fbpx
Wikipedia

The Armidale School

The Armidale School (abbreviated as TAS) is an independent Anglican co-educational early learning, primary and secondary day and boarding school, located in Armidale, New South Wales, Australia. Administration of the schools is formalised as a company limited by guarantee that operates under the Corporations Act.

The Armidale School
The main building of The Armidale School, designed by Sir John Sulman in 1892
Location

Australia
Coordinates30°31′13″S 151°40′26″E / 30.52028°S 151.67389°E / -30.52028; 151.67389
Information
Former nameNew England Proprietary School
TypeIndependent co-educational early learning, primary and secondary day and boarding school
MottoLatin: Absque Deo Nihil
(Without God, Nothing)
DenominationAnglicanism
Established1894; 129 years ago (1894)[1]
Educational authorityNew South Wales Education Standards Authority
ChairmanSebastian Hempel
HeadmasterDr Rachel Horton
ChaplainMrs Joanne Benham
Employees~127[3]
GradesEarly learning and K–12
Enrolment650 (2022[2])
Campus typeRegional
Colour(s)Navy blue and straw   
SloganExplore, Experience, Excel
AthleticsAthletic Association of the Great Public Schools of New South Wales
Affiliations
Websitewww.as.edu.au

Founded in 1894 as the New England Proprietary School,[4] The Armidale School has a non-selective enrolment policy and currently caters for approximately 640 students, including 250 boarders from Years 6 to 12.[3] TAS has classes of students in Pre-Kindergarten (4 years old), Junior School for children in Kindergarten to Year 5 which offers the IB Primary Years Programme, a Middle School for those in Years 6 to 8 (offering the IB Middle Years Programme) and a Senior School from Years 9 to 12 (18 years old).[5] In 1992, The Armidale School became the first school in Australia to provide internet access for its students.[6]

The school is affiliated with the Association of Heads of Independent Schools of Australia (AHISA),[7] the Junior School Heads Association of Australia (JSHAA),[8] the Australian Boarding Schools' Association (ABSA),[5] and is one of only three Round Square schools in the state of New South Wales.[9] TAS is also the only member of the Athletic Association of the Great Public Schools of New South Wales (AAGPS)[10] located outside of the Sydney metropolitan area.[11]

History edit

The Armidale School was founded in 1894 as a boarding school primarily for the sons of the gentry,[6] however the origins of the school can be traced to 1838, when Patrick Grant, a magistrate at Maitland, conceived the idea of a proprietary school for boys in the Hunter Valley.[4] This idea was taken over by prominent members of the Church of England in the northern districts of New South Wales, and 500 pounds was obtained from the Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge, as a result of the efforts of the first (and only) Bishop of Australia, William Grant Broughton. In 1840, a site for the school was purchased at Honeysuckle Point, in Newcastle.[4] Nothing more came of the plan until the appointment of William Tyrrell, as the first Bishop of Newcastle in 1846. The property was passed on to Tyrrell, and in 1854 the land was resumed by the Hunter River Railway Company.[4]

By 1877, the school had still not been established, and Bishop Tyrrell began to push the matter further. Subsequently, a plan was drawn up and land selected at Blandford, near Murrurundi. In 1881, it was determined that the plan to build the school at Blandford was unaffordable, and a suggestion was made that it should be built on the New England Tablelands at Armidale. The additional capital required, to the amount of 6,000 pounds, was raised by James Ross, Archdeacon of Armidale, and his leading laymen.[4]

On 5 June 1891, The New England Proprietary School Limited (NEPS) was incorporated with 100 pound shares, offered at 50 pounds each, allowing each shareholder to nominate one pupil for each share purchased. The Directors purchased 20 acres (8 ha) in Armidale in September 1891, adding to the 10 acres (4 ha) obtained in 1889. The foundation stone of the main building, designed by noted architect Sir John Sulman, was laid on 22 February 1893, by the Governor of New South Wales, the Rt. Hon. Victor Albert George, Earl of Jersey. The Opening Ceremony was performed by the Rt. Rev Arthur Vincent Green, Bishop of Grafton and Armidale on 15 May 1894.[4]

The name of the company and School was changed in 1896 to The Armidale School (TAS). Also that year, TAS joined the Athletic Association of the Great Public Schools of New South Wales (GPS) in Sydney, and has remained a member ever since.[4]

In 1950, the school site was transferred to the Trustees of the Church of England Diocese of Armidale, and was administered by a School Council comprising members from the Diocese, Old Boys' Union and P&F.[4] through to 2009.

On 1 January 2010 the school was incorporated as a company limited by guarantee under the Corporations Act with the name: The Armidale School.

