In the dead of night, a blizzard wind began to lash their tents.
Thick snow furled as teachers circulated among the shivering students, reassuring them and reminding them to rug up.
Alpine School campus principal Russell Shem plays ball with Terence Ioannou, 14, Gloria Hong Nhien Bui, 14, Samara Wahab Rahman, 14, Ryan Braid, 14, and Edie Clutterbuck, 14.Credit: Chris Hocking
“It was scary at first,” said 14-year-old Olivia Louwdijk, from Bass Coast College in San Remo.
“But it was super cool.”
For some, the experience would be the defining moment of their term at The Alpine School, a school in the snow and one of four unique campuses at The School for Student Leadership, where 45 students from different government schools across Victoria live and adventure for about nine weeks.
Education Staff and students attending the Alpine School, Dinner Plain.Credit: Chris Hocking
This year the school celebrates 25 years, ushering 720 students a year through leadership, self-awareness and community connection education. All campuses, including Don Valley, Snowy River and Gnurad-Gundidj run for 24 hours and seven days a week.
Alpine School principal Russell Shem had 10 years experience in the independent system before his role at Alpine, including six at Geelong Grammar School’s prestigious year 9 Timbertop program in the foothills of the Victorian Alps.
“These students, young people that come here, their families – it’s about an opportunity unlike anything else, but it doesn’t cost them anywhere near what it would [elsewhere],” he said.
The term costs parents $800, a stark difference to Timbertop’s $22,125 a term.
Alpine School campus principal Russell Shem shoots hoops with students Dylan Pilkington, 14, Terence Ioannou 14, Gloria Hong Nhien Bui 14, Samara Wahab Rahman 14, Ryan Braid, 14, and Edie Clutterbuck, 14. Credit: Chris Hocking
For some of the students arriving at The Alpine School, in Dinner Plain, about a 20-minute drive from Mt Hotham, it’s the first time they’ve ever seen snow, let alone lived within it.
“It was soft - the snow - it was really cool to stand on - to sink in - it was different,” said Seth Buckland, from Cann River School.
The program involves snow camping, skiing and mountain biking. There’s no social media or phones. They are immersed in nature and do chores; dishes, cleaning toilets, washing their clothes and tidying their bedrooms.
For 14-year-old Mitch Herbert, from Orbost Community College, getting stuck in a blizzard was the experience of a lifetime.
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They unzipped their tents to see everything covered with a fresh 15 centimetres of snow and hiked back to the campus in knee-deep powder.
“We were already out there, the option was to hike back or stay the night. It was something everyone wanted to experience … to be able to do that,” said Herbert.
“I’ve done so many cool things I never thought I’d be able to do.”
Shem said the program was perfect for supporting year 9 students’ adolescent stages of development, their brain development, their level of risk-taking behaviour and building relationships.
It also exposed the students to other teens from different cultures, backgrounds and areas.
“We all lead different lives and come together. It’s so good to see how everyone is different and how they’re raised,” said Edie Clutterbuck, from Surf Coast Secondary College.
The School for Student Leadership principal Brendan Pfanner said that in a normal school, students learn for six or so hours a day.
“We can do three times the learning they’d get in a normal school each day.”
Each year the school approaches principals across Victoria for applications. Pfanner said there was always strong demand, and they’d love another “10 campuses”.
Alpine School campus principal Russell Shem with students Dylan Pilkington, 14, Terence Ioannou, 14, Ryan Braid 14, Edie Clutterbuck, 14, Samara Wahab Rahman, 14, Gloria Hong Nhien Bui, 14.Credit: Chris Hocking
Shem said the school was “one of those places or roles that you are prepared to put in the work because you can see the reward, and it’s valued, and it’s making a positive change”.
Stella Oxner, 15, from Castlemaine Secondary College, is testament to that.
“We will all go back as better people,” she said. “We will have grown as people and can go and influence our friends to do the same.”
Ryan Baird from Bass Coast College agrees.
“It’s changed me,” he said.
“My parents said on visiting weekends, ‘damn, is this my kid’. It was really good to hear.”
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