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Lawrence Sheriff School

Lawrence Sheriff School is a boys' grammar school in Rugby, Warwickshire, England. The school is named after Lawrence Sheriff, the Elizabethan founder of Rugby School. Lawrence Sheriff School was founded in 1878, in order to continue Sheriff's original bequest for a free grammar school for the boys of Rugby and surrounding villages, which had originally been fulfilled by Rugby School, until the latter moved to become a fee-paying public school in the 19th century. The school's name is often shortened to 'LSS', or often just 'Sheriff'. The school has historically run in partnership with Rugby High School for Girls, a nearby grammar school.

Lawrence Sheriff School
Address
Clifton Road

, ,
CV21 3AG

England
Coordinates52°22′17″N 1°15′20″W / 52.3713°N 1.2555°W / 52.3713; -1.2555Coordinates: 52°22′17″N 1°15′20″W / 52.3713°N 1.2555°W / 52.3713; -1.2555
Information
TypeGrammar school;
Academy
Established1878
Local authorityWarwickshire County Council
Department for Education URN141277 Tables
OfstedReports
Head teacherTeresa Mpofu[1]
Faculty69
GenderMale only (Years 7 - 11) Mixed Gender (Sixth Form)
Age11 to 18