In March 2015, the school announced it would commence full co-education, and began taking enrolments for Year 12 students, who would begin tuition in October 2015, and for Year 6-11 students, to begin tuition in 2016.[12] This expanded upon an already co-educational Junior School, and was announced following a nine-week consultation process.[13] The school started 2016 with 53 girls, including 14 boarders.[14] By the start of 2022, girl enrolments accounted for around 40 percent of total enrolments.

 
TAS admitted its first senior girls in late 2015 ahead of full co-education the year after.

Headmasters edit

Period Details[4]
1894–1906 Rev W A Fisher, MA (Cantab)
1906–1910 Rev A H Reynolds, MA (Cantab)
1910–1912 Ven Archdeacon T K Abbott, MA (Oxon)
1913–1918 Rev F T Perkins, MA (Sydney)
1918–1919 Rev Canon J Forster, BA (Melbourne), ThL.
1919–1926 Rev Canon H. K. Archdall, MA (Cantab), ThSoc
1927–1934 Rev H Sanger, MA (Cantab)
1936–1939 Rev H P Young, MA (Cantab), BLitt
1940–1961 G.A. Fisher, B.A., B.Sc. (Queensland), MACE
1962–1982 A H Cash, MA (Oxon), DipEd, FACE
1982–1986 G C S Andrews, MA (Cantab), DipEd, DipEdAdmin, FRGS, MACE, MIBG
1987–1997 K Langford-Smith, BA (Sydney), MA (Western Australia), ACP
1998–2019 Murray L Guest, BA (Sydney), MComm Hons (UNSW), Grad Dip Ed (Sydney)
2020–2021 Alan Jones, BA (Sydney), Dip Ed, Dip Law (BSAB) (Head of School)
2021–present Dr Rachel Horton BSc (Hons), PhD (Bristol, UK); Grad Dip Ed (Sec) (Griffith) (hereafter the role known as Principal)

Campus edit

 
Napier Waller historian Dr Bronwyn Hughes inspects the Memorial Windows in the TAS Assembly Hall.

The Armidale School is situated on a single 18 hectares (44 acres) campus in Armidale, a university city on the New England Tablelands of New South Wales, midway between Sydney and Brisbane.[6] The school features a mix of historic and modern buildings, all of which reflect design elements of the outstanding original building designed by noted architect Sir John Sulman in 1892. Other notable buildings are the 1902 Chapel, designed by Cyril Blacket, and the War Memorial Assembly Hall, which features three magnificent stained glass windows designed by Napier Waller.

The facilities of the school include the Michael Hoskins Creative Arts Centre, which incorporates a 240-seat performing arts theatre, drama classrooms and visual arts studios. The centre is used by various local and visiting performing arts organisations including as the 'home' of the Armidale Drama & Music Society. Other facilities include a heated indoor swimming pool, rifle range, cattle stud, chapel, gymnasium, library, music centre, computer rooms,[11] climbing wall, weights room, an indoor cricket centre, several indoor and outdoor basketball courts, seven tennis courts, rugby and soccer fields, and cricket wickets.

 
TAS dormitory, 1898

Boarding edit

TAS currently has six school boarding houses, named Abbott, Croft, Dangar, Tyrrell, and White, and an as yet unnamed 64-bed girls' boarding house which opened its doors in 2018.[4] The senior boys' boarding houses (Abbott, Croft and Tyrrell) each accommodate up to 60 students, with 10 to 15 boys in each year group. In the lower years boys are accommodated in dormitories, and as they progress through the school are moved into private study/bedrooms. Middle School boys are accommodated in White House, while Middle School girl boarders reside in Dangar House, the school's original primary school.[15]

Co-curricular Activities edit

Co-curricular activities available to TAS students include: Debating and public speaking, drama, band, orchestra, choirs, art, photography, Duke of Edinburgh's Award Scheme, and a school Poll Hereford stud which exhibits cattle at local and regional agricultural shows.[11] Annual theatrical productions are staged in the School's Hoskins Centre theatre; previous productions include The Addams Family (2018), Oliver! (2019), Wizard of Oz (2019), Sweeney Todd (2020), Rhinoceros (2022) and Legally Blonde (2023).[16]

Community service edit

It is an expectation of TAS that all students must commit to at least 20 hours of community service per year, both in the local and wider community.

Year 8 students may volunteer for a service trip to St Christopher's orphanage in Fiji, where they participate in the upkeep and daily maintenance of the orphanage and establish friendships with the children.[6] In the past, a similar Christian service trip has been offered to Year 10 and 11 students to Thailand, assisting at the McKean Leprosy Rehabilitation Centre and the Agape AIDS Orphanage near Chang Mai. Other service offerings have included a visit to helping indigenous boys and girls at Yipirinya School in Alice Springs, Northern Territory. Locally, for more than a decade senior TAS students have participated in a lunchtime reading and play program with the neighbouring Minimbah Primary School, an independent school in east Armidale with a predominantly Indigenous student enrolment. Other student-led initiatives include donating blood to the NSW Red Cross Blood Bank and support raising awareness for mental health most recently through not-for-profit social agency, Batyr.

