat roof that was utilised as a promenade.

The Tower Wing provided four additional large classrooms and eight music rooms, as well as bedrooms and sleeping-out balconies for the staff and boarders. Provision was also made for servants’ quarters, and ample shower and other facilities.

The Tower Wing once extended the length of what is now the Cornwell Building. Most of it was demolished in 1989 to make way for the Cornwell Building. Remaining from the original structure are the Tower, Sutherland Rooms and Deputy Principal's office.

Abbeythorpe edit

In late 1923 Abbeythorpe, a residence that stood between the school's playing fields and Burwood Park, was purchased from Mrs Starling. Abbeythorpe was used from 1924 for the kindergarten and primary classes with accommodation for Boarders on the upper floor. The property not only had a large two storey Victorian Italianate house, but also contained a small tennis court.

It had four classes, two on the ground floor and two on the second floor. It had not been renovated to look like a school though, the original rooms just had desks placed in them and a blackboard installed at the front.

Abbeythorpe was demolished in 1972, and in 1978 the Gymnasium (still located within the Aquatic Centre) was built on the site.

Potts Hall edit

By 1925 the growth in student numbers made it clear that a new hall was desperately needed. It was resolved to go ahead and build a new hall on the site of the original kindergarten building on the corner of Rowley and Grantham Streets.

The new block was to have a tower to balance the Tower Wing and was to incorporate a gymnasium and art room as well as new classrooms. The building was opened in June 1926 complete with hall which seated 1,000 people.

The gym on the ground floor was fitted out with money raised at a fete in the previous year. Funds raised by the Old Girls’ Union provided furnishings for the new Hall.

Initially called the Assembly Hall, the building was renamed Potts Hall in 1933 on Potts’ death.

First Swimming Pool edit

On 29 April 1929 the Parents’ and Friends’ Association was established with the objective of assisting in “any way possible the promotion of the interests of the College, and to supplement school equipment”. The original members chose as their first objective “the provision of a swimming pool in the College grounds”.

The Great Depression and WWII meant that fund raising was a challenge, but on 9 March 1957 the P&F had their “fulfilment of a dream” and the first MLC School pool was officially opened.

Kent House (Art and Design Centre) edit

In August 1949 a two-storey house, Youngarra, located on the corner of Rowley and Gordon Streets was purchased by the school. Youngarra contained fourteen rooms on a quarter of a hectare of much needed land. The building was renamed Kent House, in memory of the original school building. It was occupied by the kindergarten and lower primary school.

Youngarra was demolished in 1966 and replaced by a new and larger building which brought all the kindergarten and primary school under the one roof. This was to become the third building on MLC School premises to be named Kent House. In 2009 when the junior school relocated to its new premises on Park Road and Kent House became the MLC School Art and Design Centre.

Sutton House edit

In 1936 Cartreff, a two-story house at 36 Grantham Street was purchased and rename Sutton House in honour of the former student and long standing Headmistress, Mabel Sutton. It was to provide additional classrooms and was purchased with a view to future development.

In 1949 the grand Sutton House was completed. Its first floor housed the contents of the former Fiction and Reference Libraries. The new combined library retained the name Wearne Library (in memory of the former MLC School headmistress, Minnie Wearne), and for the first time a full-time trained Librarian was employed. It occupied most of the first floor of Sutton House and contained shelving for 8,000 books.

The construction of the new Sutton House also provide new science laboratories, a geography room and two senior rooms. The new ‘Wearne Library’ was noted for its simple and light finishes and spaces and was for use of the entire school. The Old Girls’ Union had donated the furniture.

In 1962 extensions to Sutton House were made at a right angle to Sutton House along the then northern boundary of the school.

Wade House edit

The tennis court on Grantham Street between Potts Hall and Sutton Hall was replaced by Wade House in 1961, a modern two storey brick building which featured façade panels highlighting the architectural fashion of the day. The building was noted for its contemporary internal finishes and provided a bright and roomy art room, five large classrooms on the first floor as well as several smaller rooms, domestic science and well appointed staff room on the ground floor.

Music education edit

Charles Prescott edit

Since the very early days, music has held a special status at MLC School – music's importance was such that, even when the school was conspicuously successful in academic examinations, the results of music exams always took precedence in the annual Speech Day reports.

From the beginning, music has held a special status at MLC School; music's importance was such that, even when the school was conspicuously successful in academic examinations, the results of music exams always took precedence in the annual Speech Day reports. The School's Founding Principal, Rev. Prescott wanted his students to achieve tangible recognition for their achievements through examinations in music theory. MLC School was integral in the establishment of the Trinity College (London) musical theory examinations in Australia – the first board to examine candidates in music in Australia. The first MLC School Trinity College results are noted in the School's Examination Results in 1887, just one year after the School was established.

With Prescott's encouragement, MLC School students entered various music grades in the Trinity College Theory Examinations. Practical examinations were administered by the Trinity, Sydney and Australian Colleges of Music. In addition, examiners were sent to the School from the Associated Board of the Royal Academy and the Royal College of Music in London.

Frederick Morley edit

One of Prescott's first staff appointments was Frederick Morley who remained as music and singing master at MLC School for forty years.

Development of MLC School orchestras edit

The first MLC School String Ensemble was formed in 1904 and was immediately popular. To meet the growing demand for music lessons, a wooden building was erected in 1905 to house three music rooms. Further facilities were provided with the 1919 opening of the Tower Wing where eight rooms were designated exclusively for music.

By 1912 music became a qualifying subject in the MLC School curriculum. Music standards grew, along with student numbers, elevating the general status of music in the School even more.

In 1932 the first MLC School Orchestra performed folk dances on senior play day. The Orchestra consisted of one first violin, four second violins, a cello, piano, two drums, four triangles, two cymbals and one tambourine.

The first MLC School concert was held in 1933 and featured items by the Senior and Junior Choirs as well as instrumental and recitation solos. The School magazine ‘Excelsior’ published a School music column from 1930 which featured competition results and reported on musical functions including lunchtime recitals, visitors’ recitals and gramophone lecture recitals.

