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Mountains Christian Academy

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Mountains Christian Academy (MCA) was an independent non-denominational Christian co-educational early learning, primary and secondary day school, located in Blackheath, in the Blue Mountains region of New South Wales, Australia.

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Transcription

Overview

The school was affiliated with the Covenant Evangelical Church. This church was founded by Howard Carter in the mid-1980s, and the school was started to educate the children of the church.

It originally began as a high school in 1976[1] and eventually included kindergarten and primary when there were enough children. It followed an education system known as Accelerated Christian Education (ACE), which came from the United States of America. MCA was one of the first schools in Australia to implement this system of education, closer to a homeschool academy than to the familiar type of church school.[2]

Although MCA itself was a short-lived institution, it was the testing ground for a new educational paradigm that took off very rapidly.[3][4] The swift success of this new style of education caused uncertainty[1] and disquiet[5] among Australian educationalists. At MCA, Logos Foundation (Australia) introduced a type of education which offered an inexpensive, locally controlled alternative to state-run schools but was "criticised for religious, racial and community segregation", and the early-1980s saw intensifying conflicts between the ACE and government schools systems.[6]

The Academy closed in 1988 when the Covenant Evangelical Church and Logos Foundation (the CEC's political and educational arm) moved their headquarters to Toowoomba, Queensland. The curriculum and culture of The Academy was eventually duplicated by Logos at Toowoomba Christian College.

References

  1. ^ a b Long, Robert (1994). The Search to Explain a New Schooling System. Conference of the Australian Association for Research in Education. Archived from the original on 28 March 2012.
  2. ^ Long, Robert (1993). The Development of Themelic Christian Schools in Australia'. Conference of the Australian Association for Research in Education.
  3. ^ Barcan, Alan (1993). Sociological Theory and Educational Reality: Education and Society in Australia since 1949. Kensington, NSW: New South Wales University Press. p. 229.
  4. ^ Harrison, John (2006). The Logos Foundation: The Rise and Fall of Christian Reconstuctionism in Australia. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  5. ^ Speck, Cathy; Prideaux, David (1993). "Fundamentalist Education and Creation Science". Australian Journal of Education. 37 (3): 279–95.
  6. ^ Hunter, Roger (24–26 November 1982). The Shock of the Old: The Militant Church and Education (abstract). 10th Annual Conference of the Australian Comparative and International Education Society. Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.

External links

This page was last edited on 21 July 2023, at 08:58
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