Thomas Carr College | |
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Address | |
35 Thomas Carr Drive Tarneit, Victoria 3029 Australia |
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Coordinates | 37°50′50″S 144°42′1″E / 37.84722°S 144.70028°ECoordinates: 37°50′50″S 144°42′1″E / 37.84722°S 144.70028°E |
Information | |
School type | Catholic school |
Motto | "They Will Shine" |
Denomination | Roman Catholic |
Founded | 1997 |
Gender | Co-educational |
Enrolment | 1,208 |
Campus | Suburban |
Campus size | 10 hectares |
School colour(s) | Navy Blue and Red |
Song | "We Will Shine" |
Publication | The Beacon |
School fees | $4,800 |
Affiliation | ACS |
Website | ThomasCarr.vic.edu.au |
Thomas Carr College is an Australian Catholic co-educational day school in Tarneit in the western suburbs of Melbourne, Victoria. It is named after Thomas Joseph Carr, the second Roman Catholic Archbishop of Melbourne. In 2006, the principal since the College's founding, Paul D'Astoli, was transferred and was succeeded by Bruce Runnalls. Currently the College's principal is Dr Andrew Watson.
Thomas Carr College joined the Association of Co-educational School (ACS) sporting competition in 2003.
The sports involved are:
There are four houses at Thomas Carr. They are the Galway Tigers (yellow), the Moylough Muscle (blue), Maynooth Bulls (red) and Westport Roos (green). All are named after towns in Ireland and are significant places in Thomas Carr's life.
Three house sport carnivals take place annually, the swimming carnival, athletics carnival and the cross country. Galway have won 10 events, Maynooth and Westport have won eight each while Moylough has won four events.
In 2002 it was said that the Year 8 student's were given money from male students to perform sexual acts. Article from The Age: http://www.theage.com.au/articles/2002/07/25/1027497383248.html
The school has not been without controversy. In 2003, a year nine student committed suicide after being bullied at school camp. The resulting controversy led to widespread bullying awareness, and the state government introduced various reforms.
In 2005 the school establish a "wireless bully button" system which alerts teachers by SMS when students push the button and records incidents via a network of 20 video cameras, which we have been told do not actually work.