- Plymouth College
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Plymouth College Motto Dat Deus Incrementum Established 1877 Type Independent school
Boarding schoolHead Dr S Wormleighton Chairman of Governors Christopher Robinson Founder Mr FH Colson and Mr LF Griffiths Location Plymouth
Devon
EnglandStaff 60 full time, 15 part time.[1] Students 565 (approx.)[2] Gender Co-educational Ages 3–18 including Preparatory School Houses 4 Colours Black
Green
RedFormer pupils Old Plymothians and Mannameadians (OPMs) School song Carmen Collegii Plymothiensis Website www.plymouthcollege.com Plymouth College (PMC) is a co-educational independent school in Plymouth, Devon, England, for day and boarding pupils from the ages of 11 to 18. It was founded as a boys' school in 1877 and became coeducational in 1995.
Contents
History
The school was established in 1877 and in 1896 it bought out its older rival Mannamead School (founded in 1854), and was temporarily known as Plymouth and Mannamead College (hence the surviving abbreviation PMC).[3] The school's motto, Dat Deus Incrementum - God Gives The Increase, is the same as that of Westminster School, Marlborough College and Tonbridge School. In 1976, the first girls were admitted to the school's sixth form. It became fully coeducational in 1995, which also saw the end of Saturday morning lessons. In 2004, the school absorbed St Dunstan's Abbey School, a local but older independent school for girls. The combined school is still known as Plymouth College and remains at Ford Park, near Mutley Plain, just north of the city centre. The preparatory school is a mile south-west within the gated Millfields complex at Stonehouse.
Today
Plymouth College is an independent school for pupils from the ages of 11 to 18. Its headmaster is Dr Simon Wormleighton, who is a member of the Headmasters' and Headmistresses' Conference. The school has a non-selective intake but admission is by way of its annual entrance examination at the age of 11, or by way of Common Entrance at 13, although applications are considered at any other times and are not unusual at the beginning of GCSE courses and the sixth form.
The school offers the International Baccalaureate as the principal sixth-form (years 12 and 13) option, running alongside A level courses. The potential merits and practicalities of the Cambridge Pre-U examination are under continuing review by the governors.
The school has four houses named after past influential masters and headmasters:
Sargent's (Green)
Palmer's (Red)
Dale's (yellow)
Chaytor's (Blue)
Two other houses used to exist but were dissolved and the pupils distributed between the existing ones. This was to increase the strength of the competition. The older houses were College (Purple) and Thompson's (Black). Before 1953, there were four houses (College (black), Palmer's (white), Sargent's (blue) and Thompson's (green). In 1953, two further houses were created (Chaytor's (purple) and Dale's (yellow)). Up to at least 1981, the colours appeared only as the background to the badge on the school cap.
The houses compete against each other throughout the year in a range of activities for the Forsyth Cup.
Boarders at the school, of which about 40% are from abroad, are accommodated in two houses: College House (previously split into Colson House and Mannamead House), situated at Ford Park, and Captain's House for those in the Elite Swimming Programme, near the preparatory school site.
There has been a preparatory school on various Plymouth sites since the school's foundation; it currently accepts children aged 3 to 11, with a roll in excess of 300. In 2005, the prep schools of Plymouth College and St Dunstans's Abbey combined to form Plymouth College Preparatory School, based at the St Dunstan's site.
The school also has a CCF (Combined Cadet Force). Entry is voluntary and takes place at Year 10 for boys and girls. Service is for two years initially, but NCOs are chosen from those cadets who stay into the sixth form. There are three sections from which to choose: Army, Navy and RAF.
Sport
The school is involved with a wide range of competitive sports with impressive results and is amongst the top swimming schools in the country.
The Elite Swimming programme has produced pupils who have competed nationally and internationally, breaking over fifty British and English records. Cassandra Patten won a swimming bronze at the 2008 Olympics. The number of pupils who have been selected to swim for England and Great Britain is now well into double figures and the swimming programme is offered in a partnership with the Plymouth Leander Swimming Club.[2]
As well as swimming, the school also has an elite modern pentathlon and fencing academy and has a dedicated on-site shooting range with full facilities. The running club or "Pumas" practise on and off site and the show jumping team practise at established stables within easy reach of the College.
Other sports at the College include rugby union, rugby sevens, hockey, cricket, athletics, cross country, badminton, basketball, canoeing, golf, squash, tennis, netball, Rugby Fives, sailing and kayaking.