By 1939 all girls were learning music in one form or another and the School Orchestra had grown to 16 musicians. Of the 90 girls who sat for various music grades within the Conservatorium of Music Examinations, 50 passed at either Credit or Honour standard, a highly commendable result for any school.

In 1942 the Senior Choir and Orchestra participated in the All Schools’ Music Festival held at the Sydney Conservatorium of Music and percussion band training was introduced in the Primary School.

Lindley Evans edit

Lindley Evans, a visiting member of the MLC School music staff from 1930 to 1946 (also Dame Nellie Melba's accompanist for several years) became a driving force in the development of music at the school. He helped MLC School win the fabled Demster Shield in his first year on staff in 1930, a feat repeated on other occasions in the 1930s before interest in the competition waned in the early 1940s. The spirit of Lindley Evans remained an integral part of MLC School's musical tradition. This was demonstrated at the 1969 Speech Night when the orchestra played a piece specially written by Frank Hutchens, who was a close associate of Lindley Evans' for 40 years. Another lasting contribution that Lindley Evans made to MLC School was the composition of the music for the School song to lyrics by the UK Poet Laureate John Masefield.

Sylvia Lew edit

In 1948 Sylvia Lew came to MLC School when her husband, Robert Lew, took over as principal after Deane's retirement. Having received musical training at the Sydney Conservatorium, she put her skills to good use by forming a 90-strong Boarders’ Choir within a year of coming to the School. In May 1952, the Boarders' Choir received wide exposure when they were broadcast by the Australian Broadcasting Commission. In recognition of Silvia Lew's contribution to MLC School's music tradition, the auditorium in the 1987 Centenary Music Centre was named in her honour. Other facilities in the Music Centre include a keyboard laboratory along with staff areas, music tuition and practice rooms.

Ken Cornwell edit

In the 1970s, the new principal of MLC School, Ken Cornwell, the son of musical parents, and who was himself an accomplished violinist, brought to the school a love of and commitment to music that has been strongly reflected in its subsequent curriculum development.

Between 1974 and 1985 the School's Music Department increased from 10 to 16 staff to become the largest single department in the school. An orchestra was formed in the Primary School in 1983, and the formation of recorder and Junior choir groups was followed in 1984 by Junior and Senior string ensembles. A highlight of the School calendar was the Annual Musical Evening held in July where performances included sixteenth century compositions as well as modern original items.

First Opera House concert in 1986 edit

During its centenary year, MLC School performed a ‘Grand Concert’ at the Sydney Opera House initiated by Helen Watson who was the Head of Music at the time. This was billed as an ‘evening of serious music featuring soloists, choirs and orchestra’ and the performance was a magnificent feast of music, both orchestral and choral, and included performances from Old Girls who returned to join current students.

Music for all students edit

The development of music now incorporates an integrated development program to include girls from Kindergarten to Year 12. At the MLC Junior School, all primary girls participate in class music which develops performance, listening, aural and creative skills. Each girl has the opportunity to learn an orchestral instrument in a class situation as well as through individual tuition.

In the Senior School the music program focuses on learning generated by creative expression. The composition process taught from Year 7 progresses in elective classes where the girls develop skills to compose music for a variety of ensembles. Students are required to perform individually as well as being involved in ensemble performances.

Music events on the MLC School calendar edit

The musical highlight of each year is the MLC School Music Awards night held at the Sydney Town Hall.

The school's musical calendar also includes the biennial concert held in the Sydney Opera House initiated by Helen Watson in 1986 and continued by her successor, Karen Carey. These concerts display the School's musical standard. Orchestral, choral and ensemble performances by the entire School, its bands, choirs and ensembles are supplemented by excellent individual performances. The concerts routinely featured works by traditional composers such as Bach, Handel, Liszt, Saint-Saens, Schubert and Shostakovich. In addition, composition diversity is provided by performances of original works by the School's composer in residence, teachers and MLC School students.

Notable alumnae edit

Entertainment, media and the arts
Medicine and science
Politics and the law
Sport

