Central Foundation Boys' School

Central Foundation Boys' School is a voluntary-aided comprehensive secondary school in the London Borough of Islington. It was founded at a meeting in 1865 and opened the following year in Bath Street, before moving to its current location on Cowper Street in 1869. Originally named The Middle Class School of London, it was renamed in 1890 after the establishment of its trust body, the Central Foundation Schools Trust. Its sister school is Central Foundation Girls' School in Tower Hamlets. Both schools are beneficiaries of the charity Central Foundation Schools of London,[1] which in turn is a beneficiary of The Dulwich Estate, successor to the historic College of God's Gift charity.[2]

Central Foundation Boys' School
Address
Cowper Street

, ,
EC2A 4SH

Information
TypeVoluntary aided comprehensive school
MottoLatin: Spe Labore Fide
(By hope, by work, by faith)
Established1865
Local authorityIslington
Department for Education URN100458 Tables
OfstedReports
Head teacherJamie Brownhill
Staff110
GenderBoys (mixed Sixth Form)
Age11 to 18
Enrolment900
Houses4; Rogers  , Gassiot  , Wormell   and Alleyn  
Colour(s)Blue   and Gold  
Websitehttp://www.centralfoundationboys.co.uk

There are 750 pupils in the school aged 11–16, all of whom are boys, and around 200 sixth form students aged 16–19, both boys and girls. The sixth form is part of the Islington Sixth Form Consortium, a shared sixth form project with three other schools in Islington which is why the intake is mixed sex. The current Headteacher is Jamie Brownhill who has occupied the post since 2010.

Pupils generally take ten General Certificate of Secondary Education (GCSE) exams in Year Eleven (aged 15–16) and they have a choice of three or four A-levels or a vocational BTEC in the sixth form (16–19). An Office for Standards in Education, Children's Services and Skills (Ofsted) inspection in 2015 graded Central Foundation Boys' School as "outstanding", the highest ranking a school can have. The majority of students go on to higher education following the completion of their A-levels at the end of Year Thirteen (aged 17–18) with a third of pupils going to the top third most selective universities in the country.

History

Formative years (1866–1914)

Reverend William Rogers, a social reformer who had already established eight schools,[3] became convinced that London was full of academies for gentlemen and much had been done for the poor but there was little on offer for parents who could afford about £1 a quarter for their education.[4] In February 1865 he called a meeting of his wealthy friends at the Mansion House and raised £41,000 for the establishment of a middle class school. The school was opened on Bath Street on 1 October 1866 by Sergeant Edgar at 9:30am. Having started with 300 pupils, by the end of the first year over 700 attended the school. Like his other schools, the building had a previous occupier and was converted into a school but for this venture he wanted a building erected for the purposes of being a school which led him and the Corporation for Middle Class Education for the City of London to purchase a two-acre plot in nearby Cowper Street for £30,000 (equivalent to £30m today) where the school moved to in 1869 and remains to this day.[3] By the time The Great Hall of the main building was erected in 1873, there were over 900 boys in attendance with it reaching 1,000 at its peak.[5]

During its formative years, it had many royal visits including a visit in 1874 by Prince George of Wales (later George V) who suggested the colours of royal blue and gold be adopted as the school colours.[4] Five years later, the Founder's Day guest speaker Lord Lingen noted the school's royal links and asked his friend Sir Albert Woods, Garter Principal King of Arms, to design a coat-of-arms for the school which Lingen then had executed in two dies and stamps.[6] The school Houses were established in 1905 by Mr Wagstaff and in 1926 were given their current names after four men who were important in the early years of the school.[7] In 1910 the school was renamed The Central Foundation School after the Board of Education revises the endowment scheme.[5]

