Southend High School for Boys
Southend High School for Boys, also known by its initialism SHSB, is a selective secondary Grammar school situated[1] along Prittlewell Chase in Prittlewell, in the north-west of Southend-on-Sea, England, south-west of the roundabout of the A127 and A1159. It teaches students from the age of 11 through to 18 years old, and admission to the school is dependent upon their performance in selective 11+ tests set by the Consortium of Selective Schools in Essex (CSSE). It converted to Academy status on 1 February 2011, and has autonomous control over itself. Student numbers have been increasing over recent years. As of academic year 2008–2009, there are just over 1,150 students on roll, with over 230 of them in the Sixth Form, 20 to 30 of which come from other schools, including girls.
Southend High School for Boys | |
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The School crest | |
Address | |
Prittlewell Chase , , SS0 0RG England | |
Information | |
Type | Secondary Grammar school |
Motto | Latin: Forti nihil difficile (To the determined, nothing is difficult) |
Religious affiliation(s) | Anglican |
Established | 1895 (founded), 1939 (moved to current premises) |
Founder | Joseph Hitchcock |
Department for Education URN | 136443 Tables |
Ofsted | Reports |
Head teacher | Dr Robin Bevan |
Gender | Boys (with mixed-gender sixth form) |
Age | 11 to 18 |
Enrolment | Approximately 900–1000 |
Houses | Troy Athens Sparta Tuscany |
Colour(s) | Green and White |
Publication | SHSBulletin (fortnightly, formerly weekly), Excel newsletter, Old Southendian Association magazine (annually) |
Sports played | Athletics, Rugby union, football, cricket, rounders, basketball, badminton, tennis, cross country |
Website | http://www.shsb.org.uk |
The school consistently achieves over 95% of its students attaining 5 GCSEs grade A*–C each year,[2] and was one of the few schools in the country to achieve "outstanding" in the latest Ofsted inspection.[3]
The current Headteacher is Dr Robin Bevan, who has a doctorate in education and was appointed in September 2007, and the previous headmaster was Michael D Frampton, a History teacher who served as Headmaster from 1988 to 2007. The current deputy heads are Mrs E Smith and Mrs R Worth and the assistant head is Mrs C Bates.
Former pupils, teachers, and other members of the school are known as Old Southendians, and are entitled to join the Old Southendian Association (OSA) of past members and alumni, to keep in touch and network with other former pupils at social, sporting, and musical events, and on trips and meals. The OSA has the motto "sustaining friendships", and is one of the oldest and largest Boys Associations in the country, with 2,470 members as of October 2011. The school also has a Parents' Association (PA), which is a registered charity, and associated PA Committee.
History
The school was founded in 1895 on a site in Victoria Circus, and provided the first secondary education within the Borough of Southend-on-Sea. It moved to its present larger site, along Prittlewell Chase, in 1939.[4] In 1940 the school was evacuated to Mansfield in Nottinghamshire but the boys returned before the end of the war. Until 1974 it was administered by the County Borough of Southend-on-Sea Education Committee, then Essex County Council, and then the Unitary Authority of Southend-on-Sea from 1998.
Specialism and awards
In 2001 the school was a Language College as part of the Specialist Schools and Academies Trust, promoting modern foreign languages both inside and outside the curriculum as well as within the local community. It was a founder member of Southend Excellence Cluster, supporting and collaborating with nearly thirty primary and secondary schools. In 2006, as a high-performing specialist school, it was invited to become a Leading Edge school, promoting innovation in teaching and learning in liaison with local partner schools.[5] Despite now converting to academy status in 2011, the school still promotes languages as a specialism
The school has also received the National Association for Able Children in Education (NACE) Challenge Award "for Excellence in Provision for Able, Gifted & Talented Pupils", the Leading Aspect Award, and the Department for Education and Skills Sportsmark award.
Award System
Students may earn a form of award called Colours for significant achievement in academics, sport, debating or music and drama. Commonly these are awarded to winners of National or County tournaments however they are also awarded for extraordinary service to the school. They are also awarded for prestigious efforts undertaken by students outside of their school careers. There are four forms of colours raising in prestige: Term colours, for students performing an act of real merit; Year Colours, for students performing meritorious acts over an academic year; Half school colours, for dedication, achievement and service to a field and Full School Colours which are awarded very rarely to remarkable acts carried out on behalf of the school across a student's school career.
Colours are indicated by a range of additions to a students blazers: term and year colours are indistinguishable and take the form of a small brass badge with coloured enamel affixed to the lapel. The badge is coloured to indicate the school year in which it was earned and the field it was earned in is embossed in brass on it. Half school colours take the form of a badge sewn onto the breast of the blazer above the school crest on the pocket. The badge is always school green and the text gold. Full School colours are gold band sewn in rings onto the arms of the blazer one ring per award.
