bourne grammar school bulletin
Transcription
bourne grammar school bulletin
BOURNE GRAMMAR SCHOOL BULLETIN Week ending Friday 18 December 2015 From Jonathan Maddox, Headteacher ________________________________________ HABEAS CORPUS - THE SIXTH FORM PLAY On Wednesday, Friday and Saturday of last week, Alan Bennett’s comedy Habeas Corpus was performed in the Drama Studio. Under the direction of Mr Turnham, the cast of eleven Sixth Form students entertained us with acting of deeply impressive, polished sophistication and remarkable mastery of comic timing. From start to finish, Bennett’s writing sparkles with wit and intelligence, mocking the traditionally prudish attitudes - especially towards sex - of the British middle class of the 1970s. The cast was without weak link. Revelations were Jack Taylor, in the lead role of Dr Wicksteed; having joined our School from elsewhere at the start of Year 12, this was Jack’s first role here and he was exceptional. Charlotte Patchett, playing his feisty wife, was astonishing in her first major role on the BGS stage. Charlotte has a rare natural flair for acting which I hope she will continue to develop by further involvement in our performances. Cam Braid took the major role of Constance Wicksteed and was entirely convincing. The rest of the cast was formed from our finest, most mature actors "1 and actresses, so we were treated to the best that BGS has to offer and the experience was quite the equal of anything else that has been put on here. Jamie Morton, as Dr Wicksteed, has become over the years a versatile and impressive actor and this was much in evidence, especially in his delivery of the comic lines and quips. After two large audiences on Wednesday and Friday it was disappointing that the studio was not full on Saturday but this did not faze the cast; they performed as to a packed house. The reception was warm and enthusiastic. I am glad that there is the confidence here to take on such challenging, sophisticated drama even if there is a risk that full houses may not be pulled in. The experience was precious for the cast and back-stage crew and for us, the audience, it was a treat. A lady from the audience came up to me after the performance to say that she had seen a professional performance of the play only last year and that ours was better - more authentic, funnier and more enjoyable. It really was a tremendous achievement for everyone involved. NEW HEAD STUDENTS, SENIOR PREFECTS AND AMBASSADORS APPOINTED We find that it fits in best with students’ work towards their A-Levels to appoint the Head Students and Prefect team for the calendar year, not the academic year. This means that the outgoing Prefects are now free to devote all their energies to their studies. I am grateful to them for their support and hard work throughout 2015. I am delighted to announce the appointment of a very promising team of Head Students for 2016. The team is: Head Boy: Alistair Pitts Head Girl: Lauren Brown Deputy Head Boys: Ben Bristow, Alec Gray Deputy Head Girls: Neve Crosby, Ellie McAllister "2 The new Senior Prefects are: Owen Bellamy Eleanor Boothman Ben Bristow Lauren Brown Cameron Everist Olivia Corrick Alec Gray Neve Crosby Yacoub Kamareddine* Rebecca De Lima Araujo Alistair Pitts Jade Dodwell* Adam Turner* Ella Glover Felix Wright Ellie McAllister Charlotte Patchett* Rashmi Ramesh Shankar Rachel Smithers * School Ambassadors Elani Taylor CHRISTMAS CONCERT - Wednesday Evening Our first Christmas Concert - replacing our longstanding but not terribly well-attended Family Christmas Service at Bourne Abbey - was a really special evening. Planned and hosted by our Director of Music, Miss Coggin and ably supported by Music Teacher Mr Stevenson, the evening started with mince pies and mulled wine in the Chill, whilst a quartet of brass players provided seasonal background music. On moving up to the Main Hall the large audience was greeted by a mass of "3 students on and around the stage from our Concert Band and Choirs. The programme consisted of beautifully-performed items from the Concert Band, Choir, Sixth Form Choir, Brass Band, Gospel Choir and Jazz Band and amongst these items there were traditional carols for the Choir and audience. I was delighted to receive a great deal of p o s i t i v e feedback from parents and friends of the School and I feel that we have a winning formula by which to celebrate the start of the Christmas season with the School community in the coming years. FRANKFURT PRESENTS - German Department trip to