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b "MLC School, Burwood, NSW – School profile". Australian Curriculum, Assessment and Reporting Authority. Retrieved 18 December 2015.
  2. ^ "MLC School – An Independent Girls School located in the Inner West of Sydney Australia" (PDF). MLC School Sydney.
  3. ^ "Timeline". University of Sydney.
  4. ^ "Jubilee 1886–1936". MLC School Sydney. 2 December 2015. p. 10.
  5. ^ Walk In The Light Retrieved 2 August 2023.
  6. ^ "Walk In The Light". MLC School Sydney. 2 December 2015. p. 90.
  7. ^ a b Swain, Peter L. "Prescott, Charles John (1857–1946)". Australian Dictionary of Biography – entry for Prescott, Charles John (1857–1946). National Centre of Biography, Australian National University – via Australian Dictionary of Biography.
  8. ^ "Walk In The Light". MLC School Sydney. 2 December 2015.
  9. ^ Sitsky, Larry. "Evans, Harry Lindley (1895–1982)". Australian Dictionary of Biography – entry for Lindley Evans. National Centre of Biography, Australian National University – via Australian Dictionary of Biography.
  10. ^ "Lindley Evans : Represented Artist Profile". Australian Music Centre.
  11. ^ "John Masefield". Poetry Foundation. 31 October 2016.
  12. ^ "Methodist Ladies College". New South Wales Heritage Database. Office of Environment & Heritage. Retrieved 17 May 2019.
  13. ^ "Welcome to the Rev. E. J. Rodd. – Goulburn Evening Penny Post (NSW : 1881 – 1940) – 8 May 1900" – via National Library of Australia.
  14. ^ Services, Archives and Records Management. "Early women students – ARMS – The University of Sydney".
  15. ^ "Hetherington, Jessie Isabel".
  16. ^ "Obituary". Sydney Morning Herald. 22 January 1934.
  17. ^ "REV. WALLACE DEANE. – New Principal of Burwood M.L.C. – The Sydney Morning Herald (NSW : 1842 – 1954) – 5 Mar 1940" – via National Library of Australia.
  18. ^ "MLC School". IB World Schools. International Baccalaureate. 2007. Retrieved 20 October 2007.
  19. ^ "Jubilee 1886–1936". MLC School Sydney. 2 December 2015. p. 79.
  20. ^ "Links Across the Years 1976". MLC School Sydney. 2 December 2015.
  21. ^ Walk in the Light, 1986 pp. 123–125
  22. ^ "MLC School". School Choice.
  23. ^ Harvest of the Years, Burwood Council
  24. ^ Campbelltown Council 30 November 2015 at the Wayback Machine
  25. ^ Professional Historians Association (NSW) Inc
  26. ^ "Denham Court" – via City of Botany Bay Library & Museum Search.
  27. ^ "A MAN OF MARK. – Rev. Charles J. Prescott, M.A.. D.D." The Sydney Morning Herald (NSW : 1842 – 1954). 1 August 1931 – via National Library of Australia.
  28. ^ "Death of Mabel Sutton". The Sydney Morning Herald. 25 July 1968 – via Google News Archive Search.
  29. ^ [Biographical cuttings on Alice Whitley, Dr., science teacher, containing one or more cuttings from newspapers or journals] – via National Library of Australia.
  30. ^ "down memory lane". MLC School Sydney.
  31. ^ De Berg, Hazel Estelle (1913–1984) Retrieved 13 August 2018.
  32. ^ Anthony, Delyse (1996). Haenke, Helen Joyce (1916–1978). Melbourne University Press. pp. 350–351. Retrieved 13 September 2007. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  33. ^ "Shorter, Lucie Emilie (1887-1989)", Trove, 2012, retrieved 28 December 2016
  34. ^ Scollay, Moira (1979). Anderson, Phyllis Margery (1901–1957). Melbourne University Press. p. 61. Retrieved 13 September 2007. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  35. ^ Elmslie, Ronald (1993). Abbie, Andrew Arthur (1905–1976). Melbourne University Press. pp. 1–2. Retrieved 13 September 2007. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  36. ^ Fifteen locals honoured in 2023 Australia Day Awards Retrieved 27 January 2023.
  37. ^ Vickery, Joyce Winifred (1908–1979), Australian Dictionary of Biography Online retrieved 2008-04-20
  38. ^ Ferraro, Carmela. "Force of nature". Inside Story. 17 April 2013. Retrieved 27 April 2014.
  39. ^ "A lawyer first, in a career of firsts (obituary)". Sydney Morning Herald. 16 December 2011.
  40. ^ "London 2012 – Jessica Ashwood Athlete Profile". Australian Olympic Committee. Retrieved 4 August 2012.
  41. ^ "MLC School Olympians - MLC School". www.mlcsyd.nsw.edu.au. Retrieved 1 April 2020.
  42. ^ "London 2012 – Elisa Barnard Athlete Profile". Australian Olympic Committee. Retrieved 4 August 2012.

External links edit

  • Official website for MLC School
  • MLC School Annual Report 2006 (accessed:17 July 2007)

