Hockerill Anglo-European College

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Hockerill Anglo-European College is an international boarding school located in Bishop's Stortford (ca. halfway between London and Cambridge). The college has many overseas students and this is partly because it has an excellent reputation for languages (to such an extent that the Director of the Modern Foreign Languages Faculty, Mike Ullmann, was awarded the award for best Secondary School Teacher of the Year).

Hockerill's lion logo. The twelve stars resemble the European flag.
Hockerill's lion logo. The twelve stars resemble the European flag.
Hockerill from above.
Hockerill from above.

In 1850, Hockerill was founded as a teacher training school for women. The training school was closed in 1978 and, in 1980, was reopened and as a state international school. However, back then it was known as Hockerill Anglo-European School. In 1998 it became known as Hockerill College.

Hockerill has more than 700 scholars from many countries and nowadays is one of the best colleges in the country.[1] It offers, instead of A-Levels, the International Baccalaureate (IB). In this way the college is unique: it is the only international state boarding school in England. The school also gained Music College status recently thanks to funding, and the inspirational work of Paul Foulkes has blossomed in this respect. The Music College was officially opened by Lord David Puttnam on 8 October 2006.

Hockerill is becoming more and more popular and its number of students is forever rising. Because of the student increase, the school is strict when it comes to selecting its pupils. The students' school reports are inspected very carefully. The selection process seems to be having positive effects as the GCSE pass rates have been increasing greatly over the last few years.

The boarding section is divided into five boarding houses: two for the junior students (years 7-9) and three for the seniors (years 10-13). The boarding houses have their names, too: Thames House for senior boys; Roding House for senior girls; Rochester House, an extension to Roding, due to spacial restrictions; Canterbury House for junior boys; and St. Albans House for junior girls. Notice that they are all named after areas in England.

Hockerill is rapidly becoming noted for excellence since it chose to start and follow new approaches to the education of students. Apart from producing two students with a perfect IB score of 45 points, the average IB result of Hockerill was at its record highest in 2006, taking it up to the top of the league tables with UCAS points of 496.3. It beat its nearest rival by over 50 points.[citation needed] Hockerill College also celebrated, in late 2005, the receipt of the Secondary School Teacher of the Year Award by the Director of its Faculty of Modern Foreign Languages, Mike Ullmann, at The Teaching Awards Ceremony in London.

[edit] International Connections

Hockerill has many international connections with schools due to the fact that it is a language college. It has partner schools in France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Romania, Rwanda and Spain. As well as educational exchanges for language studies, Hockerill also offers charity trips to Romania and Rwanda as these countries are in need of money. At Hockerill, students can take part in fundraising activities to earn money for our Rwandan and Romanian partner schools. Every year, students are given the opportunity to visit Romania and help refurbish the derelict partner school, and will, in future, offer trips to Rwanda. Now that Hockerill has gained music college status, they have organised a charity music tour of Iaşi, the city in which their partner schools are situated. Students travelled to Romania and played at numerous concerts to raise money. They were also given 7 minutes airtime on Romanian national television, on a channel equivalent to the BBC in the United Kingdom.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Times' Top State Schools in England

[edit] External links

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