Queen Elizabeth's Grammar School, Faversham
Queen Elizabeth's Grammar School | |
---|---|
Grammar School; Academy | |
Motto | Quality with Excellence |
Established | 1576 [1] |
Department for Education URN | 136570 Tables |
Ofsted | Reports |
Head teacher | David Anderson |
Gender | Mixed |
Age | 11 to 18 |
Enrolment | 984 |
Website | http://www.queenelizabeths.kent.sch.uk/ |
Queen Elizabeth's Grammar School (usually known as QE or QEGS) is a selective co-educational grammar school with academy status in Faversham, Kent, southeast England. It was formed in 1967, when the Queen Elizabeth 1 Grammar School for Boys and the William Gibbs School for Girls merged and moved into new accommodation opposite.
The school is attended by approximately 984 students, who come from Faversham and the nearby towns of
History
Foundation
Originally Faversham Grammar School, the School was founded in 1527 by John Cole, who endowed it with property of which he made
Disposition of the original building
The Elizabethan building remained in use as a school till 1879, when much larger premises (since demolished) were erected in St Ann's Road. For a few years it was used as dwellings, and its condition began to deteriorate. Fortunately, however, the town's
The Abbey
The Grammar School was funded in 1527 by
Graves and excavations
Excavations of the site have revealed that the church had a total length of about 370 feet; the long nave was flanked by north and south aisles in the usual manner and gave a total width of nearly 80 feet. The nave joined the large transept under a massive central tower, the foundation sockets of which took the form of large rectangular pits. From here the chalk foundations of the choir, still with aisles to north and south, ran eastwards to end in a large apse. This was flanked by two smaller apsidal foundations which terminate in aisles. Four more small apses existed on the transept arms. Among the few surviving buildings of Faversham Abbey are the two Barns at Abbey Farm. The smaller (Minor) Barn dates from 1425 and the larger (Major) Barn dates from 1476. In the farmyard of which they form part there are other listed buildings, including Abbey Farmhouse, part of which dates from the 14th century, and a small building which is thought to have been the Abbot's stable. Also surviving is the Abbey Guest House, on the east side of the Outer Gateway of the Abbey; now known as Arden's House. Arden's House, now a private residence in Abbey Street, was the location of the infamous murder of Thomas Arden in 1551.
King Stephen in 1154, his wife Matilda in 1152 and son Eustace in 1153, were all buried in the Abbey; two deep pits close to the very centre of the choir were probably the royal tombs. The Abbey Church was excavated in 1964 and the empty graves of King Stephen, his wife and son were found. Their bones are said to have been thrown into Faversham Creek when the building was dismantled. However, in the Parish Church is a canopy tomb with no contemporary inscription where is said that their bones were re-interred.
Governance
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School structure
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The house system was reestablished in 2008 with the aid of a team of students in the Sixth Form, and are represented by a colour along with a patron. The five houses are: Q (patron Cole), E (patron Johnson), G (patron Gibbs), S (patron Wreight), and F (patron Fowlds).[2]
Lower school
As of 2013, the lower school has an intake of around 125 students at the beginning of
Sixth form
A minimum of 20 offers per year will be made to external applicants.[3]
Staff
Curriculum
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The school year runs from September to July, split across three terms: the autumn term (September to December), spring term (January to April) and the summer term (April to July). Students receive two weeks off for Christmas and Easter, a six-week summer break, and three "half term" breaks.[6]
Examination
League tables published by the BBC based on 2008 A-level results ranked Queen Elizabeth's as the ninth best school in Kent.
Extra-curricular activities
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There are many clubs during lunch break (12:55–1:50) and after school; pupils do not have to pay to take part. There is a wide range of different clubs for different interests, including STEM, History, Computing, Textiles, Sports, Languages and Music. Musical instrument lessons are also on offer, but are not free.
The school's STEM extra-curriculars include the lower school's Junior STEM club, and the sixth-form's student-led STEM group, Queen Elizabeth's Science and Technology Society (QuEST).
The school has seen particular success is the F1 in Schools engineering competition, with the team, Evolve UK, becoming World Champions at the 2019 World Finals in Abu Dhabi. Following on from this accomplishment, a new team emerged, known as Eclipse. They became the UK National Champions in 2022 with the opportunity to compete at the 2023 World Finals.
QuEST
Queen Elizabeth's Science and Technology Society was founded in 2017 by a handful of upper-sixth students with the support of their Physics A-level teachers (who had joined Queen Elizabeth's that year). QuEST annually elects a president and vice-president from its student membership, who (in addition to project leads) work with Science staff to offer fifth- and sixth-formers opportunities to participate in activities across a variety of STEM subject areas. The society is divided into project areas supervised by a student project lead, although pupils may be involved with as many or as few areas as they choose.