Building extensions & premises upgrades
Although the building was originally built almost symmetrically in 1939, it has undergone various changes which have meant that this is no longer the case.
In 1992, QE1 and QE2 classrooms were built inside the East End quadrangle to cope with the demand arising from extra pupils.[6]
In 1995, the Hitchcock Library was constructed to fill in the West End quadrangle with a new art room, W17 on top. The library was needed to alleviate overcrowding in the "Old Library" which is located above the headmaster's office & main school office.[6]
In 1998, the Sixth Form centre was built, removing four of the "temporary huts" 37 years after they were built.[6]
In 2003, the Language College was constructed to create room for an expanded intake of pupils; an extra 25 per year starting in the 2002–2003 year. As this was built, subject rooms also got swapped around; Mathematics moved from the four other huts into E1, E2, E3 and QE1 (E1 and E9 were previously German rooms, E2, QE1, and QE2 were French rooms, and E3 was a Latin room). E9 became an extra English Room (previously English had just E5, E6, E7 and E8) and Religious Education gained the use of QE2. Music also gained the use of L6 in the Language College for a short period of time whilst the Sports Hall & Music Centre was under construction. In the Language College, German was moved into L1 and L2, Spanish into L6 and L9, French into L10, L11, L12, L14, L15 and L16. L4, L7, and L8 are small rooms used for speaking practice and L3 and L13 are computer suites.[6][7]
Owing to such a long time in sub-standard accommodation in Music and Physical Education (as mentioned by the OFSTED report of 2001),[8] a bid was made to Southend Borough Council for a grant to be awarded for a new Sports Hall and Music Centre (following the construction of a top quality facility at St Bernard's High School for Girls). Permission was granted and the sum of £2.25 million was given to the school for the construction of this new facility.[9] The school began a development appeal to raise a further £475,000 in order to equip the centre with the latest fitness machines and recording studio. This was the largest amount an English High School had hoped to raise in the history of British education. The appeal lasted for 3 years until 2006 when it was closed. The total raised was £376,000; slightly less than expected. Unlike the Sixth Form Centre and Language College, which were built from prefabricated units in a brick shell, this building was designed by Peter Emptage & Associates and built to last. According to documentation, this building is constructed to last 120 years. Constructed in a steel frame and finished in glass, red brick, micro fibbed aluminium panelling and a beech coloured wood, the new centre boasts a 5 badminton court size sports hall, the largest school sports hall in Southend Borough (the only larger indoor hall is that at Southend Leisure & Tennis Centre). This building was completed in September 2005 and is now well used; not only by members of the school community but also the wider community in the evenings and at weekends.
In November 2008 two temporary classrooms were installed to the east of the main buildings between the music centre and the rear exit. These buildings have been constructed to relieve the inevitable stress of the new, larger pupil intake and also to provide alternative classrooms for the rooms disrupted by the planned complete window changes in the main building. The planning application was granted subject to the condition that the rooms are removed once the extension to the Sports Hall is completed.[10]
In May 2009, a planning application was submitted to Southend Council to extend the Sports Hall & Music Centre on its western side, effectively infilling the underused grass area. The application included 6 classrooms over two phases; four in Phase 1 and 2 IT suites in Phase 2, located to the north of Phase 1. The four classrooms will be used to house the Mathematics department and include 111 square metres of circulation space as well as ample storage and an office. A connection will be created from the fitness suite to the upstairs of the new extension, but will only come into use during emergency evacuations or disabled people using the lift in the main Sports Hall.[11] Construction has begun in February 2010 with scheduled completion for Phase 1 in June 2010.[12]
Over the summer months of 2010, T3 was converted to a food technology room due to the government's requirements for all schools to teach food technology as part of the curriculum beginning year 2010/11.[13]
In December 2009, a planning application was submitted to Southend Council to extend the Dining Hall into the eating area with a 150 square metre room, linked to both the dining hall and main hall.[14] This allows the room to be used both for the lunchtime seating expansion of the dining hall, exam desk expansion during exam season, and for light refreshments during school events such as the annual drama performance or music concerts.