Sport edit

 
TAS 1st XI Cricket Team, 1895

The Armidale School is one of the nine members of the Athletic Association of the Great Public Schools of New South Wales (GPS)[10] and participates in some GPS sporting competitions as well as several non-GPS or traditional sports. TAS students may participate in a variety of sports including: athletics, basketball, canoeing, cricket, cross country, hockey, mountain biking, netball, rugby union, rifle shooting, soccer, squash, rowing, swimming, tennis, triathlon, volleyball and water polo.

In April each year, the school hosts more than 40 school and club teams at the TAS Rugby Carnival, the largest primary-aged rugby carnival in Australia.

The school also holds a swimming carnival and an athletics carnival once a year, with students participating in inter-house competition. Boarding students compete for either Abbott, Croft or Tyrrell house, while day students are members of Broughton, Green or Ross houses. Broughton was originally a boarding house; Green and Ross were inaugurated in 1983 by Prince Edward, during a private visit to the school. Inter-house competitions are also held for debating, public speaking, and the creative arts.

 
Prince Edward inaugurates the first Day Houses, Green and Ross, during a private visit to the school in 1983. The captains are wearing the Norfolk Jacket, the school's formal uniform at the time.

Leadership, Service & Adventure edit

The Armidale School has a leadership, service and adventure program which has an emphasis on outdoor education and is designed to develop a sense of responsibility and self-confidence through activities such as abseiling, whitewater kayaking and bivouacs. Outdoor education activities in which students may participate in, include the following:

Cadets edit

Founded in 1898 and one of the longest-running cadet units in Australia, the TAS Cadet Unit is part of the Australian Army Cadet Corps. This activity is compulsory for students in Years 8 to 10, and is voluntary for Years 11 onwards. It involves drill and ceremonial work, and Outward Bound training. A Ceremonial Guard provides a catafalque party each year at ANZAC Day and Remembrance Day services in Armidale and at school, and the TAS Cadet band operates for the annual cadet unit passing out parade.

Rural Fire Service edit

In 1970 TAS became the first school in NSW to offer bush firefighter training, originally as part of the service component for the school's Duke of Edinburgh Award. The school's RFS program aims to produce students who are competent in aspects of bush firefighting, and who take an active role in helping their community by obtaining a Bush Firefighting (BF) qualification. The activity is carried out in conjunction with the Dumaresq Brigade of the NSW Rural Fire Service New England Zone and at the RFS' Armidale Fire Training Centre.[17]

Surf Life Saving edit

Surf life saving commenced at TAS in 1967, as a service component for the Duke of Edinburgh Award Scheme introduced at the school earlier that year. For the first few years, the boys did their training at Nambucca Heads, and during the 1990s, with Yamba SLSC. Currently the relationship is with Sawtell SLSC,[18] where students spend several days during the year and then an intensive week of training and assessment in November. Students are instructed in inshore boat rescue - crewing, patient pick-ups and assessment, related signals, radio, equipment and safety; first aid - CPR; board rescues, tube rescues, patient care, patient carries, etc. This program culminates in an examination for their RLSSA Surf Life Saving Bronze Medallion.

 
TAS students undertake Surf Life Saving qualifications in conjunction with Sawtell Surf Life Saving Club.

Expeditions edit

As part of the school's adventure program a number of expeditions have taken place including five treks of the Kokoda Track in Papua New Guinea, the Sea to Summit cycle ride from Pambula to the peak of Mount Kosciuszko, and to Antarctica.

Other edit

The TAS Triple Crown was instigated in 2014 as an award given to those students who complete three adventure events during their time at the school – the 2 km Coffs Harbour Ocean Swim, the 14 km City to Surf footrace in Sydney, and the 111 km overnight Hawkesbury Canoe Classic. Other events that are recognised for the award include Tour de Rocks, a 255 km charity cycle ride from Armidale to South West Rocks. Those who complete three in the one year are awarded the Gold Triple Crown.

Round Square edit

TAS is a member of Round Square,[19] an international organisation of more than 200 schools worldwide which subscribes to the philosophy of Kurt Hahn (1886–1974), a renowned educationalist, who founded the idea of experiential education through such initiatives as the Duke of Edinburgh’s Award Scheme and Outward Bound. The philosophy is based on five pillars or IDEALS: Internationalism, Democracy, Environment, Adventure, Leadership and Service. The Round Square network affords member schools the opportunity to arrange local and international student and teacher exchanges on a regular basis between their schools. Students and staff also have the opportunity to participate in local and international community service projects and conferences.

