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Marlborough College Malaysia

Coordinates: 1°26′46″N 103°39′03″E / 1.4461°N 103.6509°E / 1.4461; 103.6509
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Marlborough College Malaysia
Location
Map
Jalan Marlborough

Iskandar Puteri

,
79200

Coordinates1°26′46″N 103°39′03″E / 1.4461°N 103.6509°E / 1.4461; 103.6509
Information
TypePrivate International School
Boarding school & Day school
MottoLatin: Deus Dat Incrementum
(1 Corinthians 3:6: "God gives the Increase")
Religious affiliation(s)Anglican foundation but focuses on spirituality rather than Christianity.
Established2012
Chairman of Council Tunku Ali Redhauddin Tuanku Muhriz
PrincipalMRS dajouo
MasterSimon Burbury
GenderCo-educational
Age3 to 18
Enrollment890
Education systemIGCSE, IB
LanguageEnglish
Campus size90-acre (0.36 km2)
Campus typeRural
Houses14 (6 boarding and 8 day)
Colour(s)Royal blue and white   
NicknameMCM
PublicationPiccalilli
YearbookMarlburian Magazine
AffiliationHMC, Council of British International Schools, Federation of British International Schools in Asia
AlumniOld Marlburians
Websitewww.marlboroughcollegemalaysia.org

Marlborough College Malaysia (MCM) is a UK-style curriculum boarding international school in Malaysia for boarding and day pupils. The school is the sister school of Marlborough College in Wiltshire, UK. The college comprises a Pre-Preparatory School for children aged 3 to 8 years; a Preparatory School for boarding and day pupils aged between 8 and 12 years; and a Senior School for boarding and day pupils aged between 13 and 18 years. The current enrollment is approximately 890 pupils, representing 43 nationalities, and the staff-to-pupil ratio at the College is 1:7. The majority of the teaching body have teaching experience either in Marlborough College UK or other British independent schools.

As of today, Marlborough College Malaysia is a full member of FOBISIA.[1]

History

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Marlborough College Malaysia opened on 27 August 2012.[2] The school was built on the former Honan palm plantation as part of the Iskandar Development project in Johor on the southern tip of peninsula Malaysia.[3] The opening of the College was described as a catalytic project complementing the EduCity development and wider regeneration of the Iskandar region of Johor.[4] Marlborough College Malaysia was officially opened by HRH Raja Zarith Sofiah Binti Almarhum Sultan Idris Shah, consort to the Sultan of Johor, on 24 February 2013.[5] The founding Master of the College was Mr Robert Pick, former Second Master of Marlborough College in the UK. Following Mr Pick's retirement, Mr Alan Stevens took over as Master on 1 August 2017 until July 2023.[6] Mr Simon Burbury became Master on 1 August 2023.[7] The schools was listed in 2022 in The Schools Index of the world's 150 best private schools and as one of the top 15 in the China and Southeast Asia category.[8]

Names of the Houses

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Senior Boarding Houses Senior Day Houses Prep School Houses
Honan House Wallace Hunt
Munawir Hill Thompson Merlin
Wills House Butler Seymour
Steel House Sheppard Chichester
Iskandar House
Taylor House

Masters (headmasters) of Marlborough College Malaysia

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  • 2012–2017 Robert Pick
  • 2017–2023 Alan Stevens
  • 2023– Simon Burbury

Governance

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Marlborough College Malaysia is not a franchise but a genuine expansion of Marlborough College in Wiltshire, England.[9] It is operated by M East Sdn Bhd, and its directors are mostly old pupils of Marlborough College. The directors as of 2023 are: HRH Tunku Ali Redhauddin Tuanku Muhriz (Chairman), Richard Fleck CBE, Dr Chin Joo Lim, Jessie W Y Soon, Ir Wan Adlan Affandy bin Wan Abdul Rahman, Chua Guan-Hock SC, Lau Huan Yeong, Nicholas Sampson, Tom Kirkwood, John Baker, Amran Hafiz Affifudin and Kristy Castleton.[10]

