Rustenburg School for Girls
Rustenburg Girls' High School and Rustenburg Girls' Junior School are two separate public schools with a shared history, originating in the suburb of Rondebosch in Cape Town, South Africa. Rustenburg was founded in 1894 and divided into separate junior and high schools in 1932.
History
The school was founded in 1894 in the historic Rustenburg House, which dates from the early years of the Dutch settlement at the Cape In 1932, the school was divided into two schools, and the high school moved into its new buildings on Erinville Estate and Charlie's Hope in the suburb of Rosebank, while the junior school remained in Rustenburg House on Main Road, Rondebosch. Charlie's Hope was subsequently demolished in 1976, before being rebuilt closer to the school. Erinville is now the name of the High School's boarding house. Rustenburg House was declared a National Monument in 1941.Headmistresses of the Combined School:
- Miss Alicia Bleby, 1894–1911
- Miss Jean Donaldson-Wright, 1912–1916
- Miss Caroline Kemp, 1916–1933
- Miss Caroline Kemp, 1933–1936
- Miss Gwen Hazell, 1937–1951
- Miss Margaret Thomson, 1952–1979
- Mrs Josephine McIntyre, 1980–1991
- Mrs Mary van Blerk, 1991–1999
- Dr Elizabeth Fullard, 1999–2006
- Mrs Susan Schnetler, 2006-2007
- Ms Laura Bekker, 2007–2015
- Mrs Susan Schnetler, 2016
- Mr Michael Gates, 2017–present
- Miss Marion Roper, 1933–1944
- Miss Zoë Orton, 1945–1967
- Mrs Ruth Jones, 1968–1977
- Miss Hazel Lentin, 1978–1998
- Mrs Joyce Conway, 1998–2007
- Mrs Di Berry, 2008–2018
- Mrs Belinda Petersen, 2019–present
Academics
A 2013 survey by Fairlady magazine listed Rustenburg Girls' High School among the top 25 schools in the country.
In 2014, Rustenburg Girls' High School again qualified for inclusion in the official top 20 schools list and was placed sixth.
In 2015, the Western Cape Education Department stopped ranking the top schools in order of their performance and instead listed them alphabetically. In this year, Rustenburg Girls' High School was included in the list of the top 22 schools.
In 2019, a Grade 7 student at Rustenberg Girls' Junior School came first in the Western Cape at the Horizon Maths Competition.
In 2023, a matriculant from Rustenberg Girls' High School was honoured as the country's top candidate overall as well as in Maths.
| Grade 12 NSC Results | 2006 | 2007 | 2008 | 2009 | 2010 | 2011 | 2012 | 2013 | 2014 | 2015 | 2016 | 2017 | 2018 | 2019 | 2020 | 2021 | 2022 |
| Number of candidates | 127 | 130? | 142 | 152 | 161 | 154 | 136 | 143 | 151 | 152 | 149 | 171 | 143 | 166 | 163 | 154 | 165 |
| Pass Rate | 100 | 100 | 100 | 100 | 100 | 100 | 100 | 100 | 100 | 100 | 100 | 100 | 100 | 100 | 98.8 | 100 | 100 |
| Matriculation Exemption/ Bachelors Pass | 98.4% | 97% | 99% | 97% | 97.5% | 98% | 99.3% | 97.9% | 98.7% | 99.3% | 99.3% | 99.4% | 99.3% | 100% | 97.5% | 98.7% | 98.2% |
| Subject A's | - | 262 | 324 | 313 | 373 | 458 | 467 | 430 | 508 | 607 | 581 | 631 | 510 | 614 | 558 | 611 | 647 |
| Top aggregate | - | 106.1% | 92.3% | 90.8% | 90.8% | 94% | 93% | 96% | 96.7% | 96.2% | 97.5% | 96% | 97.8% | 96.0% | 95.8% | 96.5% | 97.8% |
Sport
Rustenburg has historically been well represented in South African and Western Province teams. In 2012, two girls represented South Africa in tennis and artistic gymnastics, while two staff members represented South Africa in sevens rugby and triathlon.The high school has nine tennis/netball courts, a swimming pool and two hockey/cricket fields. An astroturf playing field was installed during 2014 with floodlights added in 2016
The following sports are offered by Rustenburg Girls' High School: cricket, cross-country, hockey, indoor hockey, netball, running, football, squash, swimming, tennis, touch rugby, waterpolo
Music
The school has an orchestra, choir, chamber choir, jazz band, wind band, string quartet, vocal quartet, string ensemble and savuyisa.Notable alumni
- Frances Ames, neurologist, psychiatrist, and human rights activist
- Jodi Balfour, film and television actress
- Louise Carver, singer
- Janette Deacon, archaeologist
- Mabel Malherbe, South African politician
- Hlubi Mboya, film and television actress and humanitarian
- Debora Patta, broadcast journalist and television producer
- Leila Reitz, the first woman elected to South Africa's parliament
- Edith Layard Stephens, botanist
- Désirée Talbot, opera singer
- Marjorie van Heerden, book illustrator
- Pauline Vogelpoel MBE, late director of the Contemporary Art Society and member of the International Council of the Tate Gallery
- Elizabeth Voigt, late director of the McGregor Museum in Kimberley
In popular culture