Notable alumni edit

Alumnus of The Armidale School are referred to generally as Old Armidalians, Old Boys or Old Girls (following the introduction of co-education in 2015) and may elect to join the schools' alumni association, the Old Armidalians' Union (formerly TAS Old Boys' Union).[20] Some notable Old Armidalians include:

Rhodes scholar
Business
Media, entertainment and the arts
Politics, public service and the law
Science
Sport
Other

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ . Regional Australia - Schooling. Regional Living Australia. Archived from the original on 29 August 2007. Retrieved 24 October 2007.
  2. ^ "Annual Report 2016" (PDF). Current Happenings. The Armidale School. 2016. Retrieved 5 October 2016.
  3. ^ a b (PDF). Current Happenings. The Armidale School. 2007. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2 September 2007. Retrieved 24 October 2007.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Constable, A.J (July 1987). (PDF). School Community. The Armidale School. Archived from the original (PDF) on 10 September 2007. Retrieved 24 October 2007.
  5. ^ a b . New South Wales. Australian Boarding Schools' Association. 2007. Archived from the original on 29 August 2007. Retrieved 24 October 2007.
  6. ^ a b c d (PDF). Publications. The Armidale School. 2015. Archived from the original (PDF) on 17 December 2015. Retrieved 5 September 2015.
  7. ^ . Association of Heads of Independent Schools of Australia. April 2007. Archived from the original on 29 August 2007. Retrieved 24 October 2007.
  8. ^ . Junior School Heads' Association of Australia. 2007. Archived from the original on 17 January 2008. Retrieved 24 October 2007.
  9. ^ . Members. Round Square. 2007. Archived from the original on 5 October 2007. Retrieved 24 October 2007.
  10. ^ a b . Info. Athletic Association of the Great Public Schools of New South Wales. 2007. Archived from the original on 1 May 2008. Retrieved 9 October 2007.
  11. ^ a b c . New South Wales. School Choice. 2007. Archived from the original on 30 August 2007. Retrieved 24 October 2007.
  12. ^ Thomas, Kerrin (5 October 2015). "Historic day as first girls start HSC at The Armidale School". Australian Broadcasting Corporation. Retrieved 6 March 2016.
  13. ^ McOwan, Johannah (April 2015). "The Armidale School goes co-ed". Australian Broadcasting Corporation. Retrieved 6 March 2016.
  14. ^ Media, Fairfax Regional (28 January 2016). "Girls join the fold in TAS first". The Northern Daily Leader. Retrieved 4 May 2016.
  15. ^ . www.as.edu.au. Archived from the original on 13 March 2016. Retrieved 4 May 2016.
  16. ^ "Drama | TAS". www.as.edu.au. Retrieved 21 July 2017.
  17. ^ . www.outbackmag.com.au. Archived from the original on 9 March 2015. Retrieved 4 May 2016.
  18. ^ "Sawtell SLSC and fine TAS traditions are strictly old school". Coffs Coast Advocate. 13 March 2015. Retrieved 4 May 2016.
  19. ^ "Round Square".
  20. ^ . School Community. The Armidale School. 2007. Archived from the original on 2 September 2007. Retrieved 24 October 2007.
  21. ^ . New South Wales Regional Electronic Archives. Archived from the original on 22 June 2005. Retrieved 25 June 2017.
  22. ^ a b Pearce, Suzannah, ed. (2007). Who's Who in Australia Live!. North Melbourne, Vic: Crown Content Pty Ltd.
  23. ^ "Alex Buzo i(88 works by) (a.k.a. Alexander John Buzo)". University of Queensland. Retrieved 25 June 2017.
  24. ^ Taylor, Sir Patrick Gordon (1896–1966). Australian Dictionary of Biography. Retrieved 25 June 2017.