Traditions
House system
Students at Southend High School for Boys are split into four houses; Athens (motto: nulli secundus – 'second to none'), Tuscany (motto: sine labore nihil – 'nothing without effort'), Sparta (motto: non sibi sed domo – 'Not for self, for house'), and Troy (motto: fortiter et recte – 'boldly and rightly'), modelled upon a traditional house system. Competitiveness is actively encouraged between houses as the students contend to win the Cock House Championship. Students compete in sports, music, debating and other fields to secure house points to establish the victor. In addition students earn house credits which are converted into house points which contribute towards the overall cup. As well as the overall cup each event holds its individual trophy as well as cups for individuals.[15]
School Song
During the school's early history, the school song was Forty Years On (a song adopted by several schools at the time). Around 1923, Lionel Elvin (a student and School Captain at the time) was invited to write an original song for the school after a conversation with his history master. Elvin wrote five verses which summarised school life and the nostalgic sentiment of its pupils. The song was presented to the Headmaster who approved. Although Elvin imagined the lyrics could be sung to the tune of The Lass that Loves a Sailor by Charles Dibdin, the school's music master wrote an original tune for Elvin's lyrics.[16]
Sometime before the second world war two of Elvin's five verses were dropped. Around 1939 another music master, Arthur Hutchings, composed a new tune for the song which has been used ever since. Hutchings wrote the new melody as a piano accompaniment in pencil at the back of his hymn book. In 1953 construction of a new organ was completed and music master Reginald Foxwell adapted the tune for organ. When Foxwell died suddenly in 1957 A-level music students Gerald Usher and Paul Green inherited the responsibility of leading the school song for a year until a new music master was appointed. The two students found that no copy of the song existed and Hutchings' hymn book notes had been lost. Usher played the accompaniment as he remembered it and Green taught the younger students the lyrics. Although the lyrics were written down, when the two students left a year later the melody had still not been written down and only survived through memory and through passing it down from one generation to the next.[16]
Thirty five years later in 1993 Usher was invited by Headmaster Michael Frampton to teach A-level music. Usher was shocked to find that the song was rarely sung and had changed somewhat due to it being passed on through oral tradition. Usher wrote down the 1957 version of the song from memory and made numerous copies. A few years later a copy of Hutchings' melody resurfaced in an old school newsletter from the 1940s and Usher was delighted to find that he had only mis-remembered one note and a slightly spread chord. During his time as a teacher, Usher encouraged the singing of the school song at numerous school events and nurtured its popularity among students.[16]
The School Song has since been printed and published in several documents. The song is sung at several events every academic year, most notably at the end of the final assembly of each school term, during which the entire school (except the new students whom this is intended to startle) shouts the last word (“memory”) at the top of their voice. It is also sung by members of the Old Southendian Association at meet ups and is often sung by sixth form students repeatedly during their last day. The school song is used as the music on hold when calling the school's reception.
Academic performance
The school was last inspected in February 2006 when the main conclusion of Ofsted (the Office for Standards in Education) was as follows:
- "Southend High School for Boys is an outstanding school with a very strong ethos and a distinctive character. Its pupils are justifiably proud to belong to it, make very good progress and achieve exceptionally high standards. The school successfully balances an emphasis on academic achievement with a concern for pupils' personal development and well-being. This ensures that pupils are well prepared for their place in society.
They have also recently received the NACE Challenge Award, which means they are the first secondary school in the Eastern Counties to obtain it, and the 22nd school in the entire country of Britain to achieve the award."[3]
Notable Old Southendians
Media
- Mathew Baynton, actor. Best known for his roles in Horrible Histories, Gavin & Stacey, Spy and You, Me and the Apocalypse.
- David Austin (cartoonist) (1935–2005), produced the Hom Sap cartoon for Private Eye
- Michael Field, Telegraph foreign correspondent
- David Witts, actor & model
- Phil Gardner, journalist
- Brian Gibson, film director[17]
- Andy Moore, BBC News correspondent
Literature
- Jonathan Clements, born 1971, author[18]
- Robert Nye, born 1939, poet and novelist
Music
- Robin Trower and Chris Copping of Procol Harum[19]
- Digby Fairweather[20]
- Adrian Lucas, conductor and organist
- Vivian Stanshall, poet, author and singer-songwriter. Best known for the Bonzo Dog Doo-Dah Band[21]
- Sam Duckworth, lead singer of Get Cape. Wear Cape. Fly[22]
Armed Forces
- Air Marshal Sir Frank Holroyd CB, Chief Engineer from 1988–91 of the RAF
- Brigadier Martin Hotine CMG CBE, commanded the Royal Engineers from 1917 to 1918, responsible for the design of the UK's triangulation pillars and for the Retriangulation of Great Britain in the 1930s
- Air Marshal Sir William Richardson, Chief Engineer from 1986–88 of the RAF, Station Commander from 1971–4 of RAF Colerne
Science
- Henry Chilver, Baron Chilver of Cranfield, engineer, Vice-Chancellor from 1970–89 of Cranfield Institute of Technology (since 1993 Cranfield University)
- Bertram Kelly, electrical engineer
- Neil F. Johnson, professor of physics
- Yadvinder Malhi, Professor of Ecosystem Science at the University of Oxford
Academia
- Professor Stanley Alexander de Smith, Downing Professor of the Laws of England from 1970–4 at the University of Cambridge
- Tom F Evans, academic and biographer[23]
- Stephen Pewsey, historian
- Professor Warwick Rodwell OBE, architectural historian and archaeologist
- Samuel Soal, parapsychologist
- Professor Roger Luckhurst, writer and academic
Government
- Clive Needle, Labour MEP from 1994–9 for Norfolk
Education
- Professor Lionel Elvin, UNESCO Director of Education (also authored the School Song during his time at SHSB ), Director from 1958–73 of the Institute of Education, and Principal from 1944–50 of Ruskin College, Oxford
Religion
- Gareth Bennett, ecclesiastical historian.
