MLC School
MLC School is an independent Uniting Church single-sex early learning, primary, and secondary day school for girls, located in the Inner West Sydney suburb of Burwood, Australia. The school enrols students from early learning, through kindergarten to year 12.
History
MLC School was founded in 1886 to prepare students for entrance to the University of Sydney, which had only admitted women to degrees four years before. With the view that much more could be expected of girls’ skills and talents during their school education, MLC School was one of the first schools in Australia to offer girls the same level of education as boys.In 1889, a kindergarten was introduced, placing MLC School in the forefront of educational practice. Founding principal Charles John Prescott believed in the education of very young children and persuaded the college council to establish a co-educational kindergarten. It is believed that MLC School was one of the first to establish a purpose-built kindergarten building. In 1890, Miss Scheer became the MLC School kindergarten teacher. Scheer had received her training in Germany in the methods developed by Friedrich Fröbel. Miss Scheer, and her training under in the principles of Friedrich Fröbel are mentioned in the school history Walk In The Light but unfortunately her Christian name is not recorded.
MLC School has a long tradition in science education. The school's first science laboratory was built in 1924 and chemistry and physics were promptly added to the curriculum. MLC School became the first school in the state to present girls for the Leaving Certificate in physics.
MLC School was also a boarding school until 1977, when a fire destroyed the sleeping dormitories, dining room, offices and some classrooms. When assessed, it was decided that a significant portion of the affected buildings would have to be demolished. Due to falling demand for boarding accommodation, the school council decided not to rebuild the boarding quarters and to phase out the boarding school, which closed at the end of 1979.
In June 1977, when the Methodist Church was incorporated into the new union of the Methodist, Presbyterian and Congregational Churches, the Methodist Ladies College Burwood became known officially as MLC School. Today, MLC School is a day school that forms part of the Uniting Church of Australia.
Name changes
- 1886 – Wesleyan Ladies' College
- 1899 – Burwood Ladies' College
- 1914 – Methodist Ladies' College
- 1977 – MLC School
School crest, colours and motto
In 1886, founding principal Prescott and MLC School's drawing and painting teacher Miss Douglas designed the MLC School crest. The crest depicts the book of learning and the star of knowledge on the cross of Saint George.The MLC School motto, chosen by Prescott, is from the Vulgate: Ut filiae lucis ambulate.
Prescott also chose the MLC School colours to honour his alma mater Oxford and its rival institution Cambridge: two bands of dark blue with light blue inserted.
School song
The MLC School song is Here In This House with music written by Australian composer Lindley Evans who was a visiting music teacher at MLC School from 1930 until 1946 and lyrics written by English poet laureate John Masefield.Recent developments
A number of recent facilities at the school have been designed and constructed by architects Ed Lippmann and Associates, starting with the MLC School Aquatic Centre, which was opened by Dawn Fraser in 2003. The Junior School was completed and opened in 2009 by the Governor-General of Australia Quentin Bryce. The facilities available in the junior school include flexible learning spaces, learning studios, small group areas, wet areas, a literature and resource hub, outdoor learning and play spaces, the piazza, the kiss and drop, and the welcome wall.MLC Burwood, particularly the main school site bounded by Rowley and Grantham Street and Park Road, is listed on the local government heritage register.
Principals
From 1886 to 1972, MLC School operated under a dual control system with the principal connecting the school to the church and performing religious instruction, and the headmistress administering the day-to-day running, general education and discipline. In 1972 the system changed to single control with the Principal overseeing all the leadership duties. MLC School's principal is Lisa Moloney.| Principal | Headmistress | ||
| 1886–1899 | Charles John Prescott | 1886–1887 | E. Shiels |
| 1900–1914 | E.J. Rodd | 1887–1909 | M.F. Wearne |
| 1915–1922 | L.H.Kelynack | 1909–1912 | Jessie Isabel Hetherington |
| 1922–1933 | T. Frederick Potts | 1912–1940 | Miss M.H. Sutton |
| 1933–1939 | H.C. Foreman | 1941–1959 | Gladys Wade |
| 1940–1947 | W. Deane | 1960–1972 | Alice Whitley |
| 1948–1959 | R.B Lew | - | - |
| 1960–1964 | Winston D'Arcy O'Reilly | - | - |
| 1965–1969 | E.A. Bennett | - | - |
| 1973–1989 | Kenneth Cornwell | - | - |
| 1990–2011 | Barbara Stone | - | - |
| 2011–2016 | Denice Scala | - | - |
| 2016–2017 | Louise Robert-Smith | - | - |
| 2018–present | Lisa Moloney | - | - |
Curriculum
MLC School is registered accredited with the New South Wales Education Standards Authority and therefore follows the mandated curriculum for all years. In Year 11 and 12, students can choose to follow either the Higher School Certificate or the International Baccalaureate curriculum.Higher School Certificate
In 2024, the median ATAR for the HSC cohort was 82.15. In 2025, the school ranked 58th in the Higher School Certificate.International Baccalaureate (IB)
MLC became an IB World School in August 1999 and offers the International Baccalaureate to all students in Years 11 and 12 as an alternative to the HSC.Offered since 2002, it was chosen by nearly 40% of MLC School's graduates in 2022. In 2022, it ranked as the number one IB school in Australia and in the top 50 globally, with 67 students achieving an IB Diploma score of 45/45 since it was introduced. In 2024, the median ATAR equivalent for the IB cohort was 91.75.
