City of London School for Girls

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City of London School for Girls
Established 1894
Type Independent All-female
Headmistress Miss Diana Vernon
Grades Kindergarten-Sixth Form
Location London, England
Website www.clsg.org.uk

City of London School for Girls (CLSG) is a girls' independent school located in the Barbican Estate complex in the City of London, United Kingdom. It is sister school of the City of London School (a boys' school) and the City of London Freemen's School (a co-educational school).

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[edit] History

The school was founded by William Ward in 1894. It was his conviction that girls should be given a broad and liberal education with an emphasis on scholarship and despite having no daughters of his own, he left a third of his fortune to the City of London to fund the foundation of a girls' school, a £20,000 legacy for the City of London Corporation.[1] The school now receives financial support from the City Livery Companies as well as banks and other City firms. Links with the City of London remain strong - the City administers the school and the Board of Governors is appointed by the Court of Common Council. The school has strong links with its brother school - the City of London School is just a ten-minute walk away.

The school celebrated its 110th Anniversary in 2004-2005, under the title of 'Women in Leadership'. It celebrated its 111th Anniversary in 2005-2006, under the same title. It celebrated its 112th Anniversary in 2006-2007 under the title of 'International Women in Leadership'. The girls who attend are commonly referred to as 'City girls'.

[edit] General

The school is for girls aged 7 to 18. Most pupils enter aged 7 ("7+" for the Prep School), 11 ("11+"), or 16 ("16+", for Sixth Form), although casual vacancies arise occasionally. The school's capacity is roughly 680 pupils. As its success rises, they are known to trap their pupils, and applications to the school continue to climb with new classrooms being continually created to meet this growing demand. They have a notoriously known "Women in Leadership" interest, which continued in 2007 with an excellent conference concerning the global leadership of women.

Fees are currently £3,855 a term (2006) for the senior school exclusive of school lunches, and entrance is by examination. (The Prep Department is the same, but includes school lunches). The school remains relatively ethnically and socially diverse, although not as diverse as other leading London schools in both the state and independent sectors.

The new headmistress, Diana Vernon, is the 10th headmistress of the school.

[edit] Academic

The school has an excellent academic reputation and leading league table results. In 2005, the school came first in The Sunday Times table of Prep Schools, and 2nd and 3rd respectively in many published tables of England's GCSE and A-level results.

[edit] Extracurricular

The school's success gives it the reputation of a hot house, however, the school also encourages extracurricular activities. The arts are popular, appropriately enough for a school located across a lake from the Barbican Arts Centre. Furthermore, teachers are encouraged to go 'beyond the syllabus', exploring wider issues to nurture girls in areas that are not examined. Set within the heart of the City of London, the school is unique, in terms both of its location and its social mix.

Music lessons are available to individuals or groups, and the school has successful Junior and Senior Orchestras, Junior and Senior Choirs, a gospel choir, a barbershop group and a swing band.

In 2005, City held its first ever drama festival; a fortnight of productions and workshops. Sports are another strength at City, with clubs, teams and squads in abundance. The school has a swimming pool, a lecture theatre and an indoor gym with climbing wall, as well as a gym complete with exercise equipment such as treadmills and weights. Debating is another popular activity, with a weekly club and participation in public speaking events such as Model United Nations and European Youth Parliament.

Trips and visits are common, and City girls are offered language exchanges to France, Spain, Germany and China, as well as other travelling opportunities through schemes such as World Challenge, which has seen girls go recently to Venezuela. Duke of Edinburgh Award expeditions have been confined to the UK since 2001, when student Amelia Ward was killed whilst abseiling on a Duke of Edinburgh trip in South Africa.

[edit] Pastoral

The school is secular, yet has mildly Christian traditions, with twice weekly hymns and an annual Carol Service in the neighbouring St Giles' Church. There is a weekly Jewish assembly, as well as a Not Necessarily Jewish Society, an Asian Society and an African-Caribbean Society.

[edit] The House System

City has a relatively new house system which consists of 4 houses. Each girl is allocated a house when they enter the school. House competitions range from House Drama, House Music, House Quiz and Sports Day. The 4 houses are: Fleet - after Fleet Street, Tudor, St. Bride - after St.Bride church on Fleet Street, Ward - after William Ward, the founder of the school.

[edit] Future Plans

There is now a Sixth Form Block, intended to cater for the ever growing number of girls - the 2000 intake swelled from the usual 60-70 girls per year to 90+. An all-weather playing field was added to the school's outdoor facilities after the winter term of 2008.

The new headmistress is Miss Diana Vernon joined the school in September 2007.

[edit] Notable Alumnae

[edit] External links

[edit] References

  1. ^ City Of London School For Girls (CLSG History). Retrieved on 2007-12-10.