External links edit

  • The Armidale School website

armidale, school, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, june, 201. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources The Armidale School news newspapers books scholar JSTOR June 2014 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Armidale School abbreviated as TAS is an independent Anglican co educational early learning primary and secondary day and boarding school located in Armidale New South Wales Australia Administration of the schools is formalised as a company limited by guarantee that operates under the Corporations Act The Armidale SchoolThe main building of The Armidale School designed by Sir John Sulman in 1892LocationArmidale New South WalesAustraliaCoordinates30 31 13 S 151 40 26 E 30 52028 S 151 67389 E 30 52028 151 67389InformationFormer nameNew England Proprietary SchoolTypeIndependent co educational early learning primary and secondary day and boarding schoolMottoLatin Absque Deo Nihil Without God Nothing DenominationAnglicanismEstablished1894 129 years ago 1894 1 Educational authorityNew South Wales Education Standards AuthorityChairmanSebastian HempelHeadmasterDr Rachel HortonChaplainMrs Joanne BenhamEmployees 127 3 GradesEarly learning and K 12Enrolment650 2022 2 Campus typeRegionalColour s Navy blue and straw SloganExplore Experience ExcelAthleticsAthletic Association of the Great Public Schools of New South WalesAffiliationsAssociation of Heads of Independent Schools of AustraliaJunior School Heads Association of AustraliaAustralian Boarding Schools AssociationRound Square SchoolsWebsitewww wbr as wbr edu wbr auFounded in 1894 as the New England Proprietary School 4 The Armidale School has a non selective enrolment policy and currently caters for approximately 640 students including 250 boarders from Years 6 to 12 3 TAS has classes of students in Pre Kindergarten 4 years old Junior School for children in Kindergarten to Year 5 which offers the IB Primary Years Programme a Middle School for those in Years 6 to 8 offering the IB Middle Years Programme and a Senior School from Years 9 to 12 18 years old 5 In 1992 The Armidale School became the first school in Australia to provide internet access for its students 6 The school is affiliated with the Association of Heads of Independent Schools of Australia AHISA 7 the Junior School Heads Association of Australia JSHAA 8 the Australian Boarding Schools Association ABSA 5 and is one of only three Round Square schools in the state of New South Wales 9 TAS is also the only member of the Athletic Association of the Great Public Schools of New South Wales AAGPS 10 located outside of the Sydney metropolitan area 11 Contents 1 History 2 Headmasters 3 Campus 3 1 Boarding 4 Co curricular Activities 4 1 Community service 4 2 Sport 5 Leadership Service amp Adventure 5 1 Cadets 5 2 Rural Fire Service 5 3 Surf Life Saving 5 4 Expeditions 5 5 Other 6 Round Square 7 Notable alumni 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksHistory editThe Armidale School was founded in 1894 as a boarding school primarily for the sons of the gentry 6 however the origins of the school can be traced to 1838 when Patrick Grant a magistrate at Maitland conceived the idea of a proprietary school for boys in the Hunter Valley 4 This idea was taken over by prominent members of the Church of England in the northern districts of New South Wales and 500 pounds was obtained from the Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge as a result of the efforts of the first and only Bishop of Australia William Grant Broughton In 1840 a site for the school was purchased at Honeysuckle Point in Newcastle 4 Nothing more came of the plan until the appointment of William Tyrrell as the first Bishop of Newcastle in 1846 The property was passed on to Tyrrell and in 1854 the land was resumed by the Hunter River Railway Company 4 By 1877 the school had still not been established and Bishop Tyrrell began to push the matter further Subsequently a plan was drawn up and land selected at Blandford near Murrurundi In 1881 it was determined that the plan to build the school at Blandford was unaffordable and a suggestion was made that it should be built on the New England Tablelands at Armidale The additional capital required to the amount of 6 000 pounds was raised by James Ross Archdeacon of Armidale and his leading laymen 4 On 5 June 1891 The New England Proprietary School Limited NEPS was incorporated with 100 pound shares offered at 50 pounds each allowing each shareholder to nominate one pupil for each share purchased The Directors purchased 20 acres 8 ha in Armidale in September 1891 adding to the 10 acres 4 ha obtained in 1889 The foundation stone of the main building designed by noted architect Sir John Sulman was laid on 22 February 1893 by the Governor of New South Wales the Rt Hon Victor Albert George Earl of Jersey The Opening Ceremony was performed by the Rt Rev Arthur Vincent Green Bishop of Grafton and Armidale on 15 May 1894 4 The name of the company and School was changed in 1896 to The Armidale School TAS Also that year TAS joined the Athletic Association of the Great Public Schools of New South Wales GPS in Sydney and has remained a member ever since 4 In 1950 the school site was transferred to the Trustees of the Church of England Diocese of Armidale and was administered by a School Council comprising members from the Diocese Old Boys Union and P amp F 4 through to 2009 