IGCSE

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All pupils follow the core curriculum: English Language, English Literature, Mathematics and the three Sciences. Four more subjects may be chosen from the lists below (within various option groups):

Economics Music
Geography Physical Education
History Religious Studies
Art Mandarin First Language
Computer Science Mandarin Foreign Language
Design and Technology Malay First Language
Drama Malay Foreign Language
French Further Pure Mathematics
Spanish

In 2023, 41% of our pupils received 9 or more A*/A grades, with half of the pupils receiving 5 or more A*s [11]

IB Diploma

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In the Sixth Form, pupils study the International Baccalaureate (IB) Program[12] IB Diploma Programme results in 2023 averaged at 33 points, 14% of pupils achieved over 40 points and a 97% pass rate. With many of the pupils going on to study at Internationally renowned Universities.[13]

Pupils must study three subjects at Higher Level (HL) and three at Standard Level (SL). One subject must be chosen from each of the Groups 1 to 5, plus an extra choice from Groups 2, 3, 4 or 6.

Group 1 Group 2 Group 3 Group 4 Group 5 Group 6
English Literature (HL/SL) Mandarin Foreign (HL/SL/Ab Initio) Economics (HL/SL) Biology (HL/SL) Maths (HL/SL) Music (HL/SL)
Mandarin Language and Literature (SL) French Foreign (HL/SL) Geography (HL/SL) Chemistry (HL/SL) Maths Applications and Interpretation (HL/SL) Theatre Arts (HL/SL)
Malay Literature (HL/SL) Malay Foreign (SL/Ab Initio) History (HL/SL) Physics (HL/SL) Maths Analysis and Approaches (HL/SL) Visual Arts (HL/SL)
Self-Taught Mother Tongue (SL) Self-Taught Mother Tongue (SL) Psychology (HL/SL) Design Technology (HL/SL)
English Literature and Language (HL/SL) Spanish Foreign (HL/SL/Ab Initio) Business and Management (HL/SL) Sports, Health and Exercise Science (HL/SL) or Any subject from Groups 2, 3 or 4 (HL/SL)
Performance and Literature (SL) English Language (SL) Global Politics (HL/SL) Computer Science (HL/SL)
World Religions (SL)

School terms

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There are three academic terms in the year:

References

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  1. ^ "Member Schools - FOBISIA". www.fobisia.org. Retrieved 5 October 2024.
  2. ^ "Marlborough opens international school in Malaysia". BBC News. 25 August 2012.
  3. ^ "British expats and investors drawn to Malaysian metropolis". The Daily Telegraph. London. 11 October 2011. Retrieved 15 November 2017.
  4. ^ "British expats and investors drawn to Malaysian metropolis". Iskandar Malaysia. Malaysia. 3 November 2011. Retrieved 22 November 2017.
  5. ^ "Honourable company in east education". The Borneo Post. Malaysia. 1 March 2013. Retrieved 22 November 2017.
  6. ^ "Marlborough College Malaysia Appoints New Master". Malaysia. 3 July 2017. Retrieved 17 November 2017.
  7. ^ Marshall, Sonia (17 October 2022). "New Master appointed at Marlborough College Malaysia". Marlborough College Malaysia. Retrieved 13 February 2024.
  8. ^ "Three HK schools named among top 100 private schools in the world". The Standard (Hong Kong). 22 September 2022. Retrieved 11 April 2024.
  9. ^ "Tatler Schools Guide 2017 - Marlborough College". Tatler. England. 18 September 2016. Retrieved 23 November 2017.
  10. ^ "Governance". Marlborough College Malaysia.
  11. ^ "Academic Results".
  12. ^ "Marlborough College Malaysia International Baccalaureate". www.ibo.org. Retrieved 16 November 2017.
  13. ^ "Academic Results".
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