Frankfurt-am-Main - 11-14 December Report by Mr Smith, Subject Leader: German ‘Frankfurt Geschichte und Gegenwart’ (past and present) was the theme for the Upper School four-day visit to Germany's financial centre. Twenty Germanists from Years 10, 11 and 13, together with nineteen girls from Kesteven & Sleaford High School made the traditionally early start for a school journey (01:20) in order to enable a full four-day visit. The transfer to Heathrow was generously financed by the British German Association and the German experience began with a Lufthansa flight into Frankfurt International Airport which is only a nineteen-minute S-Bahn (suburban railway) ride from the city centre. The Meininger hotel chain styles itself as the ‘home of the urban traveller’ and served our purpose well being simple but smart and providing a generous continental breakfast and hearty evening meal in the German tradition of meaty feasts. After arrival, the first event was German tuition at the Frankfurt branch of the GoetheInstitut, concentrating on conversational language before an early night and a long sleep to recover from the lost hours of Friday morning. Everyone soon grew used to using the S-Bahn transport system and the Hauptwache station became a familiar staging post en-route to the attractions and appointments we had planned. On Saturday, a guided tour of the city centre traced Frankfurt's development from trading hub under Charlemagne to its current status as headquarters of the European Central Bank. Among the fragrant and glowing atmosphere of the Christmas market, spread through the several public squares of Frankfurt, everyone took their lunch before an absolutely charming and inspiring visit to the birthplace of Germany's greatest poet, Johann Wolfgang von Goethe. The programme starts to sound intensive with the inclusion of an evening film entitled ‘4 Könige’ (Four Kings) and all the day's experiences being conducted in German. Sunday morning was filled with a photo-scavenger hunt, requiring the students to seek out features of the Frankfurt cityscape and photograph them or, for example, ask for the autograph of a passer-by. By this stage, the pupils were confident enough to navigate the transport system unaided. Frankfurt's Historisches Museum filled in more details of the city's development especially with some impressive architectural models of the city's layout. "4 The final stop of the programme was the Frankfurt Stock Exchange on Monday - again with explanations in German. I am grateful to the Leadership Team for their pragmatic approach to the currently vexed question of running school trips, where other schools have cancelled a variety of ventures. I am delighted that our judgement at BGS was vindicated and an intensive, varied and thoroughly enjoyable trip could take place. Did the students enjoy it? I'll let you be the judge of that: our last day was, coincidentally, the sunniest: Timothy P: “The weather is trying to persuade us to stay in Germany." Lara G: "No need, I was already convinced." HUMAN RIGHTS DAY - Report by Isobel Kaufman (Year 9) On Thursday, 10 December, Bourne Grammar School’s Amnesty International group organised several activities to celebrate the International Day of Human Rights. Throughout the week, we shared information through the notices during form time, showing three cases of human rights abuse. These consisted of a Greek man, Costas, who was the victim of a homophobic and racist attack; Rania Alabassi, a Syrian lady who was abducted by the authorities along with her husband and children, and Maria, a 13 year-old girl in Burkina Faso who was "5 forced to marry a 70 year-old man. On Thursday, every student in Years 8-11 was given the opportunity to write letters of solidarity to these individuals or letters of appeal to the Greek Minister of Justice, Syria’s President Assad or Burkina Faso’s Justice and Human Rights Minister. At breaktime we ran a stall and a ‘bake giveaway’ in order to raise the profile of Amnesty International in School and, to gain a prize, students had to answer a question relating to Human Rights Day. We hope that every student now knows a little more about Human Rights and understand the devastating consequences of when they are abused or neglected. INDOOR ROWING FESTIVAL - Report by Mr Adams, Subject Leader: Mathematics Students from Years 8 and 10 took part in an Indoor Rowing Festival at Spalding High School on Tuesday 15 December. Four schools took part: Sir John Gleed School, Bourne Academy, Spalding