Co-curriculum
Sport
Primary school students may partake in competitive sport through MLC School's membership of the Junior School Heads Association of Australia. These competitions are usually held on Saturday mornings and include sports such as: tee-ball/softball, tennis, netball, cricket, minkey/hockey and soccer.Secondary school students compete against 28 other similar type schools in the Independent Girls' Schools Sporting Association competition. These competitions occur on Saturday mornings or in the form of carnivals and include sports such as: netball, softball, swimming, diving, cricket, tennis, athletics, fencing, cross country, rowing, hockey, soccer, water polo, basketball, touch football and gymnastics.
Students who perform well at JSHAA or IGSSA level may be invited to compete in NSW Combined Independent Schools' competitions.
From its inception, MLC School has valued academic and co-curricular achievements equally. MLC School was the first school to give girls equal access to sports when on 3 November 1906 the first Athletics Sports Carnival for girls in Australia was held at MLC School.
“At first other schools seemed to wonder if it was quite the correct thing, but next year some of them followed suit, and eventually all who had held up hands of horror, put them down and joined in too.”
Music
MLC School offers instrumental music lessons in over twenty instruments to both current MLC students and external students. Lessons are conducted by professional musicians. Students interested in music are offered the opportunity to perform on a number of levels, including at studio concerts and smaller groups. Performance opportunities are available every year in the Sydney Town Hall and biennially at the Sydney Opera House.From the beginning, music has held a special status at MLC School. The school's founding principal Prescott wanted his students to achieve tangible recognition for their achievements through examinations in music theory. MLC School was integral in the establishment of the Trinity College musical theory examinations in Australia – the first board to examine candidates in music in Australia. The first MLC School Trinity College results are noted in the School's Examination Results in 1887, just one year after the School was established.
House system
MLC School's senior school has ten houses. Four were created in 1942, and the other six were added in 1992.MLC School's primary school still utilises the original four houses.
Each House has a staff Head of House and House Tutors. Spirited inter-House competition takes place every year as Houses vie for honours in debating, chess, literature, athletics, cross-country racing and swimming to take out the Spirit and Points Trophies on Speech Night at the end of the year.
Original house names (1942)
The first four houses were established by Headmistress Dr Gladys Wade in 1942. The House names were chosen from Aboriginal words commencing with the letters MLCB to fit the first letters of Methodist Ladies’ College Burwood, and their emblems were drawn from the MLC School Crest.These house colours, when combined with the indigo and light blue of the school colours, create white light, which echoes the school motto: "Walk as daughters of the light".
Six additional houses (1992)
In MLC School's 1986 centenary history Walk in the Light, G. Wade described the aims of the original house system as: “giving students interests wider than those of their own class or age group and creating a greater feeling of belonging to the school as a whole. It also allowed more students to become involved in organising and decision making... The system would permeate almost every aspect of school life, providing a basis for friendly, but nevertheless intense competition”.As the school population grew, Wade's vision began to erode as each of the four Houses grew to over 200 students. At this level, the house system had little meaning other than as a convenient way of dividing the school for sporting and debating competitions.
In 1992, the addition of six new houses was an attempt to restore the system to its original intent. Expanding the house system strengthened the pastoral care program, and provided students with more leadership opportunities and greater encouragement for participation in the wider life of the school.
With ten houses, each student was able to operate within a unit of about eighty students and participation becomes a necessity rather than an option. The impact of this was immediately evident with greater involvement in swimming, sports and gymnastics competitions held during Term 4 1992.
