Name: Kedron High School
Time: 1956 -
Epoch: Late 20th Century
Category: State High School
Institution Category: Education
Institution Group: Secondary
Coordinates: -27.4132161, 153.0393649
Street Address: 34 Park Rd, Wooloowin
Suburb: Kedron
Sector: State
Local Study Area: Chermside-Wavell Heights-Kedron-Nundah
Study Stage: MBNH Stage 11 Local Study Areas
Kedron State High School was opened in 1956. Secondary Education in Queensland, outside the privileged provisions of the 1860 Grammar Schools Act, did not start until 1912, with the state undertaking to establish free high schools in places with a likely attendance of 25 qualified students, provided that there was no other provision for State-aided secondary education (such as grammar schools) in these places. Even so, secondary education in Queensland was not substantively provided (outside of Grammar and other class-based schools) until the first suburban, multilateral (offering a variety of courses) State high schools were opened in Brisbane; at Wynnum in 1942 and Cavendish Road in 1952. Several state reviews were generated by the great disappointment the community had of the state system, including transitions from primary to secondary education, and the transitions from secondary to tertiary education. Historically, the Queensland education system had been under pressure from instrumental policies which prioritised towards the state’s old agrarian and emerging industrial economy.
The Watkin Committee believed years of compulsory schooling should be coupled with a reduction in the age of transfer from primary to secondary school and the provision of new secondary curricula. These recommendations were largely implemented under the Education Act of 1964. Under this Act, secondary school curricula and examinations became the responsibility of two new administrative bodies, the Board of Junior Secondary School Studies and the Board of Senior Secondary School Studies. During the second half of the 1960s these Boards kept the Junior and Senior syllabuses and examinations under constant review, in an effort to cater for the wider range of abilities and future vocations of the students then entering the secondary school. In some cases, as in certain of the Senior science subjects, such as physics, biology and chemistry, completely new courses were introduced.
The Radford Committee, appointed in 1969, to review the system of public examinations for Queensland secondary school students and to make recommendations for the assessment of students’ achievement, suggested in its 1970 report that public examinations be replaced by a system of internal school assessment. The Radford Committee’s recommendations were enacted in the Education Act Amendment Act (No.2) of 1970. Consequently, the Junior and Senior examinations, first held in 1910, were held for the last time in 1970 and 1972 respectively. The Scholarship examination, first held in 1873, was held for the last time in 1962, and in 1963 Grade 8 became a part of secondary schooling. These changes meant that no Queensland school student in 1973 was required to sit for a public examination. The century long reign of the public examination was over. Freed from the constraints of public examinations, syllabuses could now be significantly revised and teachers given much more freedom in interpreting and teaching them. Overall responsibility for implementing the Radford proposals was given to a Board of Secondary School Studies established in 1971. Between 1971 and 1978, 70 new syllabuses were written, trialled, piloted, brought into full operation and in some cases revised.
Geographic Description 1: Outside The Green Belt
Geographic Description 2: Kedron Brook
Geographic Description 3: Flood Gullies; Hills
Chermside & Districts Historical Society; Entry extracted from Queensland Department of Education document, Secondary Education, undated.
Smith, Peter John. (n.d.). Evon Fischle and Peter Anderson at an Astronomy Field Night at Kedron High School, Wooloowin, Queensland, 1964, SLQ Collection reference: 28341 Photographs relating to The Astronomers’ Association Queensland.