1914 to 1945

Class room, ca. 1915

During the First World War of 1914 to 1918, the school remained in London, despite an unexploded bomb falling through the roof of the Great Hall. Other than this, little damage was suffered, and in 1923 the governors acquired 3.5 acres of land at Muswell Hill for use as playing fields. In 1932 they obtained a lease of the Finsbury Technical College building, to be used as science classrooms and a gymnasium.[4] In 1940, during the Second World War, 450 pupils were evacuated to Newmarket and later to Fakenham. By the time they returned in 1945, only two classrooms could be used, due to damage by bomb blasts and fires during the Blitz. The Great Hall remained closed until 1951, when it was reopened by the Lord Mayor of London.[4] In the decades after the war, the school’s campus continued to grow, with a combination of newly acquired or newly built buildings, and classrooms that had been shut up or destroyed during the war were slowly reopened.[5]

Modern Era (1945–present)

Under the 1944 Education Act, tuition fees were abolished and for a short period the school was assisted by the London County Council until it became an aided Grammar School in 1952, with three form entry and 450 pupils in the main school.[8] In 1966 a service of thanksgiving was held on 4 October at the Church of St Botolph's to celebrate the school's centenary. In the same year, the first bricks were laid on the construction of a three-storey site primarily to house the Sixth Form but also including extra science classrooms. The following decade the Whitfield Tabernacle was acquired and converted into a Games Hall and art room.

In the wake of Circular 10/65, the school began its transition from grammar to a voluntary-aided comprehensive school in 1975. In 2006 the building which had been leased to the council for use as a court expired and returned to school ownership, it was refurbished across the following two years. Shortly after this the on-site playing fields and staff car park were refurbished into an all-seasons, covered Astro-turf pitch.[5]

Amidst changes in government targets, the school's exam results have been improving since 2010, with a 17% rise in GCSE grades that year[9] before breaking the Islington record for the highest GCSE grades achieved by any school in the borough with 82% of pupils achieving 5 A* – Cs including English and maths in 2013. This record was broken once again in 2014.[10] In 2016 the government restructured league tables to focus on progress as well as attainment which saw the school place as the highest ranked non-selective boys' school in the country and 63 out of all 3098 schools.[11] In 2015 the school was rated outstanding by Ofsted. The school is currently in the planning stages of a site-wide regeneration project, overhauling much of the internal buildings and the playground area.[8]

School structure

Key stage groups

Pupils enter at Year 7, aged 11 years old, with a current intake of 150 boys split into eight forms of under 20 pupils per form group. This number has fluctuated regularly throughout the history of the school to reflect the surrounding area. In their first three years they undertake a prescribed timetable of subjects and sit exams at the end of each year. In Year 10 the boys enter Key Stage 4 and begin preparing for their GCSE certificates. This involves choosing optional subjects alongside core subjects of English, maths and science. Exams are sat at the end of Year 11. Pupils can then choose to continue onto sixth form or leave the school.

The sixth form is shared with three other schools and is known as the Islington Sixth Form Consortium. The other three schools are St Aloysius' College, Highbury Fields School and Highbury Grove School. As the sixth form is shared between all four sites, it is co-educational to accommodate the girls from Highbury Fields and mixed intake from Highbury Grove. If students choose A Level, they will be based at one of the four schools but may move between sites during the day for different subjects whereas the BTEC courses are entirely taught on-site at Central Foundation.

House system

The house system was first introduced by Mr Wagstaff in 1906; at the time it was one of the first day schools to have one. Originally the houses were briefly named after colours (Red, Blue, White and Amber) before being named after the letters A, B, C and D, respectively, the following year.[12] In 1926 Mr Gibson renamed them[7] after men who had done the school great service in its formative years and associated one quarter of the coat-of-arms to each house as a badge. A was renamed Alleyn after Edward Alleyn, the Renaissance actor whose foundation, College of God's Gift, funded the school from 1891. B was renamed Gassiot after John Peter Gassiot, a businessman who was treasurer from the school's opening and each year would make good the deficit. C was renamed Rogers after Reverend William Rogers, the principal founder of the school. D was renamed Wormell after Dr Richard Wormell, the Second Master at the school's opening who rose to Headmaster in 1874 and remained at the school until his retirement in 1897, keeping close ties to the Old Cowperians Society thereafter.[13]

Each house has a House Captain, who begin their tenure one term into Year 12 and hand over to the new captain one term into Year 13 to allow them to focus on their final exams. Each house has a number of prefects who also begin their tenure one term into Year 10. Finally, one student from Year 12 is selected each year to be School Captain. This is separate from the School Council which has been in existence since 1948 and tenures last from 1–2 years depending on which year group the elected pupils are from.