On 1 January 2010 the school was incorporated as a company limited by guarantee under the Corporations Act with the name The Armidale School In March 2015 the school announced it would commence full co education and began taking enrolments for Year 12 students who would begin tuition in October 2015 and for Year 6 11 students to begin tuition in 2016 12 This expanded upon an already co educational Junior School and was announced following a nine week consultation process 13 The school started 2016 with 53 girls including 14 boarders 14 By the start of 2022 girl enrolments accounted for around 40 percent of total enrolments nbsp TAS admitted its first senior girls in late 2015 ahead of full co education the year after Headmasters editPeriod Details 4 1894 1906 Rev W A Fisher MA Cantab 1906 1910 Rev A H Reynolds MA Cantab 1910 1912 Ven Archdeacon T K Abbott MA Oxon 1913 1918 Rev F T Perkins MA Sydney 1918 1919 Rev Canon J Forster BA Melbourne ThL 1919 1926 Rev Canon H K Archdall MA Cantab ThSoc1927 1934 Rev H Sanger MA Cantab 1936 1939 Rev H P Young MA Cantab BLitt1940 1961 G A Fisher B A B Sc Queensland MACE1962 1982 A H Cash MA Oxon DipEd FACE1982 1986 G C S Andrews MA Cantab DipEd DipEdAdmin FRGS MACE MIBG1987 1997 K Langford Smith BA Sydney MA Western Australia ACP1998 2019 Murray L Guest BA Sydney MComm Hons UNSW Grad Dip Ed Sydney 2020 2021 Alan Jones BA Sydney Dip Ed Dip Law BSAB Head of School 2021 present Dr Rachel Horton BSc Hons PhD Bristol UK Grad Dip Ed Sec Griffith hereafter the role known as Principal Campus edit nbsp Napier Waller historian Dr Bronwyn Hughes inspects the Memorial Windows in the TAS Assembly Hall The Armidale School is situated on a single 18 hectares 44 acres campus in Armidale a university city on the New England Tablelands of New South Wales midway between Sydney and Brisbane 6 The school features a mix of historic and modern buildings all of which reflect design elements of the outstanding original building designed by noted architect Sir John Sulman in 1892 Other notable buildings are the 1902 Chapel designed by Cyril Blacket and the War Memorial Assembly Hall which features three magnificent stained glass windows designed by Napier Waller The facilities of the school include the Michael Hoskins Creative Arts Centre which incorporates a 240 seat performing arts theatre drama classrooms and visual arts studios The centre is used by various local and visiting performing arts organisations including as the home of the Armidale Drama amp Music Society Other facilities include a heated indoor swimming pool rifle range cattle stud chapel gymnasium library music centre computer rooms 11 climbing wall weights room an indoor cricket centre several indoor and outdoor basketball courts seven tennis courts rugby and soccer fields and cricket wickets nbsp TAS dormitory 1898Boarding edit TAS currently has six school boarding houses named Abbott Croft Dangar Tyrrell and White and an as yet unnamed 64 bed girls boarding house which opened its doors in 2018 4 The senior boys boarding houses Abbott Croft and Tyrrell each accommodate up to 60 students with 10 to 15 boys in each year group In the lower years boys are accommodated in dormitories and as they progress through the school are moved into private study bedrooms Middle School boys are accommodated in White House while Middle School girl boarders reside in Dangar House the school s original primary school 15 Co curricular Activities editCo curricular activities available to TAS students include Debating and public speaking drama band orchestra choirs art photography Duke of Edinburgh s Award Scheme and a school Poll Hereford stud which exhibits cattle at local and regional agricultural shows 11 Annual theatrical productions are staged in the School s Hoskins Centre theatre previous productions include The Addams Family 2018 Oliver 2019 Wizard of Oz 2019 Sweeney Todd 2020 Rhinoceros 2022 and Legally Blonde 2023 16 Community service edit It is an expectation of TAS that all students must commit to at least 20 hours of community service per year both in the local and wider community Year 8 students may volunteer for a service trip to St Christopher s orphanage in Fiji where they participate in the upkeep and daily maintenance of the orphanage and establish friendships with the children 6 In the past a similar Christian service trip has been offered to Year 10 and 11 students to Thailand assisting at the McKean Leprosy Rehabilitation Centre and the Agape AIDS Orphanage near Chang Mai Other service offerings have included a visit to helping indigenous boys and girls at Yipirinya School in Alice Springs Northern Territory Locally for more than a decade senior TAS students have participated in a lunchtime reading and play program with the neighbouring Minimbah Primary School an independent school in east Armidale with a predominantly Indigenous student enrolment Other student led initiatives include donating blood to the NSW Red Cross Blood Bank and support raising awareness for mental health most recently through not for profit social agency Batyr Sport edit nbsp TAS 1st XI Cricket Team 1895The Armidale School is one of the nine members of the Athletic Association of the Great Public Schools of New South Wales GPS 10 and participates in some GPS sporting competitions as well as several non GPS or traditional sports TAS students may participate in a variety of sports including athletics basketball canoeing cricket cross country