Wycombe High School
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Motto | Fortiter, Fideliter and Feliciter (Bravely, Faithfully and Joyfully) |
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Established | 1901 |
Type | Academy Grammar school |
Headteacher | Mrs Sharon Cromie |
Location | Marlow Road High Wycombe Buckinghamshire HP11 1TB England Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. |
DfE URN | 136723 Tables |
Ofsted | Reports Pre-academy reports |
Students | 1,340 |
Gender | Girls |
Ages | 11–18 |
Colours | Blue and Burgundy |
Website | www.whs.bucks.sch.uk |
Wycombe High School is a girls' grammar school in High Wycombe, Buckinghamshire. It is an Academy, taking girls from the age of 11 through to the age of 18. The school has approximately 1,340 pupils,[1] and became an Academy in 2011.[2]
In September 2005, the Department for Education and Skills (DfES) awarded the school specialist school status in Mathematics & Computing.[3]
Contents
History
The school was the first state grammar school for girls in Buckinghamshire when it opened in 1901 with eighteen students.[4]
In 1901, the school was housed in the Clock House in Frogmoor, High Wycombe. At that time, enrolment was 18 fee-paying students and three staff. Miss Mary Christie M.A. was the first headmistress.
The school moved to Benjamin Road in 1906 where it remained for 50 years, except for a time during the First World War when it was evacuated to the old grammar school so that Benjamin Road buildings could be used as a military hospital. By 1922 the school had 300 pupils and was rapidly expanding. The school acquired its status as a Voluntary Controlled Girl's Grammar School in 1944. By 1956 the number of girls wishing to attend the school was so great that the school moved again to new premises that were built at the present site on Marlow Hill.
It won Top of the Form in 1959.[5]
Over the years new buildings were added to the school as it grew larger, with Technology, Sport and Drama blocks being some of the latest additions. These were built to allow for the extra 300 pupils and staff that arrived when Lady Verney High School joined with Wycombe High in 1993. The most recent addition is the new music centre which opened in the Summer term in 2015. The school houses a well-resourced library, conference facilities, the school archive and .[6]
Uniform and PE kit
Wycombe High School have a fairly strict uniform code, consisting of a blue, rever collared blouse, a coloured jumper (cobalt blue for years 7-9, burgundy for years 10 & 11) and either hipster trousers or a box-pleated skirt.
The PE is a black and blue nylon shirt, with a matching skirt/skort. The regulation hoodie is also required. Students are required to have black dance leggings, black tracksuit bottoms, black athletic shorts, hockey socks, shin pads, football boots, two pairs of trainers.
The uniform changed from a very traditional pale blue and white striped shirt and pleated navy skirt, to the current uniform in 2002, with a mixed response from pupils.
Curriculum
Subjects taught at Wycombe High school from Year 7 are: English, Maths, Science, Art, Emotional Resilience, ICT, History, Geography, French, Latin, Religious Studies, Physical Education, Drama and Technology (alternating between Graphics, Textiles and Food throughout the year). From September 2010, Wycombe High School introduced a new scheme where Year 9 students begin two chosen GCSEs. The students choose 4 GCSE subjects (2 to start in Year 9, 2 to start in Year 10), as well as studying the compulsory core subjects - English Language, English Literature, Maths, Biology, Chemistry, Physics, and a short course in Citizenship. In Year 9, students also take part in 5 'Enrichment Courses' of their choice.
Notable former pupils
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- Julia Bone, tennis player[7]
- Rita Clifton CBE, advertising executive
- Gladys Colton, headmistress of City of London School for Girls, 1949 to 1972[8]
- Lucinda Dryzek, actress
- Isa Guha, England cricketer
- E. L. James, author of wrote Fifty Shades of Grey
- Penny Jamieson, Bishop of Dunedin, New Zealand[9]
- Shan Morgan CMG, British diplomat
- Kate Howat, model at Elite London
References
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- ↑ http://www.whs.bucks.sch.uk/explore/about-the-school About the school]
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ ‘COLTON, Gladys M.’, in Who Was Who 1981–1990 (London: A. & C. Black, 1991, ISBN 0-7136-3336-0); online edition by Oxford University Press, December 2007
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