Australia has a system of public (state government) and private (independent) schools. Most public schools are co-educational. Most private schools are administered by their own boards and receive a government subsidy besides having their own fee structure.
Secondary education Schooling is compulsory for students until the age of fifteen, although many students continue on to complete Year 12. The following are
secondary colleges (high schools) in the City of Stonnington: •
De La Salle College, Malvern •
St Kevin's College, Toorak •
The King David School, Armadale •
Korowa Anglican Girls' School, Glen Iris •
Lauriston Girls' School, Armadale •
Loreto Mandeville Hall, Toorak •
Sacré Cœur School, Glen Iris •
St Catherine's School, Toorak •
Melbourne High School, South Yarra • Prahran High School, Windsor Additionally, Kildara College, Malvern operated from 1917 to 1993 and
Presentation College, Windsor operated from 1873 to 2020.
Tertiary education • The
Prahran Mechanics' Institute was founded in 1854. It grew to have a focus on the arts, and spawned the
Prahran Technical Art School in 1909 (later being renamed the Prahran Technical School). In 1973, this body became the
Prahran College of Advanced Education. The national higher education reforms of 1992 saw this body somewhat dismembered, with its campus becoming part of
Swinburne University of Technology (and some of its courses and other aspects going to other organisations). The campus was then transferred to
Melbourne Polytechnic in 2013. • ''Brigidine Teachers' College'' was located in High St, Malvern at the Kildara school and convent. It moved and became part of the new Christ College in Chadstone in 1966. (The book "Reflections over time: collected stories from a group of women who trained as teachers in Catholic Education in 1960" was published by the Brigidine archive in 2005, and features the college.) •
Mercer House (Associated Teachers' Training College) was located at 11 Mercer Rd, Armadale, a short walk from Lauriston. It was established here in 1946, being a continuation of an earlier college in the city founded in 1921. By 1966, it trained both general primary and lower secondary teachers, as well as art, domestic science and special science teachers. The school aimed to supply teachers to Independent schools. It closed and merged into ''Toorak Teachers' College'' in 1975. The property then became
The King David School. • ''Toorak Teachers' College
was established by the state government in Malvern in 1951. It moved to the Stonington mansion in Malvern in 1957. This later became the State College of Victoria at Toorak'', which became part of
Victoria College in 1981. This then became part of
Deakin University in 1991. Deakin chose to close the campus in 2006. • ''Christ College Teachers' College'' was established in 1966, from the merger of Brigidine Teachers' College in Malvern and Presentation Teachers' College in Elsternwick. It was temporarily located in Malvern, before moving to a purpose built building in Chadstone in 1968. The college became the Christ Campus of the
Australian Catholic University, and its location was later redefined as East Malvern. This campus closed in the year 2000, when its operations merged with those in Ascot Vale, and moved to Fitzroy. The site became part of the
Chadstone Shopping Centre car park. ==Public transport==