hockey mountain biking netball rugby union rifle shooting soccer squash rowing swimming tennis triathlon volleyball and water polo In April each year the school hosts more than 40 school and club teams at the TAS Rugby Carnival the largest primary aged rugby carnival in Australia The school also holds a swimming carnival and an athletics carnival once a year with students participating in inter house competition Boarding students compete for either Abbott Croft or Tyrrell house while day students are members of Broughton Green or Ross houses Broughton was originally a boarding house Green and Ross were inaugurated in 1983 by Prince Edward during a private visit to the school Inter house competitions are also held for debating public speaking and the creative arts nbsp Prince Edward inaugurates the first Day Houses Green and Ross during a private visit to the school in 1983 The captains are wearing the Norfolk Jacket the school s formal uniform at the time Leadership Service amp Adventure editThe Armidale School has a leadership service and adventure program which has an emphasis on outdoor education and is designed to develop a sense of responsibility and self confidence through activities such as abseiling whitewater kayaking and bivouacs Outdoor education activities in which students may participate in include the following Cadets edit Founded in 1898 and one of the longest running cadet units in Australia the TAS Cadet Unit is part of the Australian Army Cadet Corps This activity is compulsory for students in Years 8 to 10 and is voluntary for Years 11 onwards It involves drill and ceremonial work and Outward Bound training A Ceremonial Guard provides a catafalque party each year at ANZAC Day and Remembrance Day services in Armidale and at school and the TAS Cadet band operates for the annual cadet unit passing out parade Rural Fire Service edit In 1970 TAS became the first school in NSW to offer bush firefighter training originally as part of the service component for the school s Duke of Edinburgh Award The school s RFS program aims to produce students who are competent in aspects of bush firefighting and who take an active role in helping their community by obtaining a Bush Firefighting BF qualification The activity is carried out in conjunction with the Dumaresq Brigade of the NSW Rural Fire Service New England Zone and at the RFS Armidale Fire Training Centre 17 Surf Life Saving edit Surf life saving commenced at TAS in 1967 as a service component for the Duke of Edinburgh Award Scheme introduced at the school earlier that year For the first few years the boys did their training at Nambucca Heads and during the 1990s with Yamba SLSC Currently the relationship is with Sawtell SLSC 18 where students spend several days during the year and then an intensive week of training and assessment in November Students are instructed in inshore boat rescue crewing patient pick ups and assessment related signals radio equipment and safety first aid CPR board rescues tube rescues patient care patient carries etc This program culminates in an examination for their RLSSA Surf Life Saving Bronze Medallion nbsp TAS students undertake Surf Life Saving qualifications in conjunction with Sawtell Surf Life Saving Club Expeditions edit As part of the school s adventure program a number of expeditions have taken place including five treks of the Kokoda Track in Papua New Guinea the Sea to Summit cycle ride from Pambula to the peak of Mount Kosciuszko and to Antarctica Other edit The TAS Triple Crown was instigated in 2014 as an award given to those students who complete three adventure events during their time at the school the 2 km Coffs Harbour Ocean Swim the 14 km City to Surf footrace in Sydney and the 111 km overnight Hawkesbury Canoe Classic Other events that are recognised for the award include Tour de Rocks a 255 km charity cycle ride from Armidale to South West Rocks Those who complete three in the one year are awarded the Gold Triple Crown Round Square editTAS is a member of Round Square 19 an international organisation of more than 200 schools worldwide which subscribes to the philosophy of Kurt Hahn 1886 1974 a renowned educationalist who founded the idea of experiential education through such initiatives as the Duke of Edinburgh s Award Scheme and Outward Bound The philosophy is based on five pillars or IDEALS Internationalism Democracy Environment Adventure Leadership and Service The Round Square network affords member schools the opportunity to arrange local and international student and teacher exchanges on a regular basis between their schools Students and staff also have the opportunity to participate in local and international community service projects and conferences Notable alumni 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 July 2018 Alumnus of The Armidale School are referred to generally as Old Armidalians Old Boys or Old Girls following the introduction of co education in 2015 and may elect to join the schools alumni association the Old Armidalians Union formerly TAS Old Boys Union 20 Some notable Old Armidalians include This list is incomplete you can help by adding missing items August 2008 Rhodes scholarRobert Clarence Robertson Cuninghame later Chancellor of the University of New England 21 BusinessJames Keith Bain AM company director farmer author chairman of Merryville Estates Pty Ltd NatWest Aust Bank Ltd 1985 91 Bain amp Company 1947 87 Sydney Stock Exchange 1983 87 