In its inaugural year, QuEST started projects such as SpaceQuEST I—the group's first contribution to ESERO's ASGARD: Balloons for Science project as part of ASGARD VII and NanoQuEST—a nanofabrication project in collaboration with North Penn High School in the United States. QuEST has continued to make contributions to subsequent ASGARD projects with SpaceQuEST, has made further progress with NanoQuEST by partnering with the University of Bristol, and has introduced many additional projects focusing on current research. For instance, in biotechnology (BioQuEST), or with the James Webb Space Telescope (SpaceQuEST-IRIS).[9] Other QuEST divisions include RoboQuEST, EcoQuEST, BrewQuEST and the school's medical society (MedSoc). The society also organises talks, past speakers have included QEGS alumni studying for PhDs and master's degrees, experts from industry, research scientists and academics, as well as an astronaut visiting from NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory.
Current 'QuESTies', staff, and QuEST alumni have regular reunions in the form of their annual Christmas meal.
Junior STEM
The Junior STEM club, which is facilitated by Science faculty staff, has operated at least since the school's academisation in April 2011. JuniorSTEM meets weekly after school to participate in extra-curricular STEM activities. This has included project work in pursuit of British Science Association CREST Awards and competing in the Greenpower Education Trust's Formula Goblin competition.[10]
QuEST also runs frequent internal events aimed at pupils in the lower school, and hosts external speakers to give talks open to any interested students or staff. Lower school activities have included "The Twelve Days of QuESTmas", "QuEggs Launchers" - an egg–lander-adjacent engineering task, and the exceptionally popular "Pizza Box Bridge-Building Challenge".
Property
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Notable former pupils
- Sir Harry Batterbee GCMG KCVO MA (1880–1976), civil servant and diplomat, first British High Commissioner to New Zealand
- Momčilo Gavrić (1903–1993), the youngest soldier in World War I, completed his schooling at the Wreight School after the war.
- Claude Hermann Walter Johns (1857–1920), Assyriologist and clergyman[11]
- Sir Robert Magowan KCB CBE (12 September 1967 – present), former Commandant General Royal Marines
- Sir Raymond Rickett (1927–1996), educationist[12]
- Sir John Evelyn Vincent Vinelott (15 October 1923 – 22 May 2006), barrister at the Chancery Bar and an English High Court judge in the Chancery Division from 1978 to 1994.
- Isaac Hempstead Wright. (9 April 1999 – present), actor famed for playing Bran Stark in the HBO series Game of Thrones.
- Luke Thompson (ME13 Beats). (30 June 2003 - present), hip hop music producer who has produced multiple charting songs within the UK Singles Chart.
References
- ^ "Queen Elizabeth's Grammar School's Website".
- ^ "The House System". Queen Elizabeth's Grammar School, Faversham. Archived from the original on 10 April 2013. Retrieved 1 September 2013.
- ^ a b "Queen Elizabeth's Grammar School Admissions of Pupils to the School" (PDF). Queen Elizaebth's Grammar School, Faversham. 8 December 2011. Archived from the original (PDF) on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 1 September 2013.
- ^ "Queen Elizabeth's Grammar School Inspection Report" (PDF). Ofsted. 5 May 2010. Retrieved 1 September 2013.[permanent dead link]
- ^ "Queen Elizabeth's Grammar School Uniform Policy" (PDF). Queen Elizabeth's Grammar School, Faversham. 28 June 2010. Archived from the original (PDF) on 3 March 2016. Retrieved 1 September 2013.
- ^ "Term Dates 2012/13 and 2013/14" (PDF). Queen Elizabeth's Grammar School. Archived from the original (PDF) on 18 April 2013. Retrieved 4 September 2013.
- ^ "Secondary Schools in Kent". BBC News. 15 January 2009. Retrieved 4 September 2010.
- ^ "Performance results for Queen Elizabeth's Grammar School". BBC News (BBC). 13 January 2010. Retrieved 4 September 2013.
- ^ "Science Faculty, KS5". Queen Elizabeth's Grammar School, Faversham. Retrieved 30 December 2021.
- ^ "Science Faculty, KS3". Queen Elizabeth's Grammar School, Faversham. Retrieved 30 December 2021.
- doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/34198. (Subscription or UK public library membershiprequired.)
- doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/62022. (Subscription or UK public library membershiprequired.)