All Saints Secondary School

All Saints Secondary School
Sekolah Menengah All Saints
沙巴诸圣中学
Location
Jalan Teluk Likas


, ,
88805

Coordinates5°59′27.5″N 116°06′24.1″E / 5.990972°N 116.106694°E / 5.990972; 116.106694
Information
School typeSemi-National Secondary School
MottoQuod facimus id perficimus
(What we do, We carry through)
Religious affiliationChristian
DenominationAnglican Communion
Established1 April 1903,[1] 22 December 1903 (opened)[2]
School boardDiocese of Sabah
School districtKota Kinabalu
School codeXFE4001
HeadmistressDr. Mary Gambidau[3]
GradesBridge class;
Form 1–3 (Lower secondary);
Form 4–5 (Upper secondary);
Form 6 (Pre-University)
GenderCo-ed
Age13 to 17
Enrollment1500+
LanguageMalay, English
ClassroomsJasmine, Lavender, Cherry, Tulip, Violet, Petunia
HousesCollier, Paisley, Henthorne, Leggatt and Rusted
YearbookThe Saint
AffiliationsAnglican Diocese of Sabah
Websitehttps://allsaintskkedu.wordpress.com

Sekolah Menengah Kebangsaan All Saints is a single-session secondary school located in Jalan Teluk Likas of Kota KinabaluSabah, Malaysia. It is also known as All Saints Secondary School and SM All Saints for short. The school was opened in 1903 when Kota Kinabalu was known as Jesselton, making it one of the oldest schools in Kota Kinabalu.

The current principal of the school is Dr. Mary Gambidau.

History

All Saints Secondary School is a part of the Anglican Diocese of Sabah.[4] The development of Anglican Church schools was inspired by foreign settlers to provide education to their children. The Diocese also owns other secondary schools, primary schools and kindergartens in Sabah and also in West Malaysia (with joint ownership along with its sister diocese known as the Diocese of West Malaysia).[5]

Early days

All Saints was built on 1 April 1903 as one of the earliest schools in Kota Kinabalu (Jesselton). Its humble beginning was in a borrowed government building that served as an office. The school was officially declared open by Governor Sir E.W. Birch and Lady Birch on 22 December 1903 and it was firstly named as King Edward VII School after the then-reigning King of Great Britain and the British Empire.

King Edward VII School at that time, under the charge of Mr. Chai Ah Soon, was basically a one-man show, for he doubled as the headmaster and form teacher. It started with only about 30 students, all boys and mostly Chinese, and they were divided into five groups ranging from standard one to five. The students learned simple arithmetic, English grammar, reading, writing and Bible studies. On 25 May 1905, the boys of the school were invited to participate in sports events organized by the police department. This marked the beginning of sports in the school.

Move to Karamunsing

As the principal and class teacher, Mr. Chai Ah Soon's main concern was undoubtedly academics. But the school was multi-functional. It was also used to hold church services. Besides, meetings and social functions were held in King Edward VII School as it was difficult to find suitable premises in Jesselton for these purposes. Later, on 1 September 1909, King Edward VII School was moved to a land at Karamunsing, granted by the Court of Directors of the British North Borneo Company. The site of the school was moved to Karamunsing in 1910. The new school was built of wood, on stilts over the swamp.

The birth of All Saints School

World War I (1914-1918) had a big impact on King Edward VII School. The government had to stop its financial assistance and parents were unable to pay for the schooling expenses. Thus, the school board temporarily closed the school. On 1 February 1923, Rev. C. J. Collis reopened the school and renamed it as All Saints School, after the church where he served. He was the headmaster of the school then. In 1923, the 1st Jesselton (Scout) Patrol was formed by Rev. C. J. Collis in All Saints School. Boarding facilities became available in All Saints on 1 May 1930. In December 1934, Cambridge University Local Examinations were held in All Saints School for the first time in Jesselton.

Move to Likas

During World War II (1939-1945), All Saints School had to be closed again. But it was reopened in 1947 and received many enrolments from other towns. In October 1947, All Saints' School was registered as a primary school with secondary classes (19 students in secondary one and seven students in secondary two). In that same year, it was reopened as a co-educational school. In 1951, it reverted to boys-only. With the growing number of students, All Saints had to move again to a new location in Likas. In June 1953, the Governor of North Borneo, Sir Ralph Hone laid the foundation stone for building All Saints' one-storey block. The building was officially declared open on the 1 July 1954 by Sir Roland Turnbull. By the year 1954, girls were admitted to the secondary classes that were previously monopolized by the boys. The boys' hostel was built in 1955 and a second hostel was built in 1963 for a growing number of students from other parts of Sabah.

