Cobham Intermediate School

Coordinates: 43°30′39″S 172°35′03″E / 43.5108°S 172.5843°E / -43.5108; 172.5843
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Cobham Intermediate School
Cobham Intermediate School in the centre; Burnside Primary in the foreground
Address
Map
294 Ilam Road
Burnside
Christchurch,
New Zealand
Coordinates43°30′39″S 172°35′03″E / 43.5108°S 172.5843°E / -43.5108; 172.5843
Information
TypeState co-ed intermediate (years 7 and 8)
MottoAchieving For Life
Ministry of Education Institution no.3323
PrincipalEddie Norgate (2016–present)
School roll631[2] (February 2024)
Socio-economic decile8[1]

Cobham Intermediate School is a state intermediate school in the northwestern Christchurch, New Zealand suburb of Burnside.

Cobham was originally named Fendalton Intermediate. However, there was confusion between the school and Fendalton Open Air School, so the governor-general of New Zealand, Viscount Cobham, allowed the school to use his name.[citation needed] At the end of term 1 in 2011 long-running principal Trevor Beaton left Cobham Intermediate to retire. Scott Thelning from Mt. Pleasant School took over as principal in Term 3, 2011.

In March 2018 Cobham student Maia Devereaux invited Women's Minister Julie Anne Genter to come and talk about the gender pay gap to the room 11 and 12 students.[3]

Cobham today[edit]

The Hayley Westenra Suite commemorates the famous singer

Cobham is currently the largest intermediate school in the South Island and has a total attendance of 726 students.

Achievements[edit]

In 2005, Cobham won the Cantamath competition (a mathematics competition for schools around the Canterbury region) in both the year 7 and 8 competition. Many musicians and singers from this school participate in the Lions Primary School Music Festival.[citation needed]

Notable alumni[edit]

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ Decile change 2007 to 2008 for state & state integrated schools
  2. ^ "New Zealand Schools Directory". New Zealand Ministry of Education. Retrieved 14 March 2024.
  3. ^ "Minister for Women says old white men should 'move on' from company boards". Stuff. Retrieved 28 November 2018.

External links[edit]