Admission

The school is comprehensive, which means it has a mixed ability intake and has to admit pupils first judged by their ability level and then by proximity to the school. Pupils who apply sit a test at the school which will then place them in one of four ability bands. After being placed within the four bands, each grouping is then filled up in order of priority to those who are adopted or in care, those with special educational needs, those with siblings already at the school and finally by proximity to the school. 150 pupils are admitted into each year.[14]

Curriculum

The school follows the National Curriculum in Years 7–11 and offers a broad range of GCSEs (national exams taken by students aged 14–16), A-levels (national exams taken by pupils aged 16–19) and BTEC diplomas (vocational courses taken by pupils aged 16–19). The school has no affiliation with a particular religious denomination, but religious education is given throughout the school, and boys may opt to take the subject as part of their GCSE course. Each Year group has a morning assembly once a week, while Tuesday mornings see a whole school assembly in the Great Hall led by the Headmaster and other senior members of staff and focus on current affairs, topical issues and other elements not covered by the syllabus. Students participate in a number of educational visits and excursions throughout their school career, such as an annual Year 7 visit to Whipsnade Zoo or Epping Forest for Geography and Year 13 Physics visit to CERN. The curriculum comprises English, mathematics, French, history, geography, physics, chemistry, biology, art, drama, music, design technology, religious education, physical education and games. In the second year students are divided based on their ability in Maths and by Year 9 they are also divided this way in English and science. Boys take around ten subjects for GCSE in Year 10: English (language and literature), Mathematics and science, supplemented by other subjects from those listed above.[15]

In the sixth form, pupils study four AS-level (the equivalent of half an A-level qualification) subjects for one year and usually continue with three subjects to A-level. Due to the sixth form consortium with other schools, a wider choice of subjects is offered at A-level. The sixth form also offers BTEC Diplomas which are vocational courses based around a single subject and are taught exclusively at Central Foundation rather than across the consortium.

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 breaks of a week during each term.[16]

Examination

Until the establishment of the General Certificate of Education, exams were set once a year by an external examiner(s) appointed by the governors, who reported in writing on the general proficiency of pupils, as well as the condition of the school.

The school later adopted the General Certificate of Education. Currently the school offers GCSEs to pupils typically in Year 11, although Students, who pick, in Year 9, the OCR Cambridge GCSE for Creative iMedia (IT); will do their test in Year 10. Moreover, it is mandatory to study & pick AQA Religious Studies; students typically are taught throughout the junior year of Year 8, and 9 and do the test in Year 10. Students do not study RE during Year 10 to create an extra session for another class. Students in Year 7 are taught thorough the GCSE Citizenship Studies Specification under AQA Board; but unfortunately is not an option under the School.

Students mostly take their A level exams at the end of Year 13, though some subjects are modular, while the BTEC courses are examined in controlled assessments at checkpoints throughout the two-year course. Exam results have significantly risen in the 2010s for GCSEs and remained high for A level and BTEC. Upwards of 80% of pupils achieve A* – C grades in at least five of their GCSE subjects including English and maths which had been used by the government as a benchmark; Central Foundation was the first school in Islington to break the 80% barrier. In the Sixth Form the pass rate is regularly between 99–100%, with about two thirds of students achieving Cs or above. As well as being one of the highest ranked all-boys comprehensives in the country, the maths department is regularly in the top 5% of departments nationwide.

Extra-curricular activities

Clubs and societies in the school have a long history, with early student magazines proudly recording the various ups and downs of a number of societies. In the early 20th century such groups included societies for debating, photography, opera, shooting and films.