also attended The Scots College 22 Media entertainment and the artsAlex Buzo playwright 23 Peter Cousens musical theatre performer Gus Gordon illustrator and children s writer Ian Kiernan AO environmentalist and around the world yachtsman also attended The Scots College 22 Nigel Brennan Photojournalist and author who was kidnapped by Islamist insurgents in Somalia in 2008 and held hostage for 15 months Ben Mingay TV and film actor Angus Sampson TV and film actor who appeared in Kokoda and Thank God You re HerePolitics public service and the lawSir Arnold Amet former Chief Justice of Papua New Guinea Sir Kina Bona KBE Judge National and Supreme Courts of Papua New Guinea Lieutenant Colonel Sir Michael Bruxner leader of the New South Wales Country Party Deputy Premier and Member of the NSW Parliament from 1920 1962 Lieutenant General Sir Leslie Morshead KCB KBE CMG DSO ED military leader who led the Australian and British troops at the Siege of Tobruk 1941 and at the Second Battle of El Alamein TAS Staff Don Page former Member of NSW Parliament for State seat of Ballina George Souris former Member of NSW Parliament for State seat of Upper Hunter and former NSW Government Minister Dave Layzell Member of NSW Parliament for State seat of Upper Hunter NSW Nationals William Wentworth AO Liberal member of the Australian House of RepresentativesScienceProfessor Jonathan Sprent FRS Immunologist with the Garvan Institute of Medical ResearchSportGreg Cornelsen former rugby player capped 25 times for the Wallabies Sir Bernard Croft played Rugby Union for Australia in the 1928 New Zealand tour Allan Grice racing driver and politician most famous for twice winning the prestigious Bathurst 1000 1986 and 1990 and Member for Broadwater in the Queensland Parliament from 1992 to 2001 Joe Roff former rugby player for the ACT Brumbies 1996 2004 and capped 86 times for the Wallabies Richard Tombs former rugby player capped five times for the WallabiesOtherSir Patrick Gordon Taylor pioneering aviator and author 24 See also edit nbsp New South Wales portal nbsp Schools portal nbsp Christianity portal List of Anglican schools in New South Wales Anglican education in Australia List of boarding schools in Australia Lawrence Campbell Oratory CompetitionReferences edit Case Study Armidale Educational Excellence Regional Australia Schooling Regional Living Australia Archived from the original on 29 August 2007 Retrieved 24 October 2007 Annual Report 2016 PDF Current Happenings The Armidale School 2016 Retrieved 5 October 2016 a b Annual Report 2006 PDF Current Happenings The Armidale School 2007 Archived from the original PDF on 2 September 2007 Retrieved 24 October 2007 a b c d e f g h i j Constable A J July 1987 The Armidale School An Introduction PDF School Community The Armidale School Archived from the original PDF on 10 September 2007 Retrieved 24 October 2007 a b The Armidale School New South Wales Australian Boarding Schools Association 2007 Archived from the original on 29 August 2007 Retrieved 24 October 2007 a b c d Prospectus PDF Publications The Armidale School 2015 Archived from the original PDF on 17 December 2015 Retrieved 5 September 2015 AHISA Schools New South Wales Association of Heads of Independent Schools of Australia April 2007 Archived from the original on 29 August 2007 Retrieved 24 October 2007 JSHAA New South Wales Directory of Members Junior School Heads Association of Australia 2007 Archived from the original on 17 January 2008 Retrieved 24 October 2007 Member Schools Members Round Square 2007 Archived from the original on 5 October 2007 Retrieved 24 October 2007 a b AAGPS History Info Athletic Association of the Great Public Schools of New South Wales 2007 Archived from the original on 1 May 2008 Retrieved 9 October 2007 a b c The Armidale School New South Wales School Choice 2007 Archived from the original on 30 August 2007 Retrieved 24 October 2007 Thomas Kerrin 5 October 2015 Historic day as first girls start HSC at The Armidale School Australian Broadcasting Corporation Retrieved 6 March 2016 McOwan Johannah April 2015 The Armidale School goes co ed Australian Broadcasting Corporation Retrieved 6 March 2016 Media Fairfax Regional 28 January 2016 Girls join the fold in TAS first The Northern Daily Leader Retrieved 4 May 2016 Dangar House Girls Boarding TAS www as edu au Archived from the original on 13 March 2016 Retrieved 4 May 2016 Drama TAS www as edu au Retrieved 21 July 2017 Outback RM Williams www outbackmag com au Archived from the original on 9 March 2015 Retrieved 4 May 2016 Sawtell SLSC and fine TAS traditions are strictly old school Coffs Coast Advocate 13 March 2015 Retrieved 4 May 2016 Round Square Old Armidalians Union School Community The Armidale School 2007 Archived from the original on 2 September 2007 Retrieved 24 October 2007 Robertson Cuninghame Robert Clarence 1924 New South Wales Regional Electronic Archives Archived from the original on 22 June 2005 Retrieved 25 June 2017 a b Pearce Suzannah ed 2007 Who s Who in Australia Live North Melbourne Vic Crown Content Pty Ltd Alex Buzo i 88 works by a k a Alexander John Buzo University of Queensland Retrieved 25 June 2017 Taylor Sir Patrick Gordon 1896 1966 Australian Dictionary of Biography Retrieved 25 June 2017 External links editThe Armidale School website NSW Rhodes Scholars Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The Armidale School amp oldid 1189303757, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.