The Portsmouth Grammar School
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The Portsmouth Grammar School | |
Praemia Virtutis Honores | |
Established | 1732 |
---|---|
School type | Independent Coeducational |
Headmaster | Dr. T.R. Hands |
Location | Portsmouth, Hampshire, UK |
Website | http://www.pgs.org.uk/ |
The Portsmouth Grammar School is an independent school located in Portsmouth, England.
Contents |
[edit] History
In 1732 William Smith former Mayor of Portsmouth and Physician to its Garrison, died and left his estate to Christ Church College Oxford. This came with instructions to build a new school in Portsmouth - The Portsmouth Grammar School (PGS) was founded.
Since then it has undergone a series of changes - including slight alterations to its location, some of which were due to bombing in World War II, its conversion to co-education, and the abolition of boarding.
At the moment the Upper Junior School (Years 5-6) is situated in a Victorian building (which once contained the whole Grammar School) close to part of the University of Portsmouth. The Nursery, Lower Junior School (Reception to Year 4), Middle School and Upper School are located across the road on the High Street. The majority of that area used to be the Cambridge Barracks: a building used by the army which was ravaged by fire after bombing by the Luftwaffe.
The school colours are red, black and gold, and the school motto is Praemia Virtutis Honores. The current Headmaster is Dr. T.R. Hands.
[edit] Internal Structure
[edit] Houses
In each section of PGS there are four houses, each represented by a colour. Although these colours remain the same, the names change in each section of the School:
[edit] Junior School
- Hudson (Blue)
- Jerrard (Yellow)
- Nicol (Red)
- Privett (Green)
[edit] Middle School
- Barton (Blue)
- Eastwood (Yellow)
- Hawkey (Red)
- Summers (Green)
[edit] Upper School
- Grant (Blue)
- Latter (Yellow)
- Smith (Red)
- Whitcombe (Green)
[edit] Uniform
Any aspects of uniform not specified are the same as any generic uniform - black socks and shoes etc. The uniform remains the same throughout the school, except for what is listed.
[edit] Boys
- Black trousers (Black shorts for those in Junior School Years R to 4 with the optional trousers for pupils in Years 5 and 6)
- White shirt
- Black blazer with red piping and the PGS golden lion embossed on the left-breast pocket
In the sixth form the red piping is lost from the blazer.
[edit] Girls
- Black skirt with red stripe (Red Tartan Kilt is worn in the Junior School for Girls in Years R to 6, with a white and red striped Summer Dress in the Summer Term)
- White blouse
- Black blazer with red piping and the PGS golden lion embossed on the left-breast pocket
In the sixth form the girls are given more freedom, and their uniform is based around a black skirt and jacket suit.
[edit] Ties
These are black, with red diagonal stripes across them. A third stripe, alternated with the red, corresponds with the house of the pupil. In the sixth form, the optional ties of black with the PGS emblem dotted across them can be worn.
[edit] Prefects
Chosen in Year 12 by a combination of discussions between teachers and the Headmaster and a student vote, around twenty pupils are awarded with diagonally-striped red and gold ties and silver buttons for their blazers. A few pupils have golden buttons, and these are the Deputy Senior Prefects. One select Senior Prefect is also chosen to preside over shared responsibilities.
[edit] Academics
The Portsmouth Grammar School is a selective independent school, only allowing those children of high academic ability, through the use of an entrance exam at the age of 11 (within the top 15% nationally in terms of ability). Hence, the school prides itself on its academic excellence, and it is known for being one of the best schools in the area, a view upheld by consistently good league table rankings, although one has to be more and more skeptical with the reliability and bias of these. For several years an average of a 98% A-C grade pass rate has been maintained at GCSE, with several board prizes awarded at this level each year.
A-Level results are also extremely good, with many candidates achieving straight A grades. As well as public exam results, each year, individual Olympiads especially in Sciences, and Advanced Extension Awards (AEA's) are successfully undertaken.
The school has a good entry rate to top universities, including Oxbridge, especially for very competitive subjects such as Medicine, Law, Engineering and History.
The Portsmouth Grammar School has been named by The Sunday Times as one of the top ten best value for money co-educational day schools in the country. The league table, published in the newspaper’s Money section, was based on last year’s A-level results and calculated by dividing each school’s termly fee by its pupils’ average A level points score to give the cost per point. Points are awarded on a scale from 120 for an A to 40 for an E.
Headmaster Dr Timothy Hands, said: “It is great to see PGS recognized as a school which delivers outstanding results at an affordable price in relation to other schools in the country.
“No league table can tell you the whole story about a school, and there is so much more on offer at PGS – excellent pastoral care and a superb range of extracurricular activities. But parents make a significant commitment to send their children here and they will be reassured to see us selected as one of the country’s best value schools and a proven deliverer of outstanding results.”
[edit] Discipline
Discipline within the school is mostly good, indeed the ISI inspection report of 2004 commented that in lessons, discipline is maintained with a soft touch due to the good relations between pupils and teachers.
It is PGS's policy to deal with serious breaches of its code of conduct and school rules severely:
- On the lowest end of the scale, lunchtime and breaktime detentions can be administered,
- For more serious breaches, after school detentions on Thursdays can be administered,
- Above that Headmaster's detentions are carried out on Saturday mornings.
- For the most serious of breaches of conduct (for example theft) the headmaster has the power to suspend and expel students.
At least two pupils were asked to leave during the academic year beginning in September 2005, and several suspensions have been administered.
Discipline outside the classroom is maintained mainly by the Surmaster Mr. N.F.C. Blewett.
[edit] Extra-Curricular Activities
Aside from the more common extra-curricular disciplines, at the school there is also CCF and several academic clubs, including a Debating Club and a Wildlife Club. For the more adventurous, there are clubs ranging from "Miniatures and Modelling Club" to "Middle School Textiles Club"
[edit] Drama
GCSE and AS/A-level assesment performances are open to parents and friends, and are usually of a high standard. In terms of extra-curricular drama, the scene is varied; a great deal of change has occurred within the drama department recently, with the building of a new theatre and several new ventures being undertaken. A selection of regular drama activities are listed below.
Sixth Form Shakespeare - pupil-organised production of one of the bard's comedies, performed outdoors at hilsea playing fields at the end of the summer term.
Musical - a classic west end musical, organised with the help of a director-in-residence, performed at the King's Theatre, Southsea, in early December.
House Drama Competition - an inter-house contest in which small groups perform an extract from a play or musical for judgement and ranking! very prestigious.
The Middle School Play - with younger members of the school (years 7 and 8); plays have varied from Shakespeare to Kes. Performed in the summer term.
The Year Six Play - undertaken by Junior School members in year six. In 2006, the play was Macbeth.
[edit] Sport
PGS has had numerous sporting successes in recent years, including the hockey team's victory in the National Finals in 2004 and their qualification for the final in 2005 (although they were unsuccessful on both occasions), and the U11 girls' Netball team's achievement in reaching the final of the IAPS National Championships for the second year running.
[edit] CCF
The School has a Combined Cadet Force open to pupils in Year 9 and above. This comprises of the Army, Royal Air Force and Royal Navy sections. CCF gives pupils the chance to learn many skills associated with military careers as well as provides excellent extra-curricular experience. Cadets can learn skills of navigation, leadership, drill, outdoor survival, adventure training, flying, sailing and shooting as part of the CCF. Each section has its own residential camps based around the country throughout the year, with opportunities to shoot on ranges, sail, fly in planes and adventure training.
[edit] Music
The music at PGS is a major reason for pupils' entry to the school, indeed in an article in the September 2006 BBC music magazine, the following was written about the music at PGS:
At Portsmouth Grammar School, the musical opportunities put those of other, better known establishments to shame. With its own composer in residence...Links with the London Mozart Players mean that scholars get the chance to perform a concerto with a professional ensemble... Commissions for the school include works by Sally Beamish, Lynne Plowman, and Sir Peter Maxwell Davies. |
There are several ensembles that perform regularly, many conducted by the school's associate conductor, Nicolae Moldoveanu. The most prestigious of these groups is the Chamber Choir which has sung with the London Mozart Players and at the Royal British Legion Festival of Remembrance at the Royal Albert Hall. There is also an annual tradition of the choir to sing Evensong at Christ Church College Oxford.
[edit] Action This Day
In 2004, the School authorities used its available resources (including the pupils, contributing to their learning programme) to produce a book named, Action this Day, which is a collection of poetry and literature on interviews with old Portmuthian war veterans. This book had its foreword written by the Prime Minister, Tony Blair, and has been presented to the British Library and the Royal Library at Winchester Castle.
[edit] Headmaster
The current Headmaster is Dr. T.R. Hands. Dr. Hands was educated at Kings College London and later at St. Catherine's College Oxford.
Dr. Hands is the author on many books of nineteenth Century literature, these include three acclaimed studies of Thomas Hardy. He is also the editor of an award-winning edition of Thomas Hardy's Jude the Obscure.
Dr. Hands was formally the Co-leader of the London Schools Symphony Orchestra and conductor of the Schola Cantorum of Oxford.
He is currently a member of the HMC/GSA Universities Committee.
[edit] Other Events
Recently the school hosted an evening with the Poet Laureate Andrew Motion and sculptress Jilly Sutton in which she talked on the sculpture that she recently created of the poet and a bronze cast of which now resides in the school library. Mr. Motion then read some extracts from some books which are in production.
Previously, Mr. Motion had visited the school as part of a "Poetry Workshop" whereby students attending PGS and St. Luke's School (a school near to PGS, the league table results of which are known to be below average) would come together in the newly-refurbished Memorial Library. It was agreed to be a refreshing sight to see that Pupils from a high flying independent school were able to cooperate so well with pupils from St. Luke's School.
[edit] Alumni
Alumni are known as Old Portmuthians and may join The Old Portmuthian Club, founded in 1885.
[edit] Notable alumni
- Cyril Garbett (1875-1955), Archbishop of York (1942-1955)
- Major Frank Harvey RMLI. (c. 1890) Awarded a posthumous Victoria Cross for bravery on board HMS Lion at the Battle of Jutland (1916).
- Wally Hammond (1903-1965), England Cricketer and Captain
- Sir Arthur Young (1907-1979), British and colonial police chief, police reformer
- Christopher Logue (1926-), critically acclaimed poet
- Roger Black (1966-), Olympic athlete (silver medalist)
- Prof. Andrew Lyne (1942-), former Director of Jodrell Bank Observatory
- Paul Jones (1942-), singer with Manfred Mann
- Ian Osterloh, Clinical researcher attributed with the creation of 'Viagra' as well as numerous cardiovascular drugs
- Prof. David Warrell, Professor of Tropical Medicine and Infectious diseases at the University of Oxford.
- Professor Christopher B.R. Pelling MA DPhil, admissions tutor and head of Classical Civilisation at Oxford university
[edit] References
[edit] External links
Categories: NPOV disputes | Articles lacking sources from November 2006 | All articles lacking sources | Educational institutions established in the 1730s | Portsmouth | Public schools in Hampshire | Schools with Combined Cadet Forces | 1732 establishments | Members of the Headmasters' and Headmistresses' Conference