New house names (1992)
The six new houses introduced in 1992 were named after people and places of significance in the history of MLC School.Abbeythorpe was a two-storey Italianate building located across Park Road from the school, between the sports field and Burwood Park, where classes were held and early boarders were housed for almost 50 years from 1923 when it was purchased by the College Council. Abbeythorpe was demolished in 1972, and in 1978 the Gymnasium was built on the site.Lester is named after Sarah Eliza Lester, who ran one of the earliest private colleges for girls.Prescott is named after the founder and first principal-headmaster of the Wesleyan Ladies’ College, Charles Prescott.Sutton is named after Mabel Sutton, an MLC School Old Girl joined the staff of Burwood Ladies' College as first assistant in 1910 and was appointed headmistress in 1912. In 28 years, she left her mark on education both at the school and in the community. She retired in 1940.Wade is named after Gladys Irene Wade, headmistress of MLC School from 1941 until 1959. Earlier in her academic and teaching career, she had been a form mistress at MLC School. Wade instigated many of the traditions of the school, such as the house system and the school community service.Whitley is named after Alice Whitley, MLC School's last headmistress from 1960 to 1972. A former student of MLC School, Whitley made a lasting contribution to science education across NSW. Altogether, she devoted over 50 years of her life to the school.Early MLC School architecture
Miss Lester's Kent House
Sarah Eliza Lester moved her ladies’ college to a large two-storey house on the Park Road / Rowley Street corner called ‘Kent House’ which stood on part of the ‘Burwood’ estate of 750 acres granted to Thomas Rowley by Governor John Hunter in 1799.The Kent House estate consisted of 2.5 acres, about 1 acre being grassland on the opposite side of Park Road from the school.
On 22 May 1885, the Wesleyan Conference Committee considered Lester's school at the Park/Rowley corner as a possible site for the Wesleyan Ladies College that they wished to establish to complement Newington College.
The main building consisted of four ground floor rooms and several bedrooms upstairs. A cottage, a stable, a coach house, a fowl house and a paddock on the other side of Park Road were included, bringing the area of purchase to one hectare. The Sydney Morning Herald advertisement on the 23 January 1886 stated that “the premises have been occupied as a school by Miss Lester for many years past and are consequently well-known.”
Schofield Hall (now MLC School Chapel)
As student numbers rose, plans were made for a significant extension to the buildings. The Kent House cottage, which had been used mainly for sleeping accommodation, was to be demolished and replaced with a two-storey building with dining hall and suite of bedrooms above.The early days of MLC School were plagued by financial problems. Unlike other schools at the time, it had not started with a personal endowment. Prescott appealed for donations, stating that the school “started in faith, perhaps in the hope that some generous friend might come forward and do something to lighten the debt incurred by the buying of the College.”
The first ‘generous friend’ was Ellen Schofield, the wealthy widow of W. Schofield, a Wesleyan minister. Schofield provided the sum of £2,000 to the new Wesleyan Ladies College, to build the Boarder's dormitory hall and dining room.
The new Boarder's dormitory hall and dining room was named Schofield Hall. It was designed by Harry C. Kent who also made provision for two towers. Years later Schofield donated another £800 towards the construction of the northern Tower Wing.
In 1977 a fire destroyed the upstairs sleeping dormitory of Schofield Hall. The ground floor survived and is now the MLC School Chapel.
Tower Wing
The Tower Wing was designed by Alfred Newman in a Tudor Gothic style to harmonise with the existing architecture of the Schofield Hall which it adjoins.A prominent feature in the new building was the large tower, 24 feet square, and four stories in height. This tower, which was fitted as the residence of the Principal, was covered with a flat roof that was utilised as a promenade.
The Tower Wing provided four additional large classrooms and eight music rooms, as well as bedrooms and sleeping-out balconies for the staff and boarders. Provision was also made for servants’ quarters, and ample shower and other facilities.
The Tower Wing once extended the length of what is now the Cornwell Building. Most of it was demolished in 1989 to make way for the Cornwell Building. Remaining from the original structure are the Tower, Sutherland Rooms and Deputy Principal's office.
Abbeythorpe
In late 1923 Abbeythorpe, a residence that stood between the school's playing fields and Burwood Park, was purchased from Mrs Starling. Abbeythorpe was used from 1924 for the kindergarten and primary classes with accommodation for Boarders on the upper floor. The property not only had a large two storey Victorian Italianate house, but also contained a small tennis court.It had four classes, two on the ground floor and two on the second floor. It had not been renovated to look like a school though, the original rooms just had desks placed in them and a blackboard installed at the front.
Abbeythorpe was demolished in 1972, and in 1978 the Gymnasium was built on the site.
Potts Hall
By 1925 the growth in student numbers made it clear that a new hall was desperately needed. It was resolved to go ahead and build a new hall on the site of the original kindergarten building on the corner of Rowley and Grantham Streets.The new block was to have a tower to balance the Tower Wing and was to incorporate a gymnasium and art room as well as new classrooms. The building was opened in June 1926 complete with hall which seated 1,000 people.
The gym on the ground floor was fitted out with money raised at a fete in the previous year. Funds raised by the Old Girls’ Union provided furnishings for the new Hall.
Initially called the Assembly Hall, the building was renamed Potts Hall in 1933 on Potts’ death.
