Mount Scopus Memorial College | |
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Address | |
245 Burwood Highway Burwood, Victoria 3125 Australia |
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Coordinates | 37°50′53″S 145°7′2″E / 37.84806°S 145.11722°ECoordinates: 37°50′53″S 145°7′2″E / 37.84806°S 145.11722°E |
Information | |
Type | Independent |
Motto | חזק ואמץ 'Chazak Ve'Amatz' (Be Strong and of Good Courage) |
Established | 1948 |
Opened | February 1949 |
Principal | Rabbi James Kennard |
Houses | Monash (yellow), Bialik (red), Ashkenazi (green), Hillel (blue) |
Colour(s) | Navy Blue and Yellow |
Website | www |
Mount Scopus Memorial College is a Jewish day school in the Melbourne suburb of Burwood.
Mount Scopus Memorial College opened on St Kilda Road in Melbourne, Victoria, Australia in 1949, taking its name from Mount Scopus in Jerusalem, which remained under Israeli control after the 1948 Arab-Israeli War. Mount Scopus was the first co-educational Jewish day school in Melbourne, originally serving a student population of 143. It was established to meet the educational needs of the influx of Holocaust survivors to the Melbourne community. In 1953, the college moved to a larger campus in Burwood, which was designed by Melbourne's leading Jewish architect Anatol Kagan in association with Dr. Ernest Fooks. There are also campuses in St Kilda East and Caulfield South. Until 1996 there was a branch in Kew. Scopus is known for outstanding VCE (matriculation) results throughout Victoria. It is routinely listed as one of the top schools in the state and indeed was the highest performing school in Victoria in 2009 and 2014. The principal of Mount Scopus Memorial College is Rabbi James Kennard, who replaced Hilton Rubin in 2007. Previous principals have included Abraham Feiglin, Max Wahlhaus, Aleksander Ranoschy, Dr. Steven Lorch and Rabbi William Altshul.
Mount Scopus was the first of the Melbourne Jewish Day Schools to take part in the Sherut Leumi program. Every year, four Israeli women are sent to Mount Scopus as part of their Israeli National Service. They are a major component of Scopus' informal Jewish Studies team. Mount Scopus offers an Ulpan program in which tenth graders travel to Israel for 6–13 weeks. In 2007 and 2010, more than half of the school's tenth graders took part in this program.
The performing arts are considered an important part of school life at Mount Scopus Memorial College.
Mount Scopus Memorial College is an IB school. Drama and Dance electives are available to students years 9-12. Theatre Studies is taught in VCE with excellent results. Music is taught from primary through to VCE, with an instrumental program available to students years 2-12.