Bradford Grammar School
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Motto | hoc age ('Do this') |
---|---|
Established | 1548 |
Type | Independent school Co-educational grammar school |
Location | Keighley Road Bradford West Yorkshire BD9 4JP England Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. |
Students | 1122 |
Gender | Co-educational |
Ages | 6–18 |
Colours | Blue & maroon |
Built | 1945 |
Co-education since | 1999 |
Website | Bradford Grammar School |
Bradford Grammar School (BGS) is ranked as a Top Ten UK best value independent school for girls and boys aged 6 to 18 in Yorkshire. It is a co-educational, independent school in Frizinghall, Bradford, West Yorkshire, England. Headmaster, Simon Hinchliffe is a member of the Headmasters' and Headmistresses' Conference (HMC). The school was founded in 1548 and granted its Charter by King Charles II in 1662.[1] Until 1975 it was a direct grant grammar school, and when this scheme was abolished it chose to become independent.[2] The school motto is Latin: Hoc Age (Do This).[3]
Entrance is by examination, except for the Sixth Form, where admission is based on GCSE results. The school gives means-tested bursaries to help with fees. Bradford Grammar School, unusually for a private school, does not offer scholarships based on academic achievement, a policy enforced by a previous headmaster, Stephen Davidson.
Contents
Education
In 2013, the pass rate for GCSE (Grades A* - C) was 99%, which was equalled by the A-Level students.[citation needed] 31 courses are offered for A-Levels, and 97% of sixth-form pupils went on to study further education or deferred a year.[4] The standard requirement for entry to the sixth form is nine B grades at GCSE, in 2008 the lower sixth had an average equivalent to ten A grades at GCSE.
The pupil to teacher ratio is 15:1,[citation needed] and class sizes start at around 20 in the first year and are often below 10 by the final year. There are currently 934 pupils in the Senior School, including 267 in the Sixth Form and 188 in the Junior School (Clock House). The school became fully co-educational in September 1999. As at September 2011 687 boys and 435 girls were on the role. Currently there are 115 members of staff at the school.
Facilities
Over the past 15 years the school has completed a £14 million buildings development programme.
In 2001 the school built a multi-million pound Sixth Form Centre, funded primarily by Roger Evans and by pupil fund-raising. Eminent former pupil David Hockney, contributed to the funding of the large theatre, where many school productions are performed, adjacent to the sports hall. The school's computing facilities have been updated regularly in the past few years, and the school now has ten IT suites. Pupils have access to their files and email from home, by remote login and have access to the internet and email throughout the day.
The school has a Design Technology department with 4 workshops, 3 classrooms and 2 CAD suites. The school's large art department is spread over 5 classrooms, one of which is reserved for the use of sixth form students. A recently-built three-storey building houses the departments of chemistry and the social sciences, while a brand new library, currently being constructed, will provide additional IT facilities and study space. Other recent developments include a new sports pavilion and a Learning Link, which joins the main building to the newer science buildings and library.
The grammar school also has a classics department; it is compulsory for all pupils to study Latin for two years, and pupils can choose to go on to study Latin, Classical Civilisation or Ancient Greek to A-Level. In Modern Languages, pupils have the option to study Japanese, Chinese (not to GCSE or A level standard), Russian, Spanish, French and German, and the school has a laboratory to facilitate the active learning of modern languages. There are twenty networked computers, all equipped with language software that allow pupils to speak to a member of staff, as well as to be paired up to perform role-plays.
Sport
The school's first sport for boys is rugby union, and for girls it is netball or hockey, but there are opportunities to take part in other sports including squash, tennis, table-tennis, cross-country, swimming, water polo, cricket,and rowing, on the River Aire.
The school has an all-weather pitch used for hockey and football as well as nine courts used for netball and tennis. The £1m pavilion, built in 2008, contains changing rooms and space for functions. The school has two squash courts (each with their own showers and changing rooms) that also have been revamped in the last few years. BGS has four rugby pitches, which in the summer are converted into two cricket grounds. The sports hall is large and has recently been refloored. The school has an equipped gym with rowing machines, cycling machines, a treadmill and weights which was modernised in 2011. The modern 25m swimming pool is open to staff and students before the start of school and swimming and is used for swimming and water polo training at lunchtimes and evenings. A further senior gym is used for fitness training and PE lessons.