school, previously, methodist, ladies, college, independent, uniting, church, single, early, learning, primary, secondary, school, girls, located, inner, western, sydney, suburb, burwood, south, wales, australia, school, enrols, students, from, early, learning. MLC School previously Methodist Ladies College is an independent Uniting Church single sex early learning primary and secondary day school for girls located in the inner western Sydney suburb of Burwood New South Wales Australia The school enrols students from early learning through kindergarten to year 12 2 MLC SchoolSchofield Hall and the Tower Wing The hall to the left was designed by Harry Kent and the memorial stone was laid by Mrs Schofield on 16 November 1891 The tower to the right was designed by Alfred NewmanAddressRowley StreetBurwood New South Wales 2134AustraliaCoordinates33 52 14 S 151 6 5 E 33 87056 S 151 10139 E 33 87056 151 10139InformationFormer namesWesleyan Ladies CollegeBurwood Ladies CollegeMethodist Ladies CollegeTypeIndependent single sex early learning primary and secondary day schoolMottoLatin Ut filiae lucis ambulate Walk as daughters of the light DenominationUniting ChurchEstablished1886 137 years ago 1886 as Wesleyan Ladies College Educational authorityNew South Wales Department of EducationChairmanPauline JohnsonPrincipalLisa MoloneyChaplainVanessa Williams Henke and Viniana RavataliStaff142 teaching staff 2014 1 YearsEarly learning and K 12GenderGirlsEnrolment1 161 2014 1 Colour s Blue and light blue Websitewww wbr mlcsyd wbr nsw wbr edu wbr au Contents 1 History 1 1 Name changes 1 2 School crest colours and motto 1 3 School song 1 4 Recent developments 2 Principals 3 Curriculum 3 1 Higher School Certificate HSC 3 2 International Baccalaureate IB 4 Co curriculum 4 1 Sport 4 2 Music 4 3 Dance 5 House system 5 1 Original house names 1942 5 2 Six additional houses 1992 5 3 New house names 1992 6 Early MLC School architecture 6 1 Miss Lester s Kent House 6 2 Schofield Hall now MLC School Chapel 6 3 Tower Wing 6 4 Abbeythorpe 6 5 Potts Hall 6 6 First Swimming Pool 6 7 Kent House Art and Design Centre 6 8 Sutton House 6 9 Wade House 7 Music education 7 1 Charles Prescott 7 2 Frederick Morley 7 3 Development of MLC School orchestras 7 4 Lindley Evans 7 5 Sylvia Lew 7 6 Ken Cornwell 7 7 First Opera House concert in 1986 7 8 Music for all students 7 9 Music events on the MLC School calendar 8 Notable alumnae 9 See also 10 References 11 External linksHistory editMLC School was founded in 1886 to prepare students for entrance to the University of Sydney which had only admitted women to degrees four years before 3 With the view that much more could be expected of girls skills and talents during their school education MLC School was one of the first schools in Australia to offer girls the same level of education as boys 4 In 1889 a kindergarten was introduced placing MLC School in the forefront of educational practice Founding principal Charles John Prescott believed in the education of very young children and persuaded the college council to establish a co educational kindergarten It is believed that MLC School was one of the first to establish a purpose built kindergarten building In 1890 Miss Scheer became the MLC School kindergarten teacher Scheer had received her training in Germany in the methods developed by Friedrich Frobel Miss Scheer and her training under in the principles of Friedrich Frobel are mentioned in the school history Walk In The Light but unfortunately her Christian name is not recorded 5 MLC School has a long tradition in science education The school s first science laboratory was built in 1924 and chemistry and physics were promptly added to the curriculum MLC School became the first school in the state to present girls for the Leaving Certificate in physics 6 MLC School was also a boarding school until 1977 when a fire destroyed the sleeping dormitories dining room offices and some classrooms When assessed it was decided that a significant portion of the affected buildings would have to be demolished Due to falling demand for boarding accommodation the school council decided not to rebuild the boarding quarters and to phase out the boarding school which closed at the end of 1979 In June 1977 when the Methodist Church was incorporated into the new union of the Methodist Presbyterian and Congregational Churches the Methodist Ladies College Burwood became known officially as MLC School Today MLC School is a day school that forms part of the Uniting Church of Australia Name changes edit 1886 Wesleyan Ladies College opens on 27 January 1886 1899 Burwood Ladies College 1914 Methodist Ladies College 1977 MLC SchoolSchool crest colours and motto edit In 1886 founding principal Prescott 7 and MLC School s drawing and painting teacher Miss Douglas who designed the MLC School crest The crest depicts the book of learning and the star of knowledge on the cross of Saint George The MLC School motto chosen by Prescott is from the Vulgate Ut filiae lucis ambulate walk as daughters of the light Prescott also chose the MLC School colours to honour his alma mater Oxford and its rival institution Cambridge two bands of dark blue for love of Oxford with light blue inserted for love of Cambridge 8 School song edit The MLC School song is Here In This House with music written by Australian composer Lindley Evans 9 10 who was a visiting music teacher at MLC School from 1930 until 1946 and lyrics written by English poet laureate John Masefield 11 Recent developments edit nbsp A new quadrangle at MLC SchoolA number of recent facilities at the school have been designed and constructed by architects Ed Lippmann and Associates starting with the MLC School Aquatic Centre which was opened by Dawn Fraser in 2003 The Junior School was completed and opened in 2009 by the Governor General of Australia Quentin Bryce The facilities available in the junior school include flexible learning spaces learning studios small group areas wet areas a literature and resource hub outdoor learning and play spaces the piazza the kiss and drop and the welcome wall MLC Burwood particularly the main school site bounded by Rowley and Grantham Street and Park Road is listed on the local government heritage register 12 Principals editFrom 1886 to 1972 MLC School operated under a dual control system with the principal connecting the school to the church and performing religious instruction and the headmistress administering the day to day running general education and discipline In 1972 the system changed to single control with the Principal overseeing all the leadership duties MLC School s principal is Lisa Moloney Principal Headmistress1886 1899 Charles John Prescott 1886 1887 E Shiels1900 1914 E J Rodd 13 1887 1909 M F Wearne 14 1915 1922 L H Kelynack 1909 1912 15 1922 1933 T Frederick Potts 16 1912 1940 Miss M H Sutton1933 1939 H C Foreman 1941 1959 G Wade1940 1947 W Deane 17 1960 1972 Alice Whitley1948 1959 R B Lew1960 1964 Winston D Arcy O Reilly1965 1969 E A Bennett1973 1989 K Cornwell1990 2011 B Stone2011 2016 D Scala2016 2017 L Robert Smith2018 present L MoloneyCurriculum editHigher School Certificate HSC edit MLC School is registered and accredited with the New South Wales Board of Studies and therefore follows the mandated curriculum for all years In Year 12 the Higher School Certificate HSC or the International Baccalaureate IB curriculum are followed International Baccalaureate IB edit MLC became an IB World School in August 1999 and offers the International Baccalaureate IB to all students in Years 11 and 12 18 as an alternative to the HSC Students undertaking the International Baccalaureate Diploma Programme in their final two years at school select one subject from each of six core study areas ensuring a breadth of subject choice through humanities experimental sciences mathematics arts and compulsory language study The IB Diploma also requires a CAS component hours dedicated to creativity action and service Theory of Knowledge