The rugby team has also had some great successes in the recent past, with the 2008/2009 rugby team losing only one match, to Truro College, the eventual winners of the Daily Mail cup. The cricket team has also performed to a high standard, beating the famous Marylebone Cricket Club (MCC) both times in the last two seasons. The only school in England to do so. The current rugby captain is Jamie Cronk and the cricket captain is Jake Luffman. The hockey team was captained by Edward Knight, though they have not met with the same success as the two primary school sports.
The Whiteworks Outward Bound centre on Dartmoor has a 20 bed bunkhouse[4] and the school owns further grounds featuring rugby and cricket pitches at Delgany, Derriford, about two miles north of the Ford Park campus.
Business Studies
Plymouth College has the reputation of being one of the best business schools in the UK. It has had the highest scoring student in the UK at A level in 2003, 2004, 2005, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010 and the highest performing business student in the UK at GCSE in 2004, 2006 and 2010. In addition to this it has also had a further 20 students in the national top twenty at A level and GCSE during the last 10 years. The department has also become a national leader in financial literacy and students now study both the Certificate (CeFS) and Diploma (DipFS) in Financial Studies. The department was awarded two educational excellence awards in 2008 and 2009 for its work in this field by the ifs:school of finance. The Business Department at the College has also won the CIMA Management Competition (3 times), The Young Business Writer of the Year, The Share Forecast Challenge, Make Your Mark (2 times), Student Investor (2 times) and Young Enterprise, making it the most successful school in the UK in the field of business/ enterprise competitions. Most recently, Ecovation, a business set up by pupils in the Sixth Form, was awarded Youth Social Enterprise of the Year by Social Enterprise UK. Business and Economics teacher Jonathan Shields also won the secondary school teacher of the year prize in 2010 for his work in making the business/economics department the national leader.
Fees
Annual day fees: £11,475 - £12,855, Annual full boarding £22,950 - £24,255.[5]
Various scholarships and bursaries are available for high achievers and those with proven potential in academic, sporting and other fields.
Charitable status
The previous Labour British Government and the Charity Commission indicated that independent schools would lose their charitable status if they could not clearly demonstrate that in addition to having high fees and exceptional facilities they also provide a measurable benefit to the local community and admit or provide places and education for the poor. Plymouth College facilities are widely used by local organisations, bursaries and scholarships are available and there is an evolving pattern of outreach and links with the city and community.[2] The present coalition government has yet to indicate its position.
Notable OPMs
See also: Category:People educated at Plymouth CollegeFormer pupils of Plymouth College are known as OPMs (Old Plymothians and Mannameadians). Former pupils of St Dunstan's are now included. Some of those who have come to public attention:
- Alan M. Stibbs (1901-1971), Anglican evangelical theologian, preacher, writer and missionary
- Sir Alfred Woodley Croft (1841–1925), Director of Public Instruction, Bengal, Vice-Chancellor of Calcutta University
- William Crossing (1847–1928), antiquary of Dartmoor (Old Mannameadian)
- Eden Phillpohttp://www.poppymills.carbonmade.comtts (1862–1960), writer (Old Mannameadian)
- Sir Leonard Rogers (1868–1962), tropical medicine specialist, Professor of Pathology, Bengal Medical College, 1906–1920, and founder of the Calcutta School of Tropical Medicine and the British Empire Leprosy Relief Association (now LEPRA)
- Sir Alexander Maxwell (civil servant) (1880–1963), Permanent Under-Secretary of State, Home Office, 1938–1948
- Wilson Harris (1883–1955), journalist and author
- Alexander Macklin (1889–1967), surgeon on the Imperial Trans-Antarctic Expedition
- Stuart Hibberd (1893–1983), BBC announcer and presenter, 1924–1964
- Maj-Gen Alexander Bishop (1897–1984), army officer and High Commissioner in Cyprus, 1964–1965
- Frank Coles Phillips (1902–1982), geologist
- David Forbes Martyn (1906–1970), radiophysicist
- J. C. Trewin (1908–1990), writer and drama critic
- Sir Rolf Dudley-Williams (1908–1987), co-founder and Managing Director, Power Jets Ltd, 1936–1944, and MP for Exeter, 1951–1966
- Frank Hoar (1909–1976), architect, cartoonist (as Acanthus) and architectural historian
- Robert Clark (Egyptologist)|Robert Clark]] (1909–1970), historian and Egyptologist
- David Serpell (1911–2008), Permanent Under-Secretary of State for Transport, 1968–1970, Permanent Under-Secretary of State for the Environment, 1970–?