- Bertram Kelly: An engineer who brought light to the Isle of Man and later became a vicar.
Sport
- Mark Foster, swimmer
- Morgan Fox, footballer
- Josh Rees, footballer[24]
- John Lloyd, Tennis Player,[25]
- Garry Nelson, footballer, author
- Emile Acquah, footballer
- Noah Chilvers, footballer
David Lloyd tennis player, GB Davis Cup captain Also previous owner of Hull City FC and the David Lloyd Fitness chain Dick Clarke Indoor hockey capt England 50 times. 100 caps Jonty Clarke GB 2012 Olympic hockey Danny Linehan Canadian hockey captain and later coach David Horton England Bronze medal Commonwealth Games 1968 Mixed Doubles Badminton R.M. Taylor 1931-46 Essex cricketer Dave Allaway football Amateur Cup winner John McIntyre double Oxford Blue football and ??
References
- "Southend Grammar School for Boys (C) Bob Bowyer". www.geograph.org.uk. Retrieved 13 June 2018.
- "Secondary School Achievement and Attainment Tables 2006". Department for Education and Skills. Retrieved 22 June 2007.
- "Ofsted Report February 2006" (PDF). 2 February 2006. Retrieved 22 June 2007.
- "About SHSB". Archived from the original on 2 October 2011. Retrieved 13 June 2018.
- "Leading Edge Partnerships schools list" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 27 September 2007. Retrieved 22 June 2007.
- Southend High School for Boys Sports Hall & Music Centre Appeal Brochure
- Southend Borough Council, Planning Application Reference 01/01288/FUL. URL: "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 24 August 2011. Retrieved 23 February 2010.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
- Ofsted Report of 2001: URL: https://ofsted.biz/oxedu_reports/download/%28id%29/17247/%28as%29/115362_223811.pdf%5B%5D
- Southend Borough Council (2003). Planning Application Reference: 03/01106/FUL URL: "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 24 August 2011. Retrieved 23 February 2010.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
- Southend Borough Council (2008) Application Reference: 08/00654/FUL. URL: "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 24 August 2011. Retrieved 23 February 2010.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
- Southend Borough Council (2008) URL: http://idox.southend.gov.uk/WAM/showCaseFile.do?appName=planning&appNumber=09/00826/FUL%5B%5D
- SHSB Premises Activity 2010. URL: http://dl.dropbox.com/u/2359949/SHSB%20Premises%20Activity%202010.pdf Archived 9 October 2011 at the Wayback Machine
- SHSB Premises Activity 2010 URL: http://dl.dropbox.com/u/2359949/SHSB%20Premises%20Activity%202010.pdf Archived 9 October 2011 at the Wayback Machine
- SHSB Premises Activity. URL: http://dl.dropbox.com/u/2359949/SHSB%20Premises%20Activity%202010.pdf Archived 9 October 2011 at the Wayback Machine Planning application reference is 09/02406/FUL and floorplans are available
- House Activities Archived 29 June 2008 at the Wayback Machine; retrieved on 23 February 2008.
- "The School Song" (PDF). Old Southendian Association. 2008. Retrieved 15 February 2018.
- "Brian Gibson (obituary)". Telegraph.co.uk. 20 January 2004. Retrieved 17 January 2008.
- Hallissey, Nick (17 March 2005). "Sci-fi on the beach". Southend Evening Echo. Archived from the original on 6 August 2007. Retrieved 22 June 2007.
- "Robin's whiter shades of nostalgia". The Southend Standard. 16 September 2006. Retrieved 22 June 2007.
- Digby Fairweather – Website, additional text.
- "Interview from The Face, reproduced online". Ginger Geezer, Stanshall family archive site. 1 December 1981. Retrieved 11 September 2011.
- "Caped crusader". Echo. 23 August 2006. Archived from the original on 20 April 2013.
- "Obituary: Tom Evans". Theguardian.com. Retrieved 27 November 2014.
- "Josh guns for top with Arsenal". Braintree and Witham Times. Retrieved 13 June 2018.
- "John Lloyd: My new life as an estate agent". TheTennisSpace.com. 10 February 2012. Archived from the original on 14 July 2014. Retrieved 4 July 2014.