Extra-curricular activities
Cadet Force
As an alternative or a supplement to extra-curricular sport, the school maintains a volunteer Combined Cadet Force. In the 1980s, this was reduced to just the Army contingent. However, in recent years the numbers have swelled and the RAF section has been reopened, and pupils now regularly fly and partake in RAF courses. The school owns its own 25-metre shooting range. In later years, The CCF has been regenerated by the efforts of Squadron leader Dheeraj Bhasin. Bhasin has served as a pilot in the Royal Air Force and has been the commandant of the Jaguar Weapons Training School and Head of Fast Jets. He has also served in Kosovo and taken a major role in Operation Enduring Freedom and Operation Iraqi Freedom.
Debating
The school is known at national level for its competitive debating teams.[citation needed] Three pupils over the past ten years have been selected for the England Schools' Debating team which competes at the World Schools Debating Championships, and former pupils of the school have reached the Grand Final of the World Universities Debating Championships.[citation needed]
Music
The Music Department has many musical groups and clubs for pupils to join including; Senior Orchestra, Folk Group, Early Music Group, Senior Choir, Junior Choir, Junior Orchestra, Concert Band, Samba Band and String Group. The Music School is fully equipped with classrooms, a recording studio, auditorium and 12 private teaching rooms for individual instrument tuition.
Other
The school has a science club for the junior years, a physics group for sixth formers and a biology club, all of which meet regularly at lunchtimes. Pupils take part in the maths team challenge, maths challenge and olympiad, physics challenge and chemistry olympiad every year.
Arts
The interior walls of the school are decorated with artwork by pupils and a number of David Hockney's works are on display in public and private areas of the school. The music suite has several practice rooms and holds concerts throughout the year including some with major orchestral works, some featuring one instrument and some featuring the musicians of a particular year group. A musical is staged every year and rock and folk concerts end the year. The Hockney Theatre hosts a programme through the year and a full-time technician manages a student production team to service the performances. Curriculum evenings by the lower school drama groups or the A-Level Theatre Studies groups are placed between plays written specifically for pupils, Shakespeare performances, comedies and musicals. Recent productions have included Oliver!, Grease, Hedda Gabler, As You Like It, Blood Brothers, The Merchant of Venice, Peer Gynt and The Merry Wives of Windsor. In March 2007 the BGS Dramatic Society staged The Wiz, a motown version of The Wizard of Oz.More recent shows are The Winters Tale produced by a year seven class.
Annual events
Founders Day is an annual event held at Bradford Cathedral to remember the start of the school and notable characters from its history. Attendance is compulsory for 1st to 4th years and some of the 6th form. Prize giving is held in the Price Hall. A number of speeches from a guest (the guest in 2008 was Lord (Digby) Jones of Birmingham), the chairman of the governors and the headmaster are given. Then prizes are presented to those who have performed well at any aspect of school life. The Spring Fair is held around the whole school, and has many stalls and entertaining activities, especially the army assault course and the drama workshops. This year it is held on Saturday, 8 May at the school. The Christmas Fair is held every year with the support of the Netball Parents Association, and includes many stalls from local businesses and pupils, as well as a Santa's Grotto, Mince Pies & Festive Music. The school also regularly takes part in charity fundraising events such as Children in Need and Comic Relief.
History
The school grounds have been used as a helicopter landing ground by the royal family when they are visiting the local area due to its large fields. The most recent landing was by Prince William, in 2014.
Second World War
The "new" school building in Frizinghall was actually completed in 1939, however the start of the Second World prevented the building from being opened as a school. During the war, the main school building was used as a Primary Training Centre,[5] and there is still evidence of this around the building. During this time, many of the pupils from BGS were evacuated to Settle[6] and returned when the building was released from army occupation and completed. Inside the school there is a large memorial to the former pupils who died in the war.
Frizinghall railway station
Frizinghall railway station closed in 1965 and remained closed for 22 years. During this time, staff and pupils at the school campaigned hard to get the station reopened. In the end, it was due to the efforts of an English teacher, Robin Sisson[7] that the station was reopened. Now, over half of the passengers travelling on the Bradford lines alight or embark at Frizinghall railway station.