- Michael Foot (1913–2010), Leader of the Labour Party, 1980–1983 (Prep School only)
- Ronald Jasper (1917–1990), Dean of York Minster, 1975–1984, theologian and ecclesiastical historian
- Denis Ballantyne (1919–2004), army officer
- John Trevaskis (1923–2002), classicist
- Ian D. W. Wright (born c.1934), inventor of racketball and racketball champion
- Roger Vielvoye (1942–1992), energy journalist
- David King (medical engineer) (1947–2004), developer of the CT scanner
- Gerry Hillman (born 1948), landscape painter
- Richard Deacon (born 1949), sculptor and Turner Prize winner
- Paul Seymour (born 1950), Professor of Mathematics, Princeton University, 1996–
- Mark Tavener (1954–2007), novelist and scriptwriter
- Chris Constantinou, musician
- Simon Hallett (born 1955), CFA, CIC Harding Loevner Management
- Dawn French (born 1957), comedian and scriptwriter (St Dunstan's Abbey)
- Paul Ackford (born 1958), England rugby union player and rugby journalist
- Stephen Chipman (born 1960), CEO Grant Thornton LLP
- Michael Ball (born 1962), singer, actor and presenter[6]
- Steve Banyard (born 1963), football commentator
- Milos Stankovic (born c.1963), army officer accused of treason, writer
- Miles Tunnicliff (born 1968), golfer
- Kavus Torabi (born 1971), rock musician
- Simon Edwards (born 1972), journalist and author
- Finn Peters (born 1974), jazz musician
- John Fabian (born 1976), England 7s rugby union player
- William James (born 1976), Wales rugby union player
- Stephen Davies (born 1976), children's author
- Patrick K Collins (born 1977), Munster rugby union coach
- Cassie Patten (born 1987), 2008 Olympic bronze medallist swimmer
- Poppy Mills (born 1997), 14 year old classical crossover artist http://www.poppymills.carbonmade.com
The OPM Club has rooms on the campus including a large bar and its own catering facilities with a balcony overlooking the cricket pitches and seaward.
References
- ^ "Plymouth College". www.isbi.com. http://www.isbi.com/isbi-viewschool/48-PLYMOUTH_COLLEGE.html. Retrieved 2008-03-12.
- ^ a b c "ISI Inspectorate Report 2007". www.plymouthcollege.net. http://www.isi.net/reports/2007/0838_07.pdf. Retrieved 2008-04-12.[dead link]
- ^ Chris Robinson, 'Plymouth College, The First Hundred Years', 2005, Pen & Ink.
- ^ "Commercial Welcome". www.plymouthcollege.net. http://www.plymouthcollege.net/plymouthcollege/commercial/commercial_index.asp. Retrieved 2008-03-12.[dead link]
- ^ "Plymouth College". www.plymouthcollege.net. http://www.plymouthcollege.com/our-school/admissions/fees. Retrieved 2008-04-12.
- ^ Ball referred to the school during his BBC Radio 4 Desert Island Discs interview (broadcast on 2 March 2008) and described his time as a boarder as a "horrible experience". "Desert Island Discs with Michael Ball". Desert Island Discs. BBC. Radio 4. 2008-03-02.
External links
- Plymouth College
- Plymouth Leander Swimming
- Inspectorate report
- International Baccalaureate
- OPM Club Online
- OPM Hockey Club
- OPM Lodge
Coordinates: 50°23′03″N 4°08′14″W / 50.38417°N 4.13722°W
Schools in Devon Notable Primary Comprehensive Axe Valley Community College · Braunton Community College · Clyst Vale Community College · Coombe Dean School · Coombeshead College · Dawlish Community College · Hele's School · Ilfracombe Arts College · Ivybridge Community College · King Edward VI Community College · The King's School · Newton Abbot College · Notre Dame Roman Catholic School · Paignton Community College · Plymstock School · Queen Elizabeth's Community College · Ridgeway Secondary School · South Dartmoor Community College · St Boniface's Catholic College · Tavistock College · Teign School · Teignmouth Community College · Tiverton High School · Westlands SchoolGrammar Independent Allhallows College · Blundell's School · Bramdean School · Exeter School · Kelly College · Kingsley School · The Maynard School · Plymouth College · Sands School · Shebbear College · Trinity School · United Services College · West Buckland SchoolSpecial Closed Categories:- Independent schools in Devon
- Schools with Combined Cadet Forces
- Member schools of the Headmasters' and Headmistresses' Conference
- People educated at Plymouth College
- Plymouth, Devon
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