classes and an Extended 5 000 word Essay in a subject area of the student s choice The International Baccalaureate is offered as an international global alternative to the NSW Higher School Certificate It has been offered at MLC School since 2001 and is chosen by 30 of MLC School s graduates MLC School s 2010 IB Diploma results included four perfect scores converting to the maximum Australian Tertiary Admissions Rank ATAR of 99 95 The School s IB Diploma median rank was 98 80 The combined 2010 HSC and IB Diploma scores also resulted in 55 of candidates receiving an ATAR of 90 00 or above with 14 candidates scoring 99 00 or above Co curriculum editSport edit Primary school students may partake in competitive sport through MLC School s membership of the Junior School Heads Association of Australia JSHAA These competitions are usually held on Saturday mornings and include sports such as tee ball softball tennis netball cricket minkey hockey and soccer Secondary school students compete against 28 other similar type schools in the Independent Girls Schools Sporting Association IGSSA competition These competitions occur on Saturday mornings or in the form of carnivals and include sports such as netball softball swimming diving cricket tennis athletics fencing cross country rowing hockey soccer water polo basketball touch football and gymnastics Students who perform well at JSHAA or IGSSA level may be invited to compete in NSW Combined Independent Schools CIS competitions From its inception MLC School has valued academic and co curricular achievements equally MLC School was the first school to give girls equal access to sports when on 3 November 1906 the first Athletics Sports Carnival for girls in Australia was held at MLC School At first other schools seemed to wonder if it was quite the correct thing but next year some of them followed suit and eventually all who had held up hands of horror put them down and joined in too 19 Music edit MLC School offers instrumental music lessons in over twenty instruments to both current MLC students and external students Lessons are conducted by professional musicians Students interested in music are offered the opportunity to perform on a number of levels including at studio concerts and smaller groups Performance opportunities are available every year in the Sydney Town Hall and biennially at the Sydney Opera House citation needed From the beginning music has held a special status at MLC School The school s founding principal Prescott wanted his students to achieve tangible recognition for their achievements through examinations in music theory MLC School was integral in the establishment of the Trinity College London musical theory examinations in Australia the first board to examine candidates in music in Australia The first MLC School Trinity College results are noted in the School s Examination Results in 1887 just one year after the School was established citation needed Dance edit In 2008 MLC School won the Rock Eisteddfod Challenge NSW Open Division with a performance titled The Shades of Grief a story about the Beaumont children who went missing from a beach in Adelaide and have never been found They won eight awards at the heats and another eight awards at the finals plus the overall 1st place citation needed In 2009 MLC School was a grand finalist in the Rock Eisteddfod Challenge NSW Premier Division their performance titled The Private Life of a Masterpiece depicted the story of Edgar Degas sculpture Little Dancer of Fourteen Years citation needed In 2011 MLC School won the Rock Eisteddfod Challenge NSW Premier Division with an entry entitled Granville a highly sophisticated and emotional piece that recalls the circumstances of how the Granville Train Disaster occurred and then explores how the accident impacted on Sydney s Western Suburbs They also had previously won the NSW Regional Championships with the piece winning nine awards to take 1st place at the Wollongong event citation needed In 2019 MLC School competed in the Wakakirri Secondary School Story Dance Challenge with the piece The Price of Low Cost following the story of a catastrophic sweatshop fire in Bangladesh The performance was nominated for the National Story of the Year Award and placed 2nd citation needed House system editMLC School s senior school has ten houses Four were created in 1942 and the other six were added in 1992 MLC School s primary school still utilises the original four houses citation needed Each House has a staff Head of House and House Tutors Spirited inter House competition takes place every year as Houses vie for honours in debating chess literature athletics cross country racing and swimming to take out the Spirit and Points Trophies on Speech Night at the end of the year citation needed Original house names 1942 edit The first four houses were established by Headmistress Dr Gladys Wade in 1942 20 The House names were chosen from Aboriginal words commencing with the letters MLCB to fit the first letters of Methodist Ladies College Burwood and their emblems were drawn from the MLC School Crest Mooramoora means good spirit its emblem is the book and its colour is light green emerald representing initiative Churunga means sacred place or thing its emblem is the cross and its colour is yellow gold representing worship Leawarra means uprising its emblem is the shield and its colour is purple violet representing conviction Booralee means an ideal to which we must aspire its emblem is the star and its colour is red scarlet representing chivalry These house colours when combined with the indigo and light blue of the school colours create white light which echoes the school motto Walk as daughters of the light Six additional houses 1992 edit In MLC School s 1986 centenary history Walk in the Light G Wade in 1942 described the aims of the original house system as giving students interests wider than those of their own class or age group and creating a greater feeling of belonging to the school as a whole It also allowed more students to become involved in organising and decision making The system would permeate almost every aspect of school life providing a basis for friendly but nevertheless intense competition 21 As the school population grew Wade s vision began to erode as each of the four Houses grew to over 200 students At this level the house system had little meaning other than as a convenient way of dividing the school for sporting and debating competitions In 1992 the addition of six new houses was an attempt to restore the system to its original intent Expanding the house system strengthened the pastoral care program 22 failed verification and provided students with more leadership opportunities and greater encouragement for participation in the wider life of the school With ten houses each student was able to operate within a unit of about eighty students and participation becomes a necessity rather than an option The impact of this was immediately evident with greater involvement in swimming sports and gymnastics competitions held during Term 4 1992 citation needed New house names 1992 edit nbsp Mabel Sutton 1940The six new houses introduced in 1992 were named after people and places of significance in the history of MLC School Abbeythorpe was a two storey Italianate building located across Park Road from the school between the sports field and Burwood Park where the 2003 Aquatic Centre now sits where classes were held and early boarders were housed for almost 50 years from 1923 when it was purchased by the College Council Abbeythorpe was demolished in 1972 and in 1978 the Gymnasium still located within the Aquatic Centre was built on the site 23 The colour for Abbeythorpe is dark green Lester is named after Sarah Eliza Lester who ran one of the earliest private colleges for girls 24 25 26 In 1879 she established a ladies college her fifth in the 1855 built Kent House on the corner of Park Road and Rowley Street Burwood This became the Wesleyan