Growth

All Saints was the first school in Sabah to teach pure science for Form 4 and 5 in 1958 and also the first to have a pure science laboratory which is the Chemistry Lab.[6] In 1959, the Cambridge Local Examinations Committee granted the school 'A' status; this gave it the right to conduct its own practical examination in science. It was the first school in Sabah to attain this status. In 1962, Bridge class and Form 6 were introduced. All Saints was the first school to start the Form 6 arts class.

Between 1958 and 1967, the school had better facilities like laboratories, a new double-storey Domestic Science Block, a classroom and a library.

Meanwhile, there was a growing demand for classrooms and facilities, as the enrolment of the school increased substantially each year. 

School house

The school has a house system with five sports-oriented houses, Rusted, Collier, Paisley, Henthorne and Leggatt. The first four of are named after former school headmasters, whereas the last was named after an unknown former student of the school, who had the nickname "Boss Leggatt".

Progress

On 15 August 1982, Mr. Teo Then Wah became principal of All Saints.[7] During his tenure, a new multi-purpose hall was envisioned. The ground-breaking ceremony was held on 28 August 1983 by Rev. Cannon E.C.W. Rusted, OBE, MA. On the same day, the foundation stone of the new multipurpose hall was laid by the Anglican Bishop of the Diocese of Sabah, Rt. Rev. Datuk Luke H.S. Chhoa. On 8 November 1986, the occupation certificate of the All Saints hall was handed to Rev. Canon Lee by the then-president of the Kota Kinabalu Municipal Council, Datuk Peter D. Cheong. During Mr. Teo's time in office, a five-storey block was built. Fund-raising activities for the building were initiated by the school's alumni association.

On 14 October 1992, the ground-breaking ceremony was officiated by then-state cabinet minister, Datuk Wilfred Bumburing.

Simultaneously, the Anglican Bishop of the Diocese of Sabah, Rt. Rev. Datuk Yong Ping Chung also laid the foundation stone for the new building.

On the same day, Datuk Wilfred and Bishop Yong unveiled a plaque, to mark the start of construction work the building. The five-storey classroom block was completed in June 1995.

It was named Wisma All Saints. It houses the school's staff room, a library on the top floor, a canteen on the ground floor and science laboratories on the first floor. The handling of the Occupation Certificate was held on 19 December 1995.

Mr. Teo Then Wah retired on 10 September 2000; he was the longest-serving principal in All Saints' history.

21st century

Mr. Ronnie Khoo became principal in 2001. Under his term, All Saints produced winners in many inter-school competitions such as the Sabah Inventors Exhibition, National Science Quiz and Inter-Schools Science Competitions. Mr. Khoo returned the school to its traditional past, reintroducing the school song and emphasizing English as the medium of conversation.

The school's first headmistress

The school's first lady principal, Datin Lorna Mathews, served the school in 2003, when it celebrated its 100th anniversary. During her tenure the administration office and the staff rooms were renovated and expanded. She also developed the Form 6 Block, the workshop, the school archive, the conference room, the chapel, the new grandstand, the covered walkway and the installation of the closed-circuit television camera (CCTV). She upgraded all of the students' and teachers' washrooms, the classrooms, the floor tiling and improved the school landscape. In addition, she had initiated Form 6 Graduation Ceremony and made the Prefects Installation Ceremony a special function on its own.[8]

Current and former principals

Pre-war (1903–1941)

Name Year
Mr. Chai Ah Soon  1903–1916
Mr. Chin Wui Liong  1917
Mr. George Yong  1918–1920
Rev. F.W. Synott    1925–1926
Rev. Charles J. Collis 1926–1931
Rev. S.M. Collier  1931–1932
Rev. J. Paisley  1932–1933
Rev. S.M. Collier  1933–1937
Rev. Henthorne 1937
Rev. S.M. Collier 1938

Post-war (1947–present)

Name Year
Rev. P.H. Clough 1947–1950
Rev. E.C.W. Rusted 1951–1968
Mr. Noel Chin 1968–1973
Mr. Y. Mathai 1973–1981
Mr. Teo Then Wah 1982–2000
Mr. Ronnie Khoo 2001–2003
Datin Lorna Mathews 2003–2011
Mdm. Tiong Ai Ping 2011-2016
Dr. Mary Gambidau 2016−present

Academics

The school offers basic and advanced secondary courses. Students have the core classes of maths, science, Malay language, English, history, Islamic education (for Muslim students), and moral education (for non-Muslim students). Non-core classes such as geography, physical and health education, visual arts, music, living skills, Chinese, Kadazan-Dusun and Tamil languages are also offered to the students as elective and optional subjects.

Students in the higher secondary however, are offered elective classes according to their chosen streams. Elective classes include Add Maths, biology, chemistry, physics, accountancy, etc. Students in All Saints Pre-University (Form 6) will enrol as Lower 6 students then re-enrol as Upper 6 students. Form 6 students are offered the Science stream and Arts stream.

