Bishop of Hereford's Bluecoat School explained

The Bishop of Hereford's Bluecoat School
Coordinates:52.0575°N -2.6829°W
Motto:Semper Christo Fidelis
Established:1973
Type:Voluntary aided Comprehensive school
Religious Affiliation:Church of England
Head Label:Headteacher
Address:Hampton Dene Road, Tupsley
City:Hereford
County:Herefordshire
Country:England
Local Authority:Herefordshire
Ofsted:yes
Urn:116991
Enrolment:1,180
Gender:Co-educational
Lower Age:11
Upper Age:16
Houses:Ashley, Cheshire, Livingstone and Shaftesbury
Website:http://www.bhbs.hereford.sch.uk/

The Bishop of Hereford's Bluecoat School (BHBS) is a mixed comprehensive secondary school in the Tupsley district of Hereford, England. It is a voluntary aided school, which takes children from the age of 11 through to the age of 16. It is a Church of England school and is administered by the Hereford Diocese. The current Headteacher of the school is Martin Henton. The immediate past Headteacher was Sara Catlow-Hawkins who retired in 2018. She succeeded Andrew Marson in September 2007. Marson had led the school for 21 years. [1]

The school is divided into four houses which are named after Christian campaigners. The houses are Ashley, Cheshire, Livingstone and Shaftesbury.

History

The school was formed in 1973, which was the year that Herefordshire switched from the tripartite system to a comprehensive education system. The new comprehensive school was formed by the merger of two Church of England secondary modern schools; the Bishop's School, founded in 1958, and the Bluecoat foundation, which dated back to 1710. In 1983 BHBS joined the Woodard Corporation group of Church of England schools.

In September 1997 the Department for Education and Skills (DfES) awarded the school specialist school status as a Technology College. The school was also awarded a further specialism in Languages and was among the first schools to receive training school status in 2000.[2] [3]

Headteachers

Notable former pupils

Music

The school has achieved four Artsmark Gold Awards for its Arts provision. It employs twenty-four peripatetic instrumental staff who teach nearly 300 pupils who are regularly entered for National Music Grades (213 pupils have passed a grade, with a quarter of pupils achieving grade 4 – diploma standard)Specialist professional instrumentalists lead 24 instrumental ensembles which include a Concert Band, Brass Band, Sax Choir, Guitar Group, Orchestra, Viol Consort, Steel Pans, String Ensembles, Ceilidh Band, Flutes Ensembles, Boys Woodwind Quartet, Keyboard Group, guitar group, boys choir, girls choir, a chamber choir, a Parent Staff Choir, a soul band and a Japanese Koto Group. The school's concert programme has included recent performances by its Chamber Choir in Morocco, instrumentalists and singers performing in Symphony Hall and the Royal Albert Hall as well as in Lichfield, Hereford and Worcester Cathedrals. It performs in the BBC Herefordshire Musicians showcase and achieves numerous accolades from Herefordshire Festival each year.

The school is also an Arts Award Centre, which runs the bronze and silver award as part of its fast track music provision as well as early entry at AS-level.

Sport

The school's most notable sport is rugby union. Teams between Under 12 and Under 16 are fielded most weeks during the winter and spring terms.

The school has achieved a high standard in the Under 15 Daily Mail Cup. Recently reaching the last 32 of the competition three times in five years. The school's best result in the competition was in 2007, when they reached the semi-finals, where they lost to eventual runners-up St Paul's School.[6] The school organises regular tours, and have toured South Africa, New Zealand, France and Canada.

In 2011 the Hereford Times reported that Herefordshire Council were in discussions with developers who wanted to purchase the school's sports field to build 100 houses.[7]

Technology

The school provides one SMART board and/or projector for every classroom which allows teachers to display a computer feed to the students and interact with it using the SMART board pens. (In classrooms that also have SMART Boards)

The school also have specific areas, such as the recently built 'Learning Hub', which contains around 100 computers that students can use during both break-time and lesson time. The school also provide laptops which can be used in lessons per teacher request, so that students can use Internet resources to complete research tasks.

On 10 November 2022 the school was the target of a cyber attack that led to pupils' information being published online.[8]

References

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: New head teacher appointed to Bishops School . . 28 March 2007 . 24 September 2007 . dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20090109024115/http://www.herefordshire.gov.uk/council_gov_democracy/news/29761.asp . 9 January 2009 .
  2. Web site: Specialist Schools Home . . 24 September 2007 . dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20060803055309/http://www.standards.dfes.gov.uk/specialistschools/ . 3 August 2006 .
  3. Web site: Schools to share training tips . . 24 September 2007 . 5 May 2000.
  4. Web site: Headteacher laid the base for success . . https://archive.today/20120707135504/http://archive.herefordtimes.com/2002/6/27/46953.html . dead. 7 July 2012 . 27 September 2007 .
  5. Web site: Scott Bemand profile . . 24 September 2007.
  6. Web site: Daily Mail Cup official website . 24 September 2007 . https://web.archive.org/web/20070911115204/http://www.schoolsrugby.co.uk/Tournaments/DailyMailCup/ . 11 September 2007 . dead. dmy-all .
  7. News: Anger at Herefordshire Council's plot to sell sports field at Bishop of Hereford's Bluecoat School. 26 May 2011. Hereford Times. 21 January 2011.
  8. News: 2022-11-10 . Pupils' data spread online in Hereford school cyber attack . en-GB . BBC News . 2022-11-10.