High School and Bourne Grammar School. There were individual races of 3 minutes for Year 8 and 5 minutes for Year 10 in which rowers competed against each other to complete the greatest distance. The indoor rowing machines were all linked to a computer which projected the progress of each rower on to a large screen. This made the races very exciting as the rowers and spectators could see the relative progress of their ‘boat’. There were some very good individual performances but our best-placed rower was Rob McAndrew (Year 10) with a dead-heat second place (a rare occurrence in rowing!). However, it was in the team relay races that Bourne Grammar School shone; teams of four completed a distance of 2,016m swapping rowers every 250m or 500m. Our change-overs were slick, but it was the team effort and motivation which saw the three teams we entered achieve two first places and a second place. First to go were the Year 8 boys who romped home a minute ahead of second place. Then our Year 10 boys held off a strong "6 challenge from third to come second. But perhaps the best performance was the girls who, having led all the way, held off a late charge to come first by three seconds. The combined times of the Year 10 boys and girls were enough to see them through in overall first place and they will have an opportunity to represent our region in Grantham in March. Year 8 Boys: Oliver Cook, Alfie Bennett, Archy Lewis, Joshua Milner Year 8 Girl: Gemma Parker Year 10 Boys: Lucas Carlton, Jack Fitch, Callum Scane, Thomas Parker, Robert McAndrew Year 10 Girls: Molly Shaw, Erika Pond, Charlotte Crolley-Waine, Lucy Southerden. HACK THE HOLIDAYS - Report by Emmalee Higgins (Year 11) This coming weekend (19/20 December), months of planning will draw to a close as our hackathon, Hack the Holidays, will invite over ninety students to learn about computer code and to meet other young coders like themselves. A hackathon is a period of time, typically overnight, dedicated to creating unique products with code. Participants have the chance to develop something useful to them or just for fun, all in the spirit of practising their digital skills. Even if they don’t have advanced knowledge on the coding world they are still welcome at hackathons, as many volunteers are on-hand to help with any problems. Hack the Holidays, taking place at the Future Business Centre in Peterborough, encourages students from age 14 to code for 24 hours. The event is Christmas-themed and so the participants have the choice to make an application or website centred around the festivities, if they wish. During the event, the students not only have the opportunity to code but are able to socialise and participate in different activities around the venue, such as attending sponsors’ mini-games. Working on the creations is, of course, paused for the midnight pizza; a hackathon tradition! The Hack the Holidays team consists of five Bourne Grammar School students: James Brooks (the event coordinator), Edward Digby, Chloe Gutteridge, Elizabeth Hodnett and Emmalee Higgins. We have also received a wealth of mentoring from representatives at Raspberry Pi and Compare the Market. As students ourselves, we felt that there were not enough opportunities for young people to interact with each other whilst learning how to code - a skill that is growing increasingly desirable by employers in many career sectors. Hack the Holidays is our attempt at trying to change this. To power the event, we contacted local and well-known businesses in the hope of raising some sponsorship money. Amongst the sponsors are Opportunity Peterborough, Peterborough "7 Enterprise Partnership, Rocket Apps, CityFibre and Zazzle Media, along with our biggest sponsor Braintree (a PayPal company). Furthermore, we are an event sanctioned by Major League Hacking, the official student hackathon league operating in Europe, North America, Mexico and Canada. Our partnership with MLH was something that was a great help to us as their reputation boosted the profile of our event. As well as seeking participant sign-ups, Major League Hacking will be bringing some of the latest technology to our event this weekend, as part of their Hardware Lab scheme including Pebble smartwatches and Oculus Rift headsets - products that are exciting to many students who share an interest in coding. Participants will be competing to win exciting prizes such as Raspberry Pi computers, Chromecasts, Estimote Beacons and Kindle Fire tablets. Hack the Holidays has drawn attention from many