Misplaced Pages

Zonnebloem Nest Senior School

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.

Zonnebloem Nest Senior School is a school in the Western Cape.

History

Zonnebloem College was founded on 11 March 1858 by Sir George Grey and Bishop Gray on Protea Farm known today as Bishopscourt. The school was opened so princes and princess of African Kings and chiefs from the eastern Cape Colony, among others could receive an education. The school opened with 39 pupils-36 boys and 3 girls but as that number grew, Bishop Gray was forced to look for other premises. Zonnebloem which means "the place of sunflowers", the origins of which trace back to the early 1700s, came on to the market.

In 1860 the college moved to the farm and adopted the name of the farm, its emblem and created the motto, Et Fili Lucis Ambulate, which means "walk as the children of the light." When apartheid came into effect a teachers training college, a secondary school, and a boys and girls primary school were constructed. In 1971, the Children's Art Centre moved onto the premises.

2012 Possible closure

In 2012 the Western Cape Education MEC announced that 27 schools would be possibly closed and Zonnebloem Nest was one of those schools. The school petitioned and protested for the school to stay open. The closure was for underperforming schools and Zonnebloem was in that category until it was revealed that in 2010 it had a 73% pass rate and in 2011 had an 85% pass rate. Equal Education saw this as an improper reason to declare Zonnebloem Nest as an underperforming school, as the percentage for an underperforming school is below 60%. Equal Education held a picket outside Western Cape Education Department on Lower Parliament Street in Cape Town. It was announced that Zonnebloem would not be closed as it was not an underperforming school.

References

  1. Jones, Michelle (18 September 2012). "Zonnebloem nest senior plea - Cape Times | IOL.co.za". Independent Online. Retrieved 22 November 2014.
  2. ^ Williams, Mika (27 March 2016). "Zonnebloem recalls long history". Retrieved 1 March 2023 – via PressReader.

External links

33°56′3″S 18°26′18″E / 33.93417°S 18.43833°E / -33.93417; 18.43833

Cape Town
City of Cape Town
Natural environment
Bays
Beaches
Hills
Mountains
Islands
Headlands
Rivers and wetlands
Climate and weather
World heritage sites
Biodiversity
of Cape Town
Vegetation
types
Parks and
gardens
Nature reserves
Communities
Atlantic Seaboard
Blaauwberg
Cape Flats
(Klipfontein district)
Khayelitsha
Mitchells Plain
City Bowl
Helderberg
Northern Suburbs
Southern Suburbs
South Peninsula
Neighbourhoods
Built environment
Skyscrapers
Government
National government
Provincial government
City of Cape Town
History
Fortifications
Monuments and memorials
Lists of heritage sites
Historical buildings
Culture
Cuisine
Performance
art
Events and
festivals
Museums and
art galleries
Iziko Museums
Public art
Religion
Secular
architecture
Media
Economy
Companies based
in Cape Town
Hotels and resorts
Shopping areas,
malls and markets
Exhibition centres
Restaurants and cafés
Tourism
Transport
Air transport
Maritime transport
Road transport
Rail transport
Sports
Soccer
Rugby
Cricket
OtherCape Town Tigers (basketball)
Sports events
Sports venues
Education
Libraries
Universities
Colleges
Private
schools
Public schools
Alternative schools
Former schools
Art & music schools
Not yet allocated
Services
Hospitals
Lighthouses
Western Cape
Water Supply System
Electrical power generation
Emergency services
Cape Town Outline


Stub icon 1 Stub icon 2

This South Africa school-related article is a stub. You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it.

Categories: