Westfields Sports High School
Westfields Sports High School | |
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File:Westfields.jpg
Latin: Fortitudo
Endurance and Perseverance
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Location | |
Fairfield West, New South Wales Australia |
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Information | |
Type | Public, Co-educational, Sport Selective, Day school |
Established | 1963 |
Principal | Roger Davis |
Enrolment | ~1609 [1] |
Campus | Suburban |
Colour(s) | Blue & Gold |
Website | www.westfieldsports.nsw.edu.au |
Westfields Sports High School (abbreviated as WSHS) is a dedicated Sports High school in Western Sydney suburb of Fairfield West. The school has a selective approach to enrolment, with students needing to either live within the relatively small catchment area of the school, or demonstrate their ability in some sport.[2] The school is very well regarded for having produced sporting talent in a number of different areas of sporting endeavour,[3] and has received a range of grants to support its work with sporting talent.[4]
Contents
History
The School was established in 1963 and opened by Edward Gough Whitlam, later Australian Prime Minister. Its first year enrolment had 300 students. The school achieved moderate success during the 60s to 80s in sports and was on the rise during the late 80s. The Founding Principal, Philip Tucker, had wanted to establish Westfields into a school that could provide any sports person who attended a pathway to the Australian Institute of Sport, and extend their possibilities past High School level sports competition. The School was then officially declared a Sports school on 24 April 1991. Its motto is Fortitudo - Endurance and Perseverance.
Since 1997, there has been an annual student and teacher exchange scheme with Kasukabe High School, from Kasukabe, Saitama, Japan.[5]
In 2008, the International Olympic Committee recognized Westfields Sports for their involvement in producing many Australian Olympians with a special Sport and Youth Trophy.[6]
Education
Sports offered at Westfields
- track and field athletics, lawn bowls*, baseball, netball, basketball, rowing, cricket, rugby league football, curling*, rugby football, dance, softball, equestrian, swimming, soccer, table tennis, golf, tennis, gymnastics, water polo*, hockey, and volleyball.
- * = currently not undertaken at the school
The School sits on a total area of approximately seven hectares.
Notable alumni
Sport
Soccer
- Mustafa Amini
- Connor Chapman
- Miloš Degenek
- Aaron Mooy
- Michael Beauchamp
- Alex Brosque
- Jacob Burns
- David Carney
- Jason Culina
- Scott Jamieson
- Terry Antonis
- Matthew Jurman
- Harry Kewell
- Matthew Ryan
- Danny Vukovic
- Kelly Golebiowski
- Bernie Ibini-Isei
- Anthony Cáceres
- Helen Petinos
Basketball
Cricket
Netball
Athletics
Rugby League
- Israel Folau
- Liam Fulton
- Bryce Gibbs
- Eric Grothe Jr.[3]
- Dene Halatau[3]
- Jarryd Hayne[3]
- Jamal Idris[3]
- Kris Keating[3]
- Matt Keating
- Trent Hodkinson[3]
- Corey Payne[3]
- Justin Horo[3]
- Leon Bott
- Michael Buettner
- Pat Richards
- Michael Greenfield
- Issac Luke[3]
- Blake Green
- Chris Armit
- Heka Nanai
- Krisnan Inu[3]
- Feleti Mateo[3]
- Karl McNichol[3]
- Mark Minichiello
- Luke O'Donnell
- Tony Williams[3]
- Tim Lafai[3]
- David Klemmer[3]
Rugby Union
National Football League
Academia
- Denis Evans - Physicist and chemist
Politics & Law
- Joe Tripodi - Former member for Fairfield, representing Labor.
See also
References
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External links
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- ↑ "West News", 7 November 2006
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- Pages with reference errors
- Use dmy dates from July 2011
- Use Australian English from July 2011
- All Wikipedia articles written in Australian English
- Pages with broken file links
- Articles containing Latin-language text
- New South Wales articles missing geocoordinate data
- Educational institutions established in 1963
- High schools in New South Wales
- Public schools in New South Wales
- 1963 establishments in Australia