The current diet of extra-curricular activities is extremely diverse, with over 40 different before and after school clubs taking place throughout the week and many new activities trialled. One of the most significant is Music School which takes place before school every morning from 8am, or 7:30 if breakfast is included. Instrumental lessons and the instruments themselves are provided by the school and include junior and senior choirs, chamber orchestra, string quartet, brass band, concert band, guitar groups and full orchestra. Music School perform an annual winter and summer concert, the school's Founder's Day and for partner groups of the school including Wesley's Chapel, Inmarsat and Slaughter & May.

The debating society is also very popular at the school. Historically, debates were held internally on topical issues recorded in The Cowperian while in recent years the Year 7s take part in a local DebateIt competition and higher years compete in the nationwide DebateMate tournament. The school has regularly been finalists in the DebateMate Urban League and in 2013 were national champions in the DebateMate Cup.

Sport is also popular. The school offers football, cricket, basketball, boxing, fencing, table tennis, rock climbing and athletics. Football the most popular sport and the school has won the Camden and Islington Cup for 2015 and 2016, while they also compete in the Inner London Cup. The school are also reigning champions in the Islington Athletics Championship, which they have won since 2012. The school also holds an annual Sports Day in the summer at Finsbury Park, where the four houses compete against each other for points in the House Cup.

However, some clubs have been removed due to Government Cuts to Education.

Property

The Middle Class School was originally opened at a former home for Huguenot weavers on Bath Street. This premises was secured for three years and was always intended as a temporary residence until a permanent site was found.

Exterior, ca. 1915
Interior, ca. 1915

At some point in 1867 a two-acre site on Cowper Street was bought and began development. The earliest whole school photograph, dated April 1867, shows the boys and their masters in the playground at Bath Street, with the Headmaster and architect looking at plans for the Cowper Street development. The new building was opened on 29 February 1869 and The Great Hall was opened on 24 July 1873. The teaching space was expanded slightly in 1894 when the science extension was erected, opening up the original building for an increasing number of applicants. The school now has four blocks of teaching areas and the number of pupils taught in the school is 840. During the First World War, little damage was suffered but an unexploded bomb fell through the roof of the Great Hall.

Adjacent to the school in its early years was the country's first technical college, the Finsbury Technical College, which was open from 1884 to 1924.[17] In 1932 the Governors leased the then-abandoned building as it was already designed to facilitate chemistry and physics laboratories. The ground floor was converted into a gymnasium, which remains to this day, and an art room was also built. The lease was late purchased in 1962 for £14,000.

During the Second World War the site was evacuated and in its absence the Blitz caused extensive damage. In 1944 the school presented Fakenham School with a trophy as thanks for hosting it during the evacuation, hopeful that they would return that year. However the damage made this impossible until the end of 1945. Even then, only two classrooms were fit for purpose. Slowly repairs were undertaken and bit by bit the school was re-opened. The Lord Mayor reopened the Great Hall in 1951 and the Duchess of Gloucester opened the Physics Lecture Theatre in 1954.

In 1966 a £92,000 contract was commissioned for the Sixth Form Building which connected the Science Extension to the Finsbury Technical College Building. The new building, opened in 1968, could not match the varying styles, roof lines, nor the room height of the existing buildings and so, while there are corridors and staircases linking all three buildings, the floors are inconsistent. The new building provided the sixth form with a common room as well as a library, laboratory and art and pottery room. The library remained there until 2008 and the sixth form common room was returned in 2014 after moving to the other side of the site. As was intended at the time, the land fronting the site was later landscaped for football, cricket and tennis lessons, however hopes for a swimming pool never materialised.[18]

Central Foundation Boys' School, pictured in 2021

In 1974 the governors acquired Whitefield's Tabernacle on the far side of the school yard. At the time, funds were found to provide a games hall and art room. From 1988 to 1995 the Department of Education helped fund the conversion of the ground floor into six additional teaching rooms, chiefly used for maths and law. In 2006, the County Court's tenancy expired and the building was returned to the school. The building underwent a two-year renovation which saw the library move to the Court Building, a new lecture theatre open and computer provision at every desk. The most recent change to the grounds came in 2007 when the governors sold the playing fields and car park at the front of the Sixth Form Building to create the Bézier luxury flats, in order to fund an all-seasons covered Astroturf pitch as well as the Court Building's refurbishment.