Alumni
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- John Sharp (1645–1714), Archbishop of York
- Abraham Sharp (1653–1742), mathematician and scientific instrument maker
- David Hartley (1705–1757), philosopher and physician
- John William Whittaker (1790–1854), clergyman
- Frederick Delius (1862–1934), composer
- Benson Taylor (1989–1998), film composer
- Sir Charles Harris (1864–1943), civil servant
- Henry de Beltgens Gibbins (1865–1907), economic historian
- William Binnie (1867–1949), civil engineer
- Sir Frank Watson Dyson[8] (1868–1939), Astronomer Royal
- Charles Wilson[9](1869–1959), physicist
- John Lawrence Hammond[10] (1872–1949), historian and journalist
- Sir William Rothenstein[11] (1872–1945), artist
- Albert Rutherston (1881–1953), painter and illustrator
- Humbert Wolfe (1885–1930), poet and civil servant
- Charles Fairburn (1887–1945), railway engineer
- John Rawlings Rees (1890–1969), psychiatrist
- Sir Mortimer Wheeler[12] (1890–1976), archaeologist and broadcaster
- Arthur Raistrick (1896–1991), civil engineer, industrial archaeologist and pacifist
- Harry McEvoy (1902–1984), breakfast cereal manufacturer
- Richard Eurich (1903–1992), painter
- H. L. A. Hart[13] (1907–1992), legal philosopher
- Geoffrey Barraclough[14] (1908–1984), historian
- William Henry Walsh (1913–1986), philosopher
- Kenneth Garside (1913–1983), Academic Librarian and Military Intelligence Officer
- Michael Wharton[15] (1913–2006), columnist Peter Simple
- Alan Bullock[16] (1914–2004), a.k.a. Baron Bullock of Leafield, historian
- Denis Healey, Baron Healey[17] (1917–2015), Chancellor of the Exchequer
- Sir Ken Morrison[18] (born 1931), Executive Chairman of Morrisons
- Rt Rev Alan Smithson (1936-2010), Bishop of Jarrow
- David Hockney[19] (born 1937), artist
- Malcolm Laycock[20] (1938–2009), radio presenter and producer
- Vivian Nutton (born 1943), classicist and medical historian
- Paul Slack (born 1943), historian
- Michael Jack[21] (born 1946), politician
- Jonathan Silver (1949–1997), entrepreneur and art gallery owner
- Colin Lawson (born 1949) clarinetist, academic and Director of the Royal College of Music
- Nick Toczek (born 1950), writer and performer
- Richard Nerurkar, marathon and 10,000 metres runner
- Boris Rankov (born 1954), Professor of Roman History at Royal Holloway, University of London; 6-time Boat Race winner with Oxford
- John Bainbridge Webster (born 1955), Chair of Systematic Theology at King's College, University of Aberdeen
- Alistair Campbell (born 1957), journalist
- David Miliband (born 1965) Former Labour Party politician, former Foreign Secretary
- David Wootton (born 1958), Lord Mayor of London
- Roger Mosey (born 1958), Head of BBC Television News
- John Mann (politician), (born 1960), Member of Parliament for Bassetlaw
- Ashley Metcalfe (born 1963), former Yorkshire County Cricket Club cricketer
- Andrew Jones (born 1963), Member of Parliament for Harrogate and Knaresborough
- Adrian Moorhouse[22] (born 1964), Olympic gold medallist swimmer
- Enzo Cilenti, born 1974) actor
- Robert Hardy[23] (born 1980), bassist of Franz Ferdinand
- Dan Scarbrough (born 1978), England rugby union player (Full back / Wing)
- Charlie Hodgson[24] (born 1980), England rugby union player (Fly half)
- Uzair Mahomed (born 1987), cricketer
- Alistair Brownlee[25] (born 1988) British triathlete; brother of Jonathan Brownlee
- Jonathan Brownlee (born 1990) British triathlete; brother of Alistair Brownlee.
- Georgie Henley (born 1995), actress
- John Hollingworth English actor
References
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- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ Merriam-Webster definition of Hoc-Age
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ The people's war A recollection by a soldier who was at BGS during the war
- ↑ The peoples war
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- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ Schoolnet info
- ↑ Bradford Libraries
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ Oxford biography
- ↑ History Honor Society
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ Leeds University Honorary graduands
- ↑ Autobiography
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ Peter Vacher Malcolm Laycock Obituary, The Guardian, 10 November 2009
- ↑ Michael Jack official website
- ↑ T&A article
- ↑ PlayLouder interview
- ↑ RFU profile
- ↑ Beijing Olympics GB profile
External links
- Use dmy dates from July 2013
- Use British English from December 2014
- Articles containing Latin-language text
- Articles with unsourced statements from February 2009
- Official website not in Wikidata
- Member schools of the Headmasters' and Headmistresses' Conference
- Independent schools in Bradford District
- Schools in Bradford
- Educational institutions established in the 1540s
- 1548 establishments in England
- People educated at Bradford Grammar School