Brinsley Road Community School
Brinsley Road Community School was a state-run high school (years 7-12) in the suburb of Camberwell, in Melbourne, Victoria, Australia. The school was established in February 1973 under the umbrella of Camberwell High School with the support of Camberwell High School's progressive principal Margaret Essex. The school was formally referred to by the Education Department as the "Camberwell High Annex".
Brinsley Road Community School | |
Name |
Brinsley Road Community School |
Address |
Brinsley Road |
Established |
1973 |
Still operating | |
Type | |
Students |
55, Coeducation |
Years |
7 to 12 |
Nicknames |
Brinsley Road |
School philosophy and history
The concept for the school was developed by Roy Irvine, its initial coordinator, who convinced Mr Schrum, then Director of Secondary Schools in Victoria, of the need for the alternative form of education that the school would offer.
The school started with 100 students from forms 1 to 6 (years 7 to 12), many of whom with talents and aspirations that had little chance of being developed in conventional more structured state high schools of the time. The school occupied a rambling old mansion that was previously used as a children's hostel by the Salvation Army.[1] The mansion was originally owned by the Baillieu family. The school buildings have now been demolished. The site and grounds now form the Brinsley Nature Reserve.
The school, also referred to as an "open school", aimed to provide opportunities for students to become both experience-oriented and knowledge-oriented.[2]
After several relocations, the original school concept is still operating as the Caulfield Park Community School.
The school was located at:
- Brinsley Road from 1973 to 1974
- Argo Street South Yarra during 1975
- Fitzroy Street St Kilda, from 2nd term 1976, in the hall of the St Kilda Uniting Church, later including the house attached to the church on Princes St.[3]
- Balaclava Road Caulfield up to 2007
The school was well known for art, mathematics, science, media and practical subjects such as welding and woodwork. Many of its 'Graduates' have found a great deal of personal and professional success and attribute some of this to the extremely supportive nature of the schools community .
Principals
(Irvine, Smith, Schapper and Tasker were titled 'School Co-ordinators')
- Roy Irvine, 1973-1974 (Brinsley Road)
- John White, 1975 (Argo Street)
- David Schapper, 1976 (St Kilda Alternative School)
- Alan Tasker, 1977 (St Kilda Alternative School)
- David Roycroft, 2007 (Caulfield Park Community School)
Alumni Teachers
- Maud Clark, Theatrical Director (Somebody's Daughter)
- Rod Moss, Artist
- Alla Wolf Tasker, Restaurateur (Lake House Daylesford)
Alumni
- Denny Meadows, dispute resolution expert
- Marian Lees, teacher/librarian
- Dr. Catriona Moore, feminist art scholar
- Donald Lees(d.1987), physicist
- Fran Cairns, writer
- Adrian Chynoweth, musician
- Lindy Minifie, horticulturist
- Warren Broom, guitarist/hippie
- Deborah Cass, legal scholar
- Ed Brockenshire, builder
- Tony Reddrop, photographer/artist
- Polly Borland, photographer
- Kristin Otto, author
- Richard Lowenstein, film director
- Ray Argall, film maker
- Lisa Gerrard, singer/composer
- John McPherson, author/historian
- Shoshana Sackville, dramatist
- Dan Wallace-Crabbe, musician/composer
- Simon Mansfield, Internet Publisher Spacedaily
- Dr Derith Harris, Mental Health Nurse Academic
- John Harris, Computer Expert and coffee aficionado
- Stephen Theiler, Associate Professor, psychologist
- Mandy Sayer, author
- James Dean, founder Technical Solutions Australia
- Mark Laguerre, choreographer, educator
- David Rechter, lecturer, author Oxford University
- Aviva Goldman, lawyer
References
- Salvation Army Girls' Home Archived 27 July 2008 at the Wayback Machine, CLAN
- New education concept in Camberwell Archived 2 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine, The Free Press, Vo. 42, No. 6, 21 February 1973
- St Kilda Uniting Church