Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Diocesan School for Girls (Dio) is a private girls' school in Epsom, Auckland, New Zealand. It is consistently a top-achieving school nationally. The school is Anglican-based and was established in 1903. It caters to international students and has accommodation for 50 boarders at Innes House.
Diocesan School for Girls can refer to: Ireland. The Diocesan School for Girls, Dublin, merged with The High School, Dublin in 1974; New Zealand. Diocesan School for Girls (Auckland) Waikato Diocesan School, Hamilton; South Africa. Diocesan School for Girls, Grahamstown, Eastern Cape; St. Mary's Diocesan School for Girls, Kloof, KwaZulu-Natal
Nga Tawa Diocesan School, also known as the Wellington Diocesan School for Girls, is a state-integrated, Anglican girls’ boarding school situated in the heart of the Rangitikei District. It is located just outside the township of Marton in New Zealand .
Taranaki Diocesan School for Girls ( formerly known as St Mary's Diocesan School, Stratford) is an all-girls Anglican secondary school in Stratford, Taranaki, New Zealand. Taranaki Dio has a boarding hostel, and the majority of the students at the school are boarders.
Waikato Diocesan School for Girls is a state-integrated single-sex girls' secondary school in Hamilton, New Zealand. It is an Anglican girls' Boarding school for students from Year 9 to Year 13. It also has day students.
Most girls enter the school in grade 4, coming from St. Andrew's Preparatory School. There are about 120 girls from grade 4 to grade 7 (the primary school phase) and 400 from grade 8 to grade 12 (the high school phase.) From grade 10 all the academic classes are shared with St. Andrew's College and are thus co-instructional. The DR Wynne Music ...
From the mid-2000s to 2019 the diocese had closed 45 schools. By 2019 36 remained. [7] Three grade schools were scheduled to close in 2019, and that year another two grade schools were to merge. [8] Another six schools were scheduled to close in 2020, with the six collectively being owed $600,000 in tuition. [9]
In 1866, it was renamed Diocesan Female Training & Industrial Schools. Because of financial problems, the school had to restrict its services solely to orphans and destitute girls. In 1869, Diocesan Home and Orphanage [ 15 ] was founded to admit both boys and girls, and occupied the building at the corner of Eastern Street and Bonham Road.