Ladies College in 1886 and would later become Burwood Ladies College in 1899 Methodist Ladies College in 1914 and MLC School in 1977 The colour of Lester House is orange Prescott is named after the founder and first principal headmaster of the Wesleyan Ladies College Charles Prescott 7 27 In the seven weeks from the time he was offered the position of Headmaster Prescott had almost single handedly organised the school into existence and he stayed for 14 years during which the school gained a reputation for sound academic teaching and fine examination records in both academia and music citation needed He left to become the headmaster of Newington College at the end of 1899 The colour of Prescott is royal blue Sutton is named after Mabel Sutton 28 an MLC School Old Girl cohort approx 1896 joined the staff of Burwood Ladies College as first assistant in 1910 and was appointed headmistress in 1912 In 28 years she left her mark on education both at the school and in the community She retired in 1940 In the 1920s she was instrumental in introducing Physics to the MLC School curriculum thus making MLC School the first school in NSW to have girls sit the Leaving Certificate Physics exams citation needed The colour for Sutton is pink Wade is named after Gladys Irene Wade headmistress of MLC School from 1941 until 1959 Earlier in her academic and teaching career she had been a form mistress at MLC School 1918 24 Wade instigated many of the traditions of the school such as the house system and the school community service The colour for Wade is turquoise blue green Whitley is named after Alice Whitley MLC School s last headmistress from 1960 to 1972 A former student of MLC School Dux in 1930 Whitley made a lasting contribution to science education across NSW 29 failed verification Altogether she devoted over 50 years of her life to the school The colour for Whitley is maroon Early MLC School architecture editThis article may contain an excessive amount of intricate detail that may interest only a particular audience Please help by spinning off or relocating any relevant information and removing excessive detail that may be against Wikipedia s inclusion policy October 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message Miss Lester s Kent House edit nbsp Kent House circa 1892Sarah Eliza Lester moved her ladies college for the fifth and last time prior to her retirement in 1885 when she moved across the road to 47 Park Road to a large two storey house on the Park Road Rowley Street corner called Kent House which stood on part of the Burwood estate of 750 acres granted to Thomas Rowley by Governor John Hunter in 1799 Until 1886 Park Road was known as River View Terrace and Rowley Street was known as Rowley Place The Kent House estate consisted of 2 5 acres about 1 acre being grassland on the opposite side of Park Road from the school Separating this field from Burwood Park was Abbeythorpe which was built by the Starling family in the mid 1800s and acquired by the school in 1923 to be used as the Junior School On 22 May 1885 the Wesleyan Conference Committee considered Lester s school at the Park Rowley corner as a possible site for the Wesleyan Ladies College that they wished to establish to complement Newington College The main building consisted of four ground floor rooms and several bedrooms upstairs A cottage where Schofield Hall the Chapel now stands a stable a coach house a fowl house and a paddock on the other side of Park Road were included bringing the area of purchase to one hectare The Sydney Morning Herald advertisement on the 23 January 1886 stated that the premises Kent House have been occupied as a school by Miss Lester for many years past and are consequently well known Schofield Hall now MLC School Chapel edit As student numbers rose plans were made for a significant extension to the buildings The Kent House cottage which had been used mainly for sleeping accommodation was to be demolished and replaced with a two storey building with dining hall and suite of bedrooms above The early days of MLC School were plagued by financial problems Unlike other schools at the time it had not started with a personal endowment Prescott appealed for donations stating that the school started in faith perhaps in the hope that some generous friend might come forward and do something to lighten the debt incurred by the buying of the College The first generous friend was Ellen Schofield the wealthy widow of W Schofield a Wesleyan minister Schofield provided the sum of 2 000 approx 1 million in today s money to the new Wesleyan Ladies College as MLC School was then known to build the Boarder s dormitory hall and dining room The new Boarder s dormitory hall and dining room foundation stone laid in 1891 was named Schofield Hall It was designed by Harry C Kent a leading Sydney architect who was President of the NSW Institute of Architects for two terms who also made provision for two towers Years later Schofield donated another 800 towards the construction of the northern Tower Wing In 1977 a fire destroyed the upstairs sleeping dormitory of Schofield Hall The ground floor survived and is now the MLC School Chapel Tower Wing edit The Tower Wing foundation stone laid 1918 was designed by Alfred Newman in a Tudor Gothic style to harmonise with the existing architecture of the Schofield Hall which it adjoins A prominent feature in the new building was the large tower 24 feet square and four stories in height This tower which was fitted as the residence of the Principal was covered with a flat roof that was utilised as a promenade The Tower Wing provided four additional large classrooms and eight music rooms as well as bedrooms and sleeping out balconies for the staff and boarders Provision was also made for servants quarters and ample shower and other facilities The Tower Wing once extended the length of what is now the Cornwell Building Most of it was demolished in 1989 to make way for the Cornwell Building Remaining from the original structure are the Tower Sutherland Rooms and Deputy Principal s office Abbeythorpe edit In late 1923 Abbeythorpe a residence that stood between the school s playing fields and Burwood Park was purchased from Mrs Starling Abbeythorpe was used from 1924 for the kindergarten and primary classes with accommodation for Boarders on the upper floor The property not only had a large two storey Victorian Italianate house but also contained a small tennis court It had four classes two on the ground floor and two on the second floor It had not been renovated to look like a school though the original rooms just had desks placed in them and a blackboard installed at the front Abbeythorpe was demolished in 1972 and in 1978 the Gymnasium still located within the Aquatic Centre was built on the site Potts Hall edit By 1925 the growth in student numbers made it clear that a new hall was desperately needed It was resolved to go ahead and build a new hall on the site of the original kindergarten building on the corner of Rowley and Grantham Streets The new block was to have a tower to balance the Tower Wing and was to incorporate a gymnasium and art room as well as new classrooms The building was opened in June 1926 complete with hall which seated 1 000 people The gym on the ground floor was fitted out with money raised at a fete in the previous year Funds raised by the Old Girls Union provided furnishings for the new Hall Initially called the Assembly Hall the building was renamed Potts Hall in 1933 on Potts death First Swimming Pool edit On 29 April 1929 the Parents and Friends Association was established with the objective of assisting in any way possible the promotion of the interests of the College and to supplement school equipment The original members chose as their first objective the provision of a swimming pool in the College grounds The Great Depression and WWII meant that fund raising was a challenge but on 9 March 1957 the P amp F had their fulfilment of a dream and the first