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Saint Kentigern College

Saint Kentigern College
St kentigern.png
Address
130 Pakuranga Road,
Pakuranga,
Auckland,
New Zealand
Coordinates 36°54′33.06″S 174°52′27.25″E / 36.9091833°S 174.8742361°E / -36.9091833; 174.8742361Coordinates: 36°54′33.06″S 174°52′27.25″E / 36.9091833°S 174.8742361°E / -36.9091833; 174.8742361
Information
Type Private, Day & Boarding
Motto Fides Servanda Est
"The faith must be kept"
Denomination Presbyterian
Established 1953
Ministry of Education Institution no. 81
Head of Saint Kentigern David Hodge
Gender Coeducational
Accreditation IBO
School roll 2048(February 2017)
Socio-economic decile 10
Website

Saint Kentigern College is a private, co-educational Presbyterian secondary school in the Suburb of Pakuranga on the eastern side of Auckland, New Zealand, beside the Tamaki Estuary. It is operated by the Saint Kentigern Trust Board which also operates Saint Kentigern School in Remuera and Saint Kentigern School for Girls – Corran (formerly Corran School).

Established in 1953, the college is semi-coeducational with a single-sex middle school for years 7 and 8, with years 9 and 10 single sex in core subjects and a co-educational senior school for years 11–13.

Kentigern (or Mungo) is the patron Saint of Glasgow. In 2003, the college introduced girls into the school for the first time with 140 female students. There are now over 540 female students attending, with numbers increasing every year.

Saint Kentigern College is an IB World School offering the IB Diploma Programme for Year 12 and 13 students. The Saint Kentigern Trust Board approved the decision in late 2006. The course was first offered to Year 12 students in 2009.

Saint Kentigern College opened in 1953 on a rural site 16 kilometres from the centre of Auckland, bordering the waters of the Tamaki Estuary. With ninety foundation pupils and a staff of four, the College was the realisation of a dream for a group of Presbyterian ministers and laymen who had established the Saint Kentigern Trust in 1949 to found a school for 'the acquisition of knowledge, for the glory of God, and the benefit of mankind, a proper discipline of mind and body, and a life of service to others.' The College took the name of the patron saint of Glasgow, Saint Kentigern, who is also affectionately known in Scotland as Mungo.

The foundation Headmaster of the College, chosen in 1952, was a Scottish minister, the Reverend Adam MacFarlan. With a distinguished academic record at the University of Glasgow and a Military Cross from active service in World War II, Mr MacFarlan led the College from its beginnings until his retirement in 1983. In 1972 he was awarded the Doctor of Divinity degree by his old university for 'services to education in New Zealand' and on his retirement received an OBE.


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