Nayland College

Nayland College is a coeducational state secondary school located in Stoke, Nelson, New Zealand. It is one of three secondary schools in Nelson which are coeducational. The school was officially opened on 3 February 1966.[3]

Nayland College
Address
166 Nayland Road, Stoke, Nelson
Coordinates41°18′20.20″S 173°13′57.56″E
Information
TypeState coeducational secondary school
MottoLoyalty and Honour
Established1966
Ministry of Education Institution no.293
PrincipalDaniel Wilson
School roll1361[1] (March 2020)
Socio-economic decile6[2]
Websitenayland.school.nz
Nayland College's central driveway and library, August 2017

Crest

The crest is divided into quarters. The sailing ship represents discovery, the model of the atom represents research in reference to Lord Rutherford's work. The pine cone references forestry and the importance of this industry in New Zealand. The migratory godwit represents dispersal of students throughout the world.[3]

Extra-curricular

Notable extra-curricular activities of the college include its well-regarded student produced newspaper and biennial musical productions.[4] "The Circuit" is the longest running high school newspaper in New Zealand.[5]

The school has an active sports department with two gyms and multiple health and physical education rooms. Nayland College's best finish at the New Zealand Secondary School Football Championship was second place in 2010. Former student Gagame Feni is a regular for ASB Premiership side Canterbury United. Jeremy Brockie is a former Nayland College student and more recently Coey Turipa, Jamie Doris and Alex Ridsdale have all gone on to star for their specific New Zealand age-grade side.

Notable alumni

Arts

Politics

Sports

References

  1. "New Zealand Schools Directory". New Zealand Ministry of Education. Retrieved 26 April 2020.
  2. Zealand, Education in New. "Home". Retrieved 27 April 2017.
  3. Jess McHardey & Pat Taylor. Nayland College: The Growing Years. Nelson, New Zealand: Printhouse, Nelson.
  4. "About - Circuit News". Circuit News. Retrieved 1 July 2018.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.