Rochester Grammar School
Rochester Grammar School often abbreviated to RGS is a grammar school for the education of girls between the ages of 11 and 18. It has academy status. It is now known as just "Rochester Grammar School" following the introduction of boys into the sixth form.
Rochester Grammar School is located on Rochester Maidstone Road, opposite the Sir Joseph Williamson's Mathematical School. Their sixth form is mixed but the rest of the school is single-sex.
History
The Rochester Grammar School for Girls was established in 1888 under the powers of the Endowed School’s Act of 1869, which allowed the charitable trustees of the Bridge Wardens to donate the necessary funds for a girls’ grammar school. This was seen as progressive as it pioneered education for girls. Each year the school celebrates its founding with a special service at Rochester Cathedral.The school building, near the centre of Rochester, was opened in January 1889 by the Countess of Darnley. The school included a morning Kindergarten, which closed in the late 1930s.
In 1939, after the outbreak of the Second World War, the school building was taken over by the Civil Defence and the pupils were evacuated to Canterbury, moving in 1940 to Pontypridd then Porthcawl in South Wales. Several bombs fell on the school site during an incendiary raid in 1941, the main school building suffering slight damage. From 1941 an increasing number of pupils began to return to live in Rochester, and in 1942 the school was reopened, although parts of the building remained occupied by the Civil Defence until the summer of 1944.
The first male teachers were appointed in the 1960s. In 1969 additional school buildings were opened 1.3 km south of the existing school on the outskirts of Rochester. The need for staff and pupils to commute between the two sites, overcrowding and the dilapidation of the old building eventually led to the decision to consolidate the school at one location, and in April 1989 work began on additional buildings on the newer southern site. The original school building was finally closed in 1990, with the site sold for housing and a health centre.
The move to the new site allowed an expansion in the school, and it has grown in size to over 1,100 students, with nearly 300 in the sixth form. Since 2004 male students have been admitted to the sixth form, resulting in a change in the school's title in 2006 to "Rochester Grammar School" – removing the words "for Girls".
The school became grant-maintained in 1993, with funding directly from central government. In November 2010 the RGS became an “Academy of Excellence” under the Government’s academy programme for outstanding schools, and is a combined Mathematics/ICT and Music specialist school, the first nationally. Facilities now include a sixth form centre, a newly built and hi-tech teaching and training suite named after one of the school’s famous ex-students – Evelyn Dunbar. Dunbar was the only woman commissioned as a war artist, and her pictures illustrating the home front during World War II decorate the suite.
Subjects
The school teaches a wide variety of subjects including Anthropology, Art, Business Studies, Computing, Classical Civilisation, Design and Technology, Drama, Economics, Film Studies, English, Geography, History, IT, Mathematics, Modern Languages RS, PE, German, Sciences, Philosophy, Politics, Psychology, Product Design, Drama, Music, Sociology and Exel.Keystages
The school operates a two-year Key Stage 3 and start Key Stage 4 at the beginning of Year 9, when students start to study for their GCSEs. All pupils are expected to aim to achieve grades of a very high standard in every subject, the school is well known for its high GCSE and A level results. All students entering Key Stage 5 from 2020 will study the International Baccalaureate and A Levels will no longer be offered.League tables and examination results
GCSEs & A-LevelsA 2010 BBC ranked the school as having the best GCSE and second best A/AS-Level results in the south east.
In 2012 99% of students studying GCSEs attained 5 A*-C grades, including maths and English, and 99% of those studying A-levels received at least three.
International Baccalaureate
In 2011, The Rochester Grammar School was the top performing state school for IB nationally. Forty one of their students completed the IB diploma and a third achieved a score of 40 or more, which is equivalent to 4 A* grades at A Level. One student achieved the maximum possible score of 45 in their International Baccalaureate examinations, which is achieved by less than 1% of students globally.
From 2020, all students entering the school's Sixth Form will study the IB. A Levels will no longer be offered.
Houses
There are six school houses and colours associated with each – Byron, Cassidy, Fitzgerald, Hildegard, Somerville and Tomlinson. They are named after prominent women in the fields of music, mathematics, sports and literature. Each pupil wears a house flash with the colours of their house above the school badge on their blazer, showing which house they belong to. Sixth formers have pin badges with their house colours. Each form consists of a wide variety of different year 7-11 pupils who belong to the same house, known as vertical tutor groups. This plan was put in place in September 2007, and overhauled in September 2010, with vertical tutor groups including all year groups.These groups were changed again in 2013 to include only years 7-12 with separate forms for all students in Year 13.
The houses compete against each other in events throughout the year, including inter-house year tournaments such as netball, speed-stacking, benchball, dance and football. For harvest festival, each house has a specific theme allocated and each form creates a box that incorporates this theme. At the end of the year the houses compete in sports day, Olympiad and house arts day.
Originally, there were only four houses, named after the patron saints of the four countries of the British Isles: Andrew, David, George and Patrick, the colours being taken from the flower emblems thistle, daffodil, rose and shamrock.
Sixth form
In 1999 a new sixth form block, the Peggy Saxby Suite, was opened, with a large common room, a silent study area and several classrooms. This has recently changed and the common room is now home to a very large silent study hall, the Independent Learning Centre, and has many computers and desks for students to use during study periods. There is no common room, but sixth-form students have access to a separate café during break and lunch time. The sixth form now includes male pupils, and the current year twelve has a record number of male pupils.Sport
The school has many girls and a few boys who represent the county and even the country in a range of sports, including football, skiing, sailing, netball and athletics.All years take part in Physical Education with a different sport every term. These include Netball, Gymnastics, Football, Hockey, Athletics, Dance, Rounders.
The school has a well equipped gym and, outside the school, two full netball courts, an astro-turf hockey pitch and an athletics track.
Everyone is encouraged to take part in the Sports Day which is normally held at the end of the school year, which is one of the many ways to gain house points and win the house cup.
Music
The school is known for the musical abilities of its pupils. There is an orchestra, a flute choir, a main choir, a gospel choir, a chamber choir, a year seven choir and 'NChant', a choir formed of students from years 9-13 who audition to become members. Year 8 students also are able to reach a bronze Arts award.Notable former pupils
- Natasha Brennan, rugby player
- Kat Driscoll, Team GB Trampolinist
- Evelyn Dunbar, war artist
- Charlotte Evans, Team GB Paralympic Skier Guide
- Caroline Feraday, broadcaster
- Diane James, former UK Independence Party leader-elect, and MEP
- Alice Oseman, author
- Gemma Quinnell, choreographer
- Mildred Ratcliffe, painter, commercial artist & calligrapher
- Dame Sybil Thorndike, actress
- Sophia Webster, fashion designer
Controversies
In July 2016, the Thinking Schools Academy Trust Chairman, Peter Martin paid tribute to Ms Shepherd, who had since resigned, stating that:
"The Trust undertook a formal investigation, into allegations of misconduct made against Ms Shepherd. This has now concluded, with no further action required to be taken. It is extremely regrettable that these allegations were leaked to the press by an unknown source."
In July 2017 RGS received national media coverage when it was disclosed that the History Department, when teaching pupils about the 19th Century African Slave Trade, had provided a worksheet that invited Year 8 pupils to take part in a fictional slave auction, using stereotypical negative qualities about African people. The Head of the History Department later apologised on behalf of the school.
In June 2018 the school lost an unencrypted memory stick containing data of more than 1,000 pupils.