MLC School pool was officially opened Kent House Art and Design Centre edit In August 1949 a two storey house Youngarra located on the corner of Rowley and Gordon Streets was purchased by the school Youngarra contained fourteen rooms on a quarter of a hectare of much needed land The building was renamed Kent House in memory of the original school building It was occupied by the kindergarten and lower primary school Youngarra was demolished in 1966 and replaced by a new and larger building which brought all the kindergarten and primary school under the one roof This was to become the third building on MLC School premises to be named Kent House In 2009 when the junior school relocated to its new premises on Park Road and Kent House became the MLC School Art and Design Centre Sutton House edit In 1936 Cartreff a two story house at 36 Grantham Street was purchased and rename Sutton House in honour of the former student and long standing Headmistress Mabel Sutton It was to provide additional classrooms and was purchased with a view to future development In 1949 the grand Sutton House was completed Its first floor housed the contents of the former Fiction and Reference Libraries The new combined library retained the name Wearne Library in memory of the former MLC School headmistress Minnie Wearne and for the first time a full time trained Librarian was employed It occupied most of the first floor of Sutton House and contained shelving for 8 000 books The construction of the new Sutton House also provide new science laboratories a geography room and two senior rooms The new Wearne Library was noted for its simple and light finishes and spaces and was for use of the entire school The Old Girls Union had donated the furniture In 1962 extensions to Sutton House were made at a right angle to Sutton House along the then northern boundary of the school Wade House edit The tennis court on Grantham Street between Potts Hall and Sutton Hall was replaced by Wade House in 1961 a modern two storey brick building which featured facade panels highlighting the architectural fashion of the day The building was noted for its contemporary internal finishes and provided a bright and roomy art room five large classrooms on the first floor as well as several smaller rooms domestic science and well appointed staff room on the ground floor Music education editThis article may contain an excessive amount of intricate detail that may interest only a particular audience Please help by spinning off or relocating any relevant information and removing excessive detail that may be against Wikipedia s inclusion policy October 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed February 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Charles Prescott edit Since the very early days music has held a special status at MLC School music s importance was such that even when the school was conspicuously successful in academic examinations the results of music exams always took precedence in the annual Speech Day reports From the beginning music has held a special status at MLC School music s importance was such that even when the school was conspicuously successful in academic examinations the results of music exams always took precedence in the annual Speech Day reports The School s Founding Principal Rev Prescott wanted his students to achieve tangible recognition for their achievements through examinations in music theory MLC School was integral in the establishment of the Trinity College London musical theory examinations in Australia the first board to examine candidates in music in Australia The first MLC School Trinity College results are noted in the School s Examination Results in 1887 just one year after the School was established With Prescott s encouragement MLC School students entered various music grades in the Trinity College Theory Examinations Practical examinations were administered by the Trinity Sydney and Australian Colleges of Music In addition examiners were sent to the School from the Associated Board of the Royal Academy and the Royal College of Music in London Frederick Morley edit One of Prescott s first staff appointments was Frederick Morley who remained as music and singing master at MLC School for forty years Development of MLC School orchestras edit The first MLC School String Ensemble was formed in 1904 and was immediately popular To meet the growing demand for music lessons a wooden building was erected in 1905 to house three music rooms Further facilities were provided with the 1919 opening of the Tower Wing where eight rooms were designated exclusively for music By 1912 music became a qualifying subject in the MLC School curriculum Music standards grew along with student numbers elevating the general status of music in the School even more In 1932 the first MLC School Orchestra performed folk dances on senior play day The Orchestra consisted of one first violin four second violins a cello piano two drums four triangles two cymbals and one tambourine The first MLC School concert was held in 1933 and featured items by the Senior and Junior Choirs as well as instrumental and recitation solos The School magazine Excelsior published a School music column from 1930 which featured competition results and reported on musical functions including lunchtime recitals visitors recitals and gramophone lecture recitals By 1939 all girls were learning music in one form or another and the School Orchestra had grown to 16 musicians Of the 90 girls who sat for various music grades within the Conservatorium of Music Examinations 50 passed at either Credit or Honour standard a highly commendable result for any school In 1942 the Senior Choir and Orchestra participated in the All Schools Music Festival held at the Sydney Conservatorium of Music and percussion band training was introduced in the Primary School Lindley Evans edit Lindley Evans a visiting member of the MLC School music staff from 1930 to 1946 also Dame Nellie Melba s accompanist for several years became a driving force in the development of music at the school He helped MLC School win the fabled Demster Shield in his first year on staff in 1930 a feat repeated on other occasions in the 1930s before interest in the competition waned in the early 1940s The spirit of Lindley Evans remained an integral part of MLC School s musical tradition This was demonstrated at the 1969 Speech Night when the orchestra played a piece specially written by Frank Hutchens who was a close associate of Lindley Evans for 40 years Another lasting contribution that Lindley Evans made to MLC School was the composition of the music for the School song to lyrics by the UK Poet Laureate John Masefield Sylvia Lew edit In 1948 Sylvia Lew came to MLC School when her husband Robert Lew took over as principal after Deane s retirement Having received musical training at the Sydney Conservatorium she put her skills to good use by forming a 90 strong Boarders Choir within a year of coming to the School In May 1952 the Boarders Choir received wide exposure when they were broadcast by the Australian Broadcasting Commission In recognition of Silvia Lew s contribution to MLC School s music tradition the auditorium in the 1987 Centenary Music Centre was named in her honour Other facilities in the Music Centre include a keyboard laboratory along with staff areas music tuition and practice rooms Ken Cornwell edit In the 1970s the new principal of MLC School Ken Cornwell the son of musical parents and who was himself an accomplished violinist brought to the school a love of and commitment to music that has been strongly reflected in its subsequent curriculum development Between 1974 and 1985 the School s Music Department increased from 10 to 16 staff to become the largest single department in the school An orchestra was formed in the Primary School in 1983 and the formation of recorder and Junior choir groups was followed in 1984 by Junior and Senior string ensembles A highlight of