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諾丁漢中學(xué)

Nottingham High School

 
 

 

 

 

 

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Nottingham High School, 諾丁漢中學(xué),諾丁漢高級(jí)學(xué)校 Waverley Mount, Nottingham NG7 4ED
Tel: 0115 978 6056 Fax: 0115 979 2202
Website: www.nottinghamhigh.co.uk
• BOYS, 11–18, Day
• Pupils 820, Upper sixth 115
• Termly fees £2690
• HMC
• Enquiries/application to the Headmaster

What it’s like

Founded in 1513 by Dame Agnes Mellers, widow of Richard Mellers – a bell-founder and Mayor of Nottingham. She was granted a royal charter from Henry VIII. It had early links with Oxford and Cambridge to which many boys went as scholars. From the turn of the 19th century it expanded steadily to its present size and in 1868 moved to its present position between the Arboretum and the Forest – a very agreeable, urban site with fine gardens. The large campus is both well designed and well equipped, with many recent developments. It is a well-run school with motivated pupils and staff. Its academic standards are high and examination results are excellent. Music is very strong with a range of musical groups. There is much activity in drama throughout the school. Sports and games are compulsory for everyone and high standards are attained each year (the school has an outstanding record at county and national level). Numerous clubs and societies cater for most conceivable needs. Chess is especially strong. There is a large and flourishing CCF and an active scout group. At any one time there are over 120 pupils taking part in the Duke of Edinburgh’s Award Scheme for silver and gold awards. Outdoor pursuits, eg orienteering, canoeing, rock-climbing, are widely encouraged and expeditions and foreign trips are frequent. The school combines with Nottingham Girls’ High School in joint theatrical productions, concerts etc. A large number of boys are actively engaged in local community work.

School profile


Scholarships & bursaries
9 pa scholarships, up to 15 pa entrance bursaries, 2 HSBC scholarships; additional sixth-form scholarships and bursaries including Ogden Trust science bursary.

Head & staff

Headmaster: Christopher Parker, in post from 1995. Educated at Windsor Grammar School, and at universities of Bristol (geography) and Cambridge (education). Previously Headmaster of Batley Grammar School, Deputy Head of Goffs School, and Senior Geography Master at Bradford Grammar. Also FRSA; former Chairman of Government Advisory Group on Independent/State School Partnerships; Vice Chairman of the Permanent Forum on Independent/State School Partnerships; Co-Chairman of ISC–LGA Joint Committee.
Teaching staff: 74 full time, 5 part time. Annual turnover 4%. Average age 45.

Exam results

GCSE: In 2003, 119 pupils in Year 11, of whom 99% gained at least grade C in 7+ subjects. Average GCSE score 68 (69 over 5 years).
A-levels: 115 in upper sixth: 98% passed in 4+ subjects; 2% in 3 subjects. Average final point score achieved by upper sixth formers 462.

University & college entrance
94% of 2003 sixth-form leavers went on to a degree course (12% after a gap year), 14% to Oxbridge. 14% took courses in medicine, dentistry & veterinary science, 30% in science & engineering, 5% in law, 16% in humanities & social sciences, 16% in business and finance, 12% in other subjects. Others typically go on to non-degree courses or into employment.

Curriculum
GCSE, AS and A-levels. 16 GCSE subjects, 20 AS and 18 A-level.
Sixth form: Most sixth formers take 4 subjects at AS-level, 3 at A-level; in addition, all take AS and A-level general studies. 17% take science A-levels; 26% arts/humanities; 57% both. Evidence of key skills attainment built up and recorded by students in school-provided logbook.
Vocational: Work shadowing available.
Languages: French, German, Spanish and Latin offered to GCSE and A-level. Regular exchanges (France, Germany, Italy, Spain).
ICT: Taught both as discrete subject in Year 7 (2 lessons a week) and cross-curricular in Years 8–13; most subjects use ICT where appropriate. 160 computers for pupil use (access 8 hours/day), all networked on fast ethernet network, and with email and internet access.

The arts

Music: Approx 25% of pupils learn a musical instrument. Musical groups include 2 orchestras, 3 bands, a number of choirs and ensembles. 1 band in finals of national concert band championships; biennial foreign music tour.
Drama: Drama offered. Strong tradition of school productions.
Art & design: On average, 33 take art GCSE, 8 A-level; 32 take design technology GCSE, 3 A-level.

Sport & activities

Sport: Rugby, athletics, cricket compulsory in 1st year. Sixth form only: football, badminton, golf, squash, shooting, hockey, weight training. Recent national representatives at cross-country, golf, athletics, orienteering, swimming, chess.
Activities: Pupils take silver and gold Duke of Edinburgh’s Award. CCF and Community Action both optional at age 14. Up to 40 clubs, eg canoe, climbing, music, politics, Scouts, stage staff, fencing, debating, Christian Union, chemistry, chess, bridge, eco-schools.

School life

Uniform: School uniform worn throughout.
Houses & prefects: Competitive houses. School captain, prefects, head of house and house prefects, appointed by the Headmaster based on recommendations from housemasters and prefects.
Religion: Attendance at non-denominational religious assemblies compulsory, unless parents request exemption.
Social: Joint concerts and theatrical productions, politics society, Explorer Scouts with Nottingham High (Girls). French and German exchange visits. Pupils allowed to bring own car/bike. Meals formal. School shop. No tobacco or alcohol allowed.

Discipline
Structured sanctions to match severity of offence, eg warning, detention, Saturday detention as appropriate. Firm, clearly explained procedures to combat bullying, involvement with drugs, etc.

Alumni association
is run by Simon Jackson, Lenton House, Cropwell Bishop, Nottingham
NG12 3BQ.

Former pupils
Kenneth Clarke; Geoff Hoon; Edward Balls; Edward Davey; Lord Richardson;
Reg Simpson; Sir Peter Gregson; Sir Douglas Wass.