St. Paul's Missionary College (Malta) should not be confused with St. Paul's Missionary College (Australia).
St. Paul's Missionary College (abbreviated to SPMC) is a Maltese junior school and secondary school situated on Emmanuele Vitale Street in Rabat, Northern Region.
Founded as a non-fee-paying school by Joseph De Piro, it received its first intake in October 1964, in what was then the library of the motherhouse that the Missionary Society of St Paul has in Rabat. The school was the brainchild of Stanley Tomlin.
In its first years, both the academic and support staff were all MSSP members. Work on the present premises of the school started in 1974 and was completed in 1982 with the inauguration of St Agatha's Auditorium. It was completed when the college was the only non-fee-paying private school in Malta, and MSSP members had no fixed income. Over the years, there have been developments in the school curriculum, particularly in science, information technology, and modern languages (French, (Italian and German). [1]
The junior school received its first intake in October 2011, after construction works were done on the former Depiro Youth Centre building.The junior school and senior school combined have a total of 550 students, with 50 students per age group further distributed between two classes of 25 each.