the School calendar was the Annual Musical Evening held in July where performances included sixteenth century compositions as well as modern original items First Opera House concert in 1986 edit During its centenary year MLC School performed a Grand Concert at the Sydney Opera House initiated by Helen Watson who was the Head of Music at the time This was billed as an evening of serious music featuring soloists choirs and orchestra and the performance was a magnificent feast of music both orchestral and choral and included performances from Old Girls who returned to join current students Music for all students edit The development of music now incorporates an integrated development program to include girls from Kindergarten to Year 12 At the MLC Junior School all primary girls participate in class music which develops performance listening aural and creative skills Each girl has the opportunity to learn an orchestral instrument in a class situation as well as through individual tuition In the Senior School the music program focuses on learning generated by creative expression The composition process taught from Year 7 progresses in elective classes where the girls develop skills to compose music for a variety of ensembles Students are required to perform individually as well as being involved in ensemble performances Music events on the MLC School calendar edit The musical highlight of each year is the MLC School Music Awards night held at the Sydney Town Hall The school s musical calendar also includes the biennial concert held in the Sydney Opera House initiated by Helen Watson in 1986 and continued by her successor Karen Carey These concerts display the School s musical standard Orchestral choral and ensemble performances by the entire School its bands choirs and ensembles are supplemented by excellent individual performances The concerts routinely featured works by traditional composers such as Bach Handel Liszt Saint Saens Schubert and Shostakovich In addition composition diversity is provided by performances of original works by the School s composer in residence teachers and MLC School students Notable alumnae editThis article s list of alumni may not follow Wikipedia s verifiability policy Please improve this article by removing names that do not have independent reliable sources showing they merit inclusion in this article AND are alumni or by incorporating the relevant publications into the body of the article through appropriate citations May 2019 Entertainment media and the artsAngela Catterns media personality and broadcaster 30 Olive Cotton modernist photographer Grace Crowley modernist painter Hazel de Berg MBE oral history pioneer 31 Helen Joyce Haenke poet and playwright 32 Emma Jones award winning poet Vimala Raman Indian actress Lulu Shorter Australian designer 33 Nikki Webster singerMedicine and sciencePhyllis Margery Anderson pathologist 34 Freida Ruth Heighway gynaecologist 35 Emeritus Professor Jane Latimer AO 36 Susie O Reilly pioneering female Australian doctor Joyce Winifred Vickery MBE forensic botanist 37 Politics and the lawNatalie Bennett Leader of the Green Party of England and Wales 38 Megan Latham Judge of the Supreme Court of New South Wales Commissioner of ICAC 2014 2016 Marise Payne Liberal Senator for New South Wales and former Minister for Foreign Affairs Mahla Pearlman Chief Judge of the NSW Land and Environment Court from 1992 to 2003 and was the first woman chief judge in any State jurisdiction in Australia 39 SportJessica Ashwood Olympic Games representative in swimming 40 Vanessa Baker Commonwealth and Olympic Games diver 41 Elisa Barnard Olympic Games representative in archery 42 Lorraine Crapp Olympic diver and swimmer Felicity Galvez Olympic swimmer Taniele Gofers Member of Olympics and National Women s waterpolo team Elizabeth Kell Olympic rower and 2006 Rowing World Champion citation needed Alyssa Healy cricketerSee also edit nbsp Schools portal nbsp Calvinism portalList of non government schools in New South WalesReferences edit a b MLC School Burwood NSW School profile Australian Curriculum Assessment and Reporting Authority Retrieved 18 December 2015 MLC School An Independent Girls School located in the Inner West of Sydney Australia PDF MLC School Sydney Timeline University of Sydney Jubilee 1886 1936 MLC School Sydney 2 December 2015 p 10 Walk In The Light Retrieved 2 August 2023 Walk In The Light MLC School Sydney 2 December 2015 p 90 a b Swain Peter L Prescott Charles John 1857 1946 Australian Dictionary of Biography entry for Prescott Charles John 1857 1946 National Centre of Biography Australian National University via Australian Dictionary of Biography Walk In The Light MLC School Sydney 2 December 2015 Sitsky Larry Evans Harry Lindley 1895 1982 Australian Dictionary of Biography entry for Lindley Evans National Centre of Biography Australian National University via Australian Dictionary of Biography Lindley Evans Represented Artist Profile Australian Music Centre John Masefield Poetry Foundation 31 October 2016 Methodist Ladies College New South Wales Heritage Database Office of Environment amp Heritage Retrieved 17 May 2019 Welcome to the Rev E J Rodd Goulburn Evening Penny Post NSW 1881 1940 8 May 1900 via National Library of Australia Services Archives and Records Management Early women students ARMS The University of Sydney Hetherington Jessie Isabel Obituary Sydney Morning Herald 22 January 1934 REV WALLACE DEANE New Principal of Burwood M L C The Sydney Morning Herald NSW 1842 1954 5 Mar 1940 via National Library of Australia MLC School IB World Schools International Baccalaureate 2007 Retrieved 20 October 2007 Jubilee 1886 1936 MLC School Sydney 2 December 2015 p 79 Links Across the Years 1976 MLC School Sydney 2 December 2015 Walk in the Light 1986 pp 123 125 MLC School School Choice Harvest of the Years Burwood Council Campbelltown Council Archived 30 November 2015 at the Wayback Machine Professional Historians Association NSW Inc Denham Court via City of Botany Bay Library amp Museum Search A MAN OF MARK Rev Charles J Prescott M A D D The Sydney Morning Herald NSW 1842 1954 1 August 1931 via National Library of Australia Death of Mabel Sutton The Sydney Morning Herald 25 July 1968 via Google News Archive Search Biographical cuttings on Alice Whitley Dr science teacher containing one or more cuttings from newspapers or journals via National Library of Australia down memory lane MLC School Sydney De Berg Hazel Estelle 1913 1984 Retrieved 13 August 2018 Anthony Delyse 1996 Haenke Helen Joyce 1916 1978 Melbourne University Press pp 350 351 Retrieved 13 September 2007 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help Shorter Lucie Emilie 1887 1989 Trove 2012 retrieved 28 December 2016 Scollay Moira 1979 Anderson Phyllis Margery 1901 1957 Melbourne University Press p 61 Retrieved 13 September 2007 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help Elmslie Ronald 1993 Abbie Andrew Arthur 1905 1976 Melbourne University Press pp 1 2 Retrieved 13 September 2007 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help Fifteen locals honoured in 2023 Australia Day Awards Retrieved 27 January 2023 Vickery Joyce Winifred 1908 1979 Australian Dictionary of Biography Online retrieved 2008 04 20 Ferraro Carmela Force of nature Inside Story 17 April 2013 Retrieved 27 April 2014 A lawyer first in a career of firsts obituary Sydney Morning Herald 16 December 2011 London 2012 Jessica Ashwood Athlete Profile Australian Olympic Committee Retrieved 4 August 2012 MLC School Olympians MLC School www mlcsyd nsw edu au Retrieved 1 April 2020 London 2012 Elisa Barnard Athlete Profile Australian Olympic Committee Retrieved 4 August 2012 External links editOfficial website for MLC School MLC School Annual Report 2006 accessed 17 July 2007 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title MLC School amp oldid 1183922394, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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