co-curricular

Clubs

We have a number of clubs which are active and thriving across our two campuses, from Crochet Club to Chess Club. Clubs give our students the opportunity to engage and participate in activities that they enjoy and are passionate about. Our teachers and parents at Trinity volunteer their lunchtime to run clubs for the students as places where they can feel connected and part of a group that share similar interests.

junior campus

Children at Trinity Lutheran College are provided with a wide range of extracurricular activities to broaden and enrich their school experience. The Lunchtime clubs offered in our Junior Years give students the opportunity to engage and participate in activities that they enjoy and are passionate about. Our teachers and parents at Trinity volunteer their lunchtime to run clubs for the students as places where they can feel connected and part of a group that share similar interests. They allow students to experience something new and meet up with other students from different year levels. We are so blessed to have dedicated, enthusiastic and talented teachers and parents who are willing to share their skills with our students and the focus is always on fun and friendship.

Some of the Lunchtime clubs include:

Some of the Lunchtime clubs include:

chess club

The Trinity chess club has proven very popular with aspiring ‘Grand Masters’ signing up for the opportunity to learn about chess, improve their skills and represent Trinity at inter-school tournaments. Every Tuesday morning while most Trinity students are still sleeping or enjoying their breakfasts, the Trinity Checkmates already have their minds in top gear plotting, planning, scheming and laughing. Through professional coaching from the Gardiner Chess Company, our members strengthen their chess knowledge and develop skills such as the four move checkmate, steamroller and the French defence.

Our senior players patiently help our new members to understand the fundamentals of chess while providing a supportive and inviting environment. Each term the Checkmates travel to interschool tournaments where players are grouped and graded into teams of four to go head to head with other local schools. It is in the practice sessions and tournaments that students are required to call upon higher-order thinking skills, analyse actions and consequences, and visualise future possibilities. Chess develops memory, logical thinking, sportsmanship, improves concentration and teaches how to make tough and abstract decisions.

debating

Debating is both a highly challenging and rewarding academic sport; in this unique environment, students are given the opportunity to develop their confidence, improve their communication skills and appreciate an opposing viewpoint. Short preparation debates with no access to technology are particularly challenging because they demand an extensive knowledge of current affairs, local issues and global challenges.