First Swimming Pool
On 29 April 1929 the Parents’ and Friends’ Association was established with the objective of assisting in “any way possible the promotion of the interests of the College, and to supplement school equipment”. The original members chose as their first objective “the provision of a swimming pool in the College grounds”.The Great Depression and WWII meant that fund raising was a challenge, but on 9 March 1957 the P&F had their “fulfilment of a dream” and the first MLC School pool was officially opened.
Kent House (Art and Design Centre)
In August 1949 a two-storey house, Youngarra, located on the corner of Rowley and Gordon Streets was purchased by the school. Youngarra contained fourteen rooms on a quarter of a hectare of much needed land. The building was renamed Kent House, in memory of the original school building. It was occupied by the kindergarten and lower primary school.Youngarra was demolished in 1966 and replaced by a new and larger building which brought all the kindergarten and primary school under the one roof. This was to become the third building on MLC School premises to be named Kent House. In 2009 when the junior school relocated to its new premises on Park Road and Kent House became the MLC School Art and Design Centre.
Sutton House
In 1936 Cartreff, a two-story house at 36 Grantham Street was purchased and rename Sutton House in honour of the former student and long standing Headmistress, Mabel Sutton. It was to provide additional classrooms and was purchased with a view to future development.In 1949 the grand Sutton House was completed. Its first floor housed the contents of the former Fiction and Reference Libraries. The new combined library retained the name Wearne Library, and for the first time a full-time trained Librarian was employed. It occupied most of the first floor of Sutton House and contained shelving for 8,000 books.
The construction of the new Sutton House also provide new science laboratories, a geography room and two senior rooms. The new ‘Wearne Library’ was noted for its simple and light finishes and spaces and was for use of the entire school. The Old Girls’ Union had donated the furniture.
In 1962 extensions to Sutton House were made at a right angle to Sutton House along the then northern boundary of the school.
Wade House
The tennis court on Grantham Street between Potts Hall and Sutton Hall was replaced by Wade House in 1961, a modern two storey brick building which featured façade panels highlighting the architectural fashion of the day. The building was noted for its contemporary internal finishes and provided a bright and roomy art room, five large classrooms on the first floor as well as several smaller rooms, domestic science and well appointed staff room on the ground floor.Notable alumnae
Academia
- Alice Whitley – chemist and chemistry teacher
- Elizabeth New – chemist and professor at University of New South Wales
- Ros Pesman – historian, first female Challis Professor at the University of Sydney
- Sylvia Walton – principal of Tintern Grammar, chancellor of La Trobe University and principal of St Catherine's School
Entertainment, media and the arts
- Angela Catterns – media personality and broadcaster
- Emma Jones – award-winning poet
- Grace Crowley – modernist painter
- Hazel de Berg – oral history pioneer
- Helen Joyce Haenke – poet and playwright
- Lulu Shorter – designer
- Nikki Webster – singer
- Olive Cotton – modernist photographer
- Renée Geyer – singer, jazz, soul and R&B musician
- Vimala Raman – actress
Medicine and science
- Elizabeth Dennis – molecular biologist
- Freida Ruth Heighway – gynaecologist
- Joyce Winifred Vickery – forensic botanist
- Marguerite Henry – zoologist
- Pamela Anne Wills – research biologist and radiology scientist
- Phyllis Margery Anderson – pathologist
- Susie O'Reilly – pioneering female doctor
Politics and the law
- Annie Wyatt – conservationist, helped establish the National Trust of Australia
- Elizabeth Grace – Federal Member for Division of Lilley
- Mahla Pearlman – Chief Judge of the Land and Environment Court of New South Wales
- Marise Payne – Liberal Senator for New South Wales and former Minister for Foreign Affairs
- Megan Latham – Judge of the Supreme Court of New South Wales, Commissioner of ICAC
- Natalie Bennett – Leader of the Green Party of England and Wales
- Olive Nelson – first Pacific Islander to receive a law degree from University of Auckland
- Sonia McMahon – socialite and philanthropist, wife of Sir William McMahon
Sport
- Alyssa Healy – captain of the Australia women's national cricket team
- Amie Thompson – Olympic synchronised swimmer
- Desiree Miller – rugby union player for Waratahs and Wallaroos player
- Elisa Barnard – Olympic archer
- Elizabeth Kell – Olympic rower
- Felicity Galvez – Olympic swimmer
- Gillian Foster – Olympic soccer player
- Jan Andrew – Olympic swimmer
- Jessica Ashwood – Olympic swimmer and Commonwealth Games swimmer
- Joan Beck – fencing instructor and archaeologist
- Keesja Gofers – Olympic water polo player
- Lorraine Crapp – Olympic diver and swimmer and Commonwealth Games swimmer
- Penelope Blackmore – Olympic rhythmic gymnast
- Taniele Gofers – Olympic water polo player
- Vanessa Baker – Commonwealth and Olympic Games diver