NextGenLive
Scots College (NZ)

Scots College (NZ)

Virtutem paret doctrina

Est. 1916

Watch live
About Scots College (NZ)

Scots College in Wellington is a long-established independent school with a distinct Presbyterian character and a strong presence in New Zealand’s educational landscape. Founded in 1916 by Rev James Gibb and the Hon John Aitken, the school began on the Thorndon site that is now home to Queen Margaret College. Its founders envisioned a Christian college that would operate outside the state system, combining academic standards with character formation. The move to the current Strathmore Park campus in 1920 set the foundation for the school’s modern identity. From its earliest years, the college cultivated a strong sense of heritage, reflected in its ceremonies, tartan, pipe band traditions and the prominence given to historical symbolism throughout campus life.

Over the past century the school has expanded from a small boys’ boarding institution into a large IB World School with students from Year 1 to Year 13. The transition to co-education, introduced between 2020 and 2022, represented one of the most significant shifts in the college’s history. It was framed as part of a broader future-focused strategy, ensuring the school remained aligned with global educational trends and the expectations of modern families. Despite this shift, long-standing cultural markers remain intact, including the use of kilts for prefects at formal events and the ongoing connection to Scots heritage through music, ceremony and campus architecture. The Main Block is listed as a Heritage New Zealand Category 2 historic building and still serves as a central landmark.

The campus has undergone a sustained programme of expansion and redevelopment, reflecting both roll growth and the shift toward contemporary learning environments. Major additions include the science block opened in 2006, the Hodge Sports Centre in 2011, and the Creative and Performing Arts Centre in 2012, which houses facilities for drama, music, art and the school’s pipe band. In recent years the college has embraced flexible learning areas that support collaborative, project-based learning and senior student autonomy. The most prominent upgrade was the McKinnon Block, opened in 2020, which includes food science, design and fabrication laboratories, senior common areas, and pastoral facilities for the growing number of female students. Gibb House, the boarding facility named after the school’s founder, accommodates around 130 students and continues to play a major role in school culture.

House identity and inter-house activity remain a defining feature of life at Scots. The Middle and Senior Schools operate eight houses whose names reflect founding figures and major contributors to the college. These houses compete across swimming, cross-country, music, athletics and weekly sports, while the Preparatory School maintains its own set of four houses with their own traditions and history. The structure supports vertical interaction across age groups and fosters loyalty within each house community.

Sport has long been one of the school’s strongest public-facing pillars. Scots College fields competitive sides across major codes, most notably rugby, football, basketball, and cricket. The school’s 1st XV competes in Wellington’s Premier 1 division and enjoyed significant success in the mid-2010s, including winning the New Zealand Secondary Schools Championship in 2014 and placing third at the Sanix Youth Tournament in Japan the following year. Rugby traditions include a distinctive haka composed by an Old Boy for 1st XV fixtures. The school also maintains regular inter-school matches with both regional secondary schools and traditional brother and sister schools such as Queen Margaret College. The boarding houses and growing international student cohort contribute to the strength of senior sports programmes.

Scots College alumni span a wide range of professions. Among the most well-known are basketballer Steven Adams, All Black and Sevens international Victor Vito, health leader Ashley Bloomfield, satirist John Clarke, and a number of professional footballers including Sarpreet Singh and Eugenio Pizzuto. The school’s academic alumni include surgeons, legal scholars, authors and public servants, reinforcing the college’s longstanding emphasis on producing well-rounded graduates.

With its mix of heritage, modern facilities, international curriculum and strong sporting culture, Scots College occupies a distinctive position within Wellington’s educational environment. The shift to co-education has broadened its identity, while the school maintains an environment shaped by tradition, pastoral care and wide-ranging student opportunities across academics, culture and sport.