Wycliffe College (Gloucestershire)

Wycliffe College
Motto Bold and Loyal
Established 1882
Type Independent school
Co-educational
Boarding in Sixth Form
Religion Non-denominational
Headteacher Margie Burnet Ward (Senior), Adrian Palmer (Nursery & Prep.)
Founder GW Sibly
Location Bath Road
Stonehouse
Gloucestershire
GL10 2JQ
England, United Kingdom
Students ca. 800
Gender Mixed
Ages 2–18
Houses Collingwood, Haywardsend, Ivy Grove, Haywardsfield, Ward's, Robinson, Loosley Halls, Lampeter.
Website www.wycliffe.co.uk

Wycliffe College is a co-educational independent school located in the town of Stonehouse (near the market town of Stroud) in Gloucestershire, in the West of England. The school was founded in 1882 by GW Sibly,[1] and comprises a Nursery School for ages 2 – 4, a Preparatory School for ages 4 – 13, and a Senior School catering for ages 13 – 18, that includes a Sixth Form College. A total of around 800 pupils are enrolled at the school. The school is the first independent school in the country to have achieved recognition with National Academy for Able Children in Education (NACE). The school has also achieved 'CReSTeD' accreditation for teaching dyslexic pupils.[2] A 2007 Ofsted inspection report on the welfare and facilities for boarders assessed the overall quality as good, with some aspects being outstanding.[2]

Contents

Nursery School

The Nursery School which first opened in 1983 at the Grove (a beautiful cotswold stone house which was destroyed by fire in 1994) is located within the same grounds as the Preparatory School boarding houses and sports fields.

Wycliffe Preparatory School

The Prep School has extensive sports grounds separated by a main road from the main campus. The pupils use a specially built bridge to cross over the road safely. The Prep School has two boarding houses: Pennwood housing the male boarders and Windrush housing the female boarders. The school amenities include an indoor swimming pool, performing arts centre, tennis courts and extensive sports fields.

The Senior School

The Senior School is located a five-minute walk away from the Prep and Pre-Prep campus. The campus covers a large area with classrooms, boarding houses and sports facilities all intermixed. The school fields teams in the following sports: rugby, cricket, squash, rowing, football, tennis, netball, hockey and swimming.

Students are separated into different houses, this is where both their prep rooms and common rooms are located. The Preparatory and Senior school houses each have around 300 to 400 pupils.With the exceptions of Collingwood House, a mixed house for day pupils, and Loosley, a mixed sixth form boarding house, the houses are single gender boarding houses. The school holds inter-house competitions, the most significant of which is the annual music competition. Other inter-house activities include drama, football, netball, hockey and rugby.

Sport

Wycliffe is a major squash-playing school, due to their recent and previous success in the squash court. Many of the pupils choose to do squash as an out of school activity for both boys and girls. The large number of students playing squash has led to many of these squash players being world and country champions.. Other sports played at Wycliffe include rugby, hockey, football, cricket, rowing, tennis, Volleyball, Gym, Athletics, Cross Country, Kickball, Badminton and Polo for the boys. For the girls there is Hockey, Netball, Tennis, Rounders, Athletics, Cross Country, Rowing, Gym, Polo and Badminton

Curriculum

The academic structure targets exams of both standard English curriculum GCSE and the International GCSE, and A level subjects at the standard English curriculum. Other activities include a Combined Cadet Force and a Round Square Association.[3]

Achievements

Wycliffe was the first private school in the United Kingdom to be recognised by NACE, and is also accredited by CReSTeD for teaching dyslexic children.[2]

Head Teachers (Senior)

Notable Old Wycliffians

Notable Old Wycliffians include:

References

  1. ^ Independent Schools Council Retrieved 13 October 2009
  2. ^ a b c Ofsted report December 2007 Retrieved 13 October 2009
  3. ^ Good Schools Guide Retrieved 13 October 2009
  4. ^ Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (ODNB), Oxford University Press. Retrieved 8 October 2007
  5. ^ Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (ODNB), Oxford University Press. Retrieved 8 October 2007
  6. ^ Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (ODNB), Oxford University Press. Retrieved 8 October 2007
  7. ^ Gilbert Parkhouse on Crickinfo Cricketers on Cricinfo
  8. ^ Charlie Barnett on Cricinfo Cricketers on Cricinfo
  9. ^ Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (ODNB), Oxford University Press, Retrieved 8 October 2007

External links