英中教育 Anglo-Chinese Education Consultancy

紐卡斯?fàn)栔袑W(xué)

Newcastle U Tyne Church High School

 
 

 

 

 

 

►►►其它中學(xué)

The Newcastle upon Tyne Church High School,紐卡斯?fàn)栔袑W(xué),紐卡斯?fàn)朥泰恩教會(huì)高中  Tankerville Terrace, Jesmond,
Newcastle upon Tyne NE2 3BA
Tel: 0191 281 4306 Fax: 0191 281 0806
• GIRLS, 2_ –18, Day
• Pupils 560, Upper sixth 35
• Termly fees £1681–£2400
• GSA
• Enquiries/application to the School Secretary

What it’s like

Founded in 1885, it stands in a pleasant residential district in one of the older suburbs, close to the city centre and university. The original buildings, completed in 1890, are well-designed and surrounded by pleasant gardens and grounds. Recent developments include a learning resource centre, library, sports hall, ICT suite and new facilities for art, food technology and humanities. The senior and junior schools are on the same site and there is a nursery school for girls aged 2+. It caters for varying degrees of academic ability and lays considerable stress on a Christian atmosphere and education. Exam results are good. There are flourishing music, art and drama departments and a range of sports, games (good district and county representation) and outdoor activities. Strong commitment to local community schemes.

School profile


Pupils & entrance

Pupils: Total age range 2_ –18; 560 day girls. Senior department 11–18, 350 girls.
Entrance: Main entry ages 2–4, 7, 9, 11, 13 and 16. Own entrance exam used. For sixth-form entry, 5 GCSEs at least grade C (grade B in sixth-form subjects). No special skills or religious requirements. State school entry, 40% main senior intake plus some sixth form. Many senior pupils from own junior department (tel 0191 281 3347).

Scholarships, bursaries & extras
Variable number of awards, value 17%–50% fees: most academic, some music. Parents not expected to buy textbooks.

Head & staff

Headmistress: Mrs Lesley Smith, appointed 1996. Educated at Colston’s Girls’ School, and at Bedford College, London University (medieval & modern history), and King’s College London (PGCE). Previously Head of St Nicholas’ School, Fleet, Deputy Head and Head of History and Politics at Notting Hill & Ealing High. Also FRSA, FIMgt.
Teaching staff: 49 full time, 13 part time.

Exam results

GCSE: In 2003, 56 pupils in upper fifth: 98% gained at least grade C in 5+ subjects. Average GCSE score 59 (over 5 years).
A-levels: 39 in upper sixth. Average final point score achieved by upper sixth formers 310.

University & college entrance
96% of 2003 sixth-form leavers went on to a degree course (some after a gap year). Pupils go on to a wide range of degree courses eg medicine, science, humanities & social sciences, art & design, and other vocational subjects.

Curriculum
GCSE, AS and A-levels. 25 GCSE subjects, 17 AS/A-level.
Sixth form: Most sixth formers take 4 subjects at AS-level, 3 at A-level; AS-level general studies additional option.
Vocational: Work experience encouraged.
Languages: French and German offered at GCSE, AS and A-level; also Spanish GCSE. Regular exchanges (France and Germany).
ICT: Taught both as a discrete subject (2 lessons a week in Key Stage III) and across the curriculum. Most pupils take Clait or GCSE (also available at AS/A-level). 90 computers for pupil use (8 hours a day), all networked and with email and internet access.

The arts

Music: Over 30% of pupils learn a musical instrument; instrumental exams can be taken. Musical groups including orchestra, madrigal group, chamber ensembles, recorder group etc.
Drama: GCSE drama, A-level theatre studies and LAMDA exams may be taken. Some pupils are involved in school and house/other productions.
Art & design: On average, 20 take GCSE, 8 A-level.

Sport & activities

Sport: Netball, tennis, hockey, athletics, swimming, rounders, fitness, badminton, squash. 30 girls represent county and city in various sports; national U14 squash champions.
Activities: Pupils take bronze, silver and gold Duke of Edinburgh’s Award. Community service. Up to 15 clubs, eg music, drama, Christian Union, debating, computer, chess, first aid, cookery, aerobics, Young Enterprise.

School life

Uniform: School uniform worn, dress code in the sixth form.
Houses & prefects: Competitive houses. Head girl and deputies, appointed by sixth form and staff. Sixth-form committee and school council.
Religion: Daily assembly. 3 or 4 church services a year.
Social: Summer fair, debates and music with local schools. Trips for choirs, skiing, art and languages; sports weeks in holidays (riding, canoeing, orienteering). Pupils allowed to bring own car to school (but no parking in school grounds). Meals cafeteria-style (deli-bar for sixth form). No tobacco or alcohol allowed.

Discipline
Code of conduct agreed by school council.

Alumnae association  
is run by Mrs S Timney, c/o the school.