Co-curriculum

All students are required to participate in at least two co-curricular activities. Many clubs and organizations are offered and they fall into the following categories: Uniformed Groups, Performing Arts, Clubs & Societies, and Sports & Games. Competitions and performances are regularly held.

School magazine

The Saint

The first school magazine, The Saint, was published in 1952. In 1957, the Rotary Club of Jesselton donated a second-hand printing press to the school and a large quantity of type blocks was donated by a firm in Sheffield, England. The school printed its own magazine from then till 1969. Presently, the school magazine has become the school's yearbook and selected students are assigned to the Editorial Board to publish the yearbook.

International relations

Global Generation Programme

Japan

All Saints has international links with the Arima Senior High School, in Sanda, Hyōgo, Japan through the Global Generation Programme which started in 2005 and continues bi-annually. The students from Arima Senior High School come from Japan to visit the school, learn the differences between Japanese and Malaysian life and culture here in Sabah, led by selected All Saints students.[9] Students who are selected to participate in the student-exchange programme travel to Arima Senior High School in Japan, accompanied by teachers. The bi-annual programme allows All Saints students to experience the life and culture of Japan and to make Japanese friends.[10]

Korea

In 2017, All Saints School initiated an international student-exchange programme with Bisan Middle School from Anyang, Gyeonggi, South Korea. This programme allows Malaysian students to develop a global perspective. The students exchange their knowledge of the language and culture of both countries. Teaching and learning methods in STEM fields as well as opinions on global warming, oceanic pollution and other crucial environmental issues abroad are exchanged. Furthermore, students are provided with the opportunity to experience the traditional food, cooking recipes, dances and traditional curiosities of both countries. This programme is held biannually for two weeks in the months of July and November. The programme involves approximately 20 students aged 14–16 from both schools.

Sakura Science Exchange Programme

Since 2015, All Saints School has established international relations with Hokkaido Sapporo Keisei High School in Japan through the Sakura Science Programme[11] to promote establishment of a mutual research scheme and a high school-university international partnership (Rakuno Gakuen University of Hokkaido, Japan and Universiti Malaysia Sabah), to help raise the next generation who will contribute to solving Asian challenges of biodiversity and water resources. This programme is fully sponsored by the Japan Science and Technology Agency (JST).

Each year, five students who have excelled in their academics are selected to participate in this programme. These students spend a week in Sapporo, Japan accompanied by a teacher. Subsequently, selected students from Sapporo visit Kota Kinabalu. Students from both nations are also given the opportunity to exchange cultures and traditions during the stay with their foster families.

Krimbati Program

In January 2019, All Saints School carried out the Krimbati program. Krimbati comes from a Kwijau word for orangutan-like creatures. The aim of the programme was to spread awareness about the yaws disease which was common in some tropical countries. The school held a competition open to all students that had them forming groups of up to eight people to create a video on any subject, as long as the video had a moral lesson. Team "Peraturan Tigopulumpat" won the first place and a prize of RM100.

Nearby landmarks

All Saints School is located near some notable touristic, biological and athletic locations. Among them are the must-visit Kota Kinabalu City Mosque, located a six-minute walk away.

Furthermore, the Kota Kinabalu Wetland Centre (KKWC), is a 24-hectare mangrove forest located a five-minute drive away. This site widely known for its conservation efforts, earning it a Ramsar title.

Nearby Likas Stadium is usually used for sports training by students from All Saints School. It is also the venue for the school's annual Sports Day.

Notable alumni

References

  1. ^ "SM All Saints was built in April 1, 1903 | Daily Express Newspaper Online". Daily Express. 24 October 2013.
  2. ^ "Declared open by Governor E. W. Birch on Dec 22, 1903 | Daily Express Newspaper Online". Daily Express. 24 October 2013.
  3. ^ Roslan, Fiqah (March 2, 2017). "Better STPM Results with Modular System - Principal". Borneo Post. Sabah. Archived from the original on 27 May 2023. Retrieved 25 July 2023.
  4. ^ "Anglican Diocese of Sabah". www.anglicansabah.org. Archived from the original on 2017-03-19.
  5. ^ "Anglican Diocese of Sabah". www.anglicansabah.org. Archived from the original on 2017-03-19.
  6. ^ "All Saints was first to have pure science | Daily Express Newspaper Online". Daily Express. 24 October 2013.
  7. ^ "Sekolah Menengah All Saints Likas". www.sabah.org.my.
  8. ^ "Datin Lorna had made changes in the administration and management of the school | Daily Express Newspaper Online". Daily Express. 24 October 2013.
  9. ^ "All Saints welcomes Japanese friends | Daily Express Newspaper Online". Daily Express. 2 August 2011.
  10. ^ Yee, Chok Sim (2013-07-30). "Japanese students here to learn about Sabah culture, life". BorneoPost Online | Borneo, Malaysia, Sarawak Daily News.
  11. ^ "Principal: They want the best". Daily Express. 25 June 2016.