Key Points
- Parents and old boys have protested against a Sydney private school's plans to shift to co-ed.
- The school announced its intention to admit girls in November last year.
- Protesters said the move to co-education represented an unacceptable change to the school's culture.
Parents and old boys have staged a protest outside the 160-year-old Sydney private school over its plans to take in girls for the first time.
Newington College in Sydney's inner west announced its intention in November to shift to co-education across its kindergarten-to-year 12 program.
The school, which charges fees of up to $42,200 per year, has exclusively taught boys since it was founded in 1863.
Placards outside Newington College in Sydney. Source: AAP / Bianca De Marchi
About 25 people protested outside the school as students returned to classes on Wednesday after the summer holidays.
Many complained that the move to co-education represented an unacceptable change to the school's culture.
"Old Newingtonian" Tony Retsos said he intended to pay for his first-born grandson to attend the school.
"There are current parents that signed up on the basis that it's an elite boys' single-sex school," he told AAP.
"That's what it's been for 160 years."
Newington College is facing a backlash over plans to become co-educational. Source: AAP / Bianca De Marchi
"I suspect it's for virtue-signalling, woke-type principles, which I'm dead against," he said.
The school's chairman, Tony McDonald, previously said the switch was intended to promote inclusiveness among students and the decision was made after feedback from students, parents, staff and alumni.
The staged shift to co-education will start in the junior school in 2026 and for high school students from 2028, with the college fully co-educational by 2033.
One parent who attended the protest but declined to give his name said he expected the change would lead to worse educational outcomes.
"You'd be mad to send a girl to a boys' school that's going to have 200 boys and 100 girls," he said.
"I don't think it's going to benefit the boys either."