Truro High School

Truro High School is an independent day and boarding school for girls in Truro, Cornwall. The school consists of a girls-only Prep School, Senior School and Sixth Form. It is a member of the Girls' Schools Association.

Truro High School
Address
Falmouth Road

, ,
TR1 2HU

England
Coordinates50.25705°N 5.05643°W / 50.25705; -5.05643
Information
TypeIndependent day and boarding
MottoLuce Magistra
Religious affiliation(s)Church of England
Established1880
FounderEdward White Benson, Bishop of Truro
Local authorityCornwall
Chair of GovernorsMr John Keast
HeadmistressMrs Sarah Matthews
Staff80
GenderGirls
Age4 to 18
Enrolment340
Colour(s)    
Websitehttp://www.trurohigh.co.uk/

History

The school was founded in 1880 by the future archbishop Edward White Benson, then Bishop of Truro. As well as establishing Truro High School, Bishop Benson also oversaw the building of Truro Cathedral before moving on to become Archbishop of Canterbury.[1]

The school was started as an all-girls school with just seven pupils and moved to its present site in 1896. By the 1950s, pupil numbers were up to almost 500. During the early 1970s it was a direct grant grammar school before becoming independent when the tripartite system was abolished in 1976. Both boys and girls were in both its Nursery and Sixth Form at various stages in its development.

Its first headmistress was Amy Key, well known as the writer Mrs. Henry Clarke. A history of the school was written by her daughter Amy Key Clarke.

Admission

Admission into the school takes place throughout the year:

Prep – Girls join the Prep School at various stages but entry at Reception level is highly recommended. Entry is subject to availability, an interview with the Headmistress, a reference from the pupil’s current Head Teacher and a positive Taster Day. Girls do not sit entrance examinations but will be informally assessed during their Taster Day. Girls in the Prep School are guaranteed automatic transfer into the Senior School at the end of Prep 6.

Senior – Most girls join the Senior School in Year 7, with about one third of the intake coming from our own Prep 6 girls and the other two thirds coming from local primary schools, other Prep schools or out of county. Entry is subject to interview with the Headmistress, a positive Taster Day, a reference from the pupil's current Head Teacher and a successful 11+ entrance examination taken in the January of Year 6. Girls sit three papers – Mathematics, English and Verbal Reasoning with the first two papers set in line with the Key Stage 2 curriculum at Level 4 and higher.

Girls may join the Senior School higher up the school subject to availability, an interview with the Headmistress, a reference from the pupil’s current Head Teacher and a successful entrance examination. Girls would normally be expected to sit papers in Mathematics, English and Verbal Reasoning but, on occasion, may also be tested in other subjects as well.

Sixth Form – Each year girls join the Sixth Form from other schools. The entry requirements are 7 GCSE passes at Grades C and above (or equivalent), a positive Taster Day and an interview with the Headmistress. For those subjects to be studied at AS level, at least a grade B at GCSE (or equivalent) is required with most students offering grades A or A*. Prospective students are invited to have a Taster Day during Year 11 (to fit in with their own current studies) and will spend the day as a Sixth Former joining in with as many of their AS level subject choice lessons as the timetable allows.

Curriculum

Girls in Senior School are required to take English, mathematics, all three sciences, a foreign language, PE and a number of electives.

Years 7, 8 and 9 – Subjects include:

Art & Design, Biology, Chemistry, Drama, English Language, English Literature, Food & Nutrition, French, Geography, German, History, ICT, Latin, Mathematics, Music, Physics, Religious Philosophy & Ethics, Spanish, Textiles

The girls also have timetabled PE lessons (2 hours per week in Years 7–11).

In addition the School benefits from a thorough PHSE programme which supports and complements the School's Healthy School status. Topics covered range from managing money to sex education, from eating healthily to drug awareness and from dealing with bullies to study skills.

Years 10 and 11 (GCSE) – during Year 8 girls start to consider their choice of subjects for GCSE, narrowing their options slightly ahead of the start of Year 9.

Core subjects: English Language, English Literature, Mathematics, Biology, Chemistry, Physics, One Modern Language (French or Spanish), Religious Philosophy & Ethics (short or long course)

and then select three further subjects from the following

Options: Art, Food & Nutrition, French, Geography, History, Latin, Music, Physical Education, Spanish, Textiles, Theatre Studies, Astronomy, Ancient Greek, Computing

Site and facilities

The Prep and Senior departments as well as the boarding houses are on the same campus and over the last 20 years the school have subsumed the previous Daniel Girls' Secondary School site to provide the Daniel Road campus which houses English, Art, Drama, Modern Foreign Languages Departments as well as the Performing Arts Studio and Studio Theatre.

In April 2012, work on a purpose-built music and drama block began, including 6 sound proofed rooms for peripatetic teaching, new music and drama classrooms and 2 performance areas for both music and drama. This work was completed in 2014.

There is also a 22.5 metre indoor swimming pool, netball, tennis courts and an astro-turf pitch.

Boarding

The school has about 50 boarders who live, during term time, in two Boarding Houses – Dalvenie for the girls from Prep 6-Year 10 and Rashleigh House for those in Years 11–13. The Houses are located in the centre of the school campus and are home to girls from 12 different nationalities.


School publications

All pupils receive a copy of Highlights, a magazine highlighting events from the previous year. High Life newsletters are sent out every Friday to keep parents and pupils up-to-date with everything that goes on in the school community. The school also send regular school updates to parents.

Notable former pupils

Further reading

  • Amy Key Clarke, The Story of Truro High School, the Benson Foundation: with a memoir of its first headmistress Amy Key. Truro: Oscar Blackford, 1979.
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References

  1. Mark D. Chapman, ‘Benson, Edward White (1829–1896)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004; online edn, Oct 2009 accessed 4 March 2017
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