on social media as well as the BBC. Last week we were visited by a BBC News Look East team who filmed an interview about the event which was aired on television, radio and on-line this week. This was an exciting experience for us and it was one we thoroughly enjoyed. Situation Vacant - SCHOOL RECEPTIONIST Following the internal promotion of Ms Sarah Baker, our present Receptionist, we wish to recruit a new Receptionist. Please see the advertisement at the back of this issue. STUDENTS OF THE WEEK Name Year Staff Subject Flo Brill 7 Mr Ray PE Maisie Brownlow 7 Mr Hartley Geography Jared Carroll 7 Mr Topham History Harry Marriott 7 Mr Binns PE Sam Olverson 7 Miss Smallshaw Science Nina Ortiz-Jimenez 7 Mr Evans History Marcus Walker 7 Miss Creedon Spanish Ryan Collin 8 Mrs Somerville Art Samar Damani 8 Mr Tighe EPR Lewis Holbrook 8 Mr Graves PE Finn McCullough 8 Mr Dennis PE Jessica Pratt 8 Miss Cousins History Aaliyah Pudney 8 Miss Turton English Peter Reid 8 Miss Espin Spanish Bertie Cliffe 9 Mrs Russell French Ashley Hammond 9 Mrs Hall Drama Harvey Isitt 9 Miss Ellis Art "8 Name Year Staff Subject Chloe Laird 9 Miss Bowtell PE Harriet Laugharne 9 Mr Sheppard Mathematics Dylan Edwards 10 Mr Elliott Mathematics Kara Morton 10 Mrs Durno English Edward Digby 11 Mr Edwards Spanish Melody Parker 11 Mrs Faux Biology Laura Prill 11 Mr Smith History Bethany Ramsden 11 Miss Walters English Hannah Scott 11 Miss Hurst Geography Eshanee Aubeeluck 12 Ms Kemp English Literature Mikayla Bessent 12 Miss Hempstead PE Yacoub Kamareddine 12 Mrs Shales Mathematics Hayden Mackenzie 12 Mr Adamson Mathematics Harriet Smith 12 Mr Gilbert Business Studies Jack Taylor 12 Mrs Pignatiello Theatre Studies ARTWORK For the final issue of 2015 I feature two Year 8 paintings. They are Scream Dreams, made in response to Edvard Munch's The Scream. Noah Harwood "9 Anita Wong SHOW-JUMPING - National Schools Equestrian Association – Regional Qualifiers at Arena UK, Nottinghamshire Report by Georgie Dick (Year 8) On Sunday Hollie Lewis and I represented Bourne Grammar School at the National Schools’ Equestrian Association show-jumping competition at Arena UK. There was some very strong competition from a number of different schools, including Stamford High School, KGGS and Kesteven and Sleaford High School. The day started very early and, as classes were so large, there were long gaps between classes. A big thank you to parental support! Riding Cloud, I was first to go from BGS; we jumped a lovely clear round. Hollie and Bonnie were the next to go. They also jumped a clear round, and were very fast against the clock. We were all very excited when the results were announced because Hollie had ridden so well – and she was rewarded with 3rd place. This qualifies Hollie for the Finals in April. Congratulations to Hollie and Bonnie. INDIVIDUAL ACHIEVEMENTS Power-Lifting Billy Osborn (Year 12) has qualified for the British Bench Championship at the North West Power-Lifting championships in Liverpool. Music Charlotte Rist (Year 9) has passed both her Grade 5 violin and her Grade 5 piano exams. " 10 SCHOOL RECEPTIONIST Grade 4: £14,819 - £16,634 (actual salary) We wish to appoint a full-time School Receptionist. The successful candidate will have a superb telephone manner, the ability to communicate in a welcoming and professional manner, excellent administration and organisational skills. The ability to multi-task is essential as is a sense of humour. The post will be 37 hours per week, 38 weeks per year (term-time) plus 5 training days and 1 week during the school holiday period as determined by the Director of Business and Development. The hours will be 08:00 to 16:00 Monday to Thursday and 08:00 to 15:30 on Friday. For an information pack and application form, please contact: Mrs Stella Chamberlain Bourne Grammar School South Road, Bourne, Lincs PE10 9JE Tel: 01778 391648 Fax: 01778 394872 Email: recruitment@bourne-grammar.lincs.sch.uk Closing Date: Friday 8 January 2016 Bourne Grammar School recruits from all sectors: Comprehensive, selective and independent We are committed to safeguarding and promoting the welfare of children and young people and expects all who work here to share this commitment. The successful applicant will be subject to an enhanced DBS disclosure and satisfactory references. www.bourne-grammar.lincs.sch.uk _______________ Term 3 starts at 08:45 on Monday 4 January 2016 - WEEK 2 Very best wishes to everyone in the School Community for Christmas and the New Year _______________ " 11