Currently, in 2018, the School is under-going a massive renovation project, where the school hopes to renovate all of the School which includes the Main Block (A), the Maths Block & Entrance (B), the Court Building (CB), Tabernacle, Printing Press Building and the Sixth Form Center (also referred to as Silicon Hub). They also hope to create an underground gymnasium, and a more modernized building as the buildings acquired by the school in the last 90's were never renovated or modernized.

Summary: •Laboratory building, •Extensive refurbishment of existed listed buildings •New sports hall underground •Conversion of the Tabernacle into a new Creative Arts Center

The architecture is created by Hawkins\Brown[19]

Notable former pupils

References

  1. "Central Foundation Schools of London, registered charity no. 312695". Charity Commission for England and Wales.
  2. "The Dulwich Estate, registered charity no. 312751". Charity Commission for England and Wales.
  3. "Reverend William Rogers Article" (PDF). Alleyn's School. Archived from the original (PDF) on 7 November 2015. Retrieved 19 October 2016.
  4. The Cowperian Magazine (Vol 2 No 10 ed.). June 1966. p. 4.
  5. A brief history 1866 – 2008. The Old Cowperians. 2008.
  6. The Central (Vol 2 No 2 ed.). April 1908.
  7. The Central (Vol 8 No 1 ed.). December 1926. p. 3.
  8. Celebrating 150 years (1866–2016). September 2016.
  9. Mankston, Charlie (14 January 2011). "Islington school celebrates double GCSE and Ofsted success". Islington Gazette. Retrieved 10 February 2017.
  10. Brigstock-Barron, Rory (21 August 2014). "GCSE results: Central Foundation Boys' School trump last years record-breaking grades". Islington Gazette. Retrieved 10 February 2017.
  11. Adams, Richard; Bengtsson, Helena (19 January 2017). "Grammar schools lose top spots after league table shakeup". Guardian. Retrieved 10 February 2017.
  12. The Central (Vol 1 No 8 ed.). April 1907. p. 186.
  13. "Houses". Central Foundation Boys' School. Retrieved 10 February 2017.
  14. "Admissions". Central Foundation Boys' School. Retrieved 10 February 2017.
  15. "Curriculum". Central Foundation Boys' School. Retrieved 10 February 2017.
  16. "Term Dates". Central Foundation Boys' School. Retrieved 10 February 2017.
  17. "Finsbury Technical College (1883–1924) and the Central Institution". Technical Education Matters. 10 October 2010. Retrieved 18 January 2017.
  18. Ceremonial Opening of New Wing. 8 February 1968. p. 4.
  19. "Hawkins\Brown wins planning for the transformation of Central Foundation Boys' School".
  20. "The Times & The Sunday Times".
  21. Christopher Hogg (14 July 1992). "Obituary: John Forrest". The Independent. Retrieved 28 February 2017.
  22. Enfield, Laura (28 February 2015). "Martin Kemp says Spandau Ballet will record a brand new album after their tour". Epping Forest Guardian. Retrieved 21 September 2016.
  23. Michael Freedland (21 August 2003). "Obituary: Woolf Phillips | Global". The Guardian. Retrieved 28 February 2017.
  24. "Sir Michael Sobell". Michael Sobell Hospice. Archived from the original on 11 February 2017. Retrieved 18 January 2017.
  25. By: LSE Library (23 September 2009). "Professor Alan Stuart, c1979 | Pro-Director 1976-1979 'Alan …". Flickr. Retrieved 28 February 2017.
  26. "Alumni | Central Foundation Boys' School". Archived from the original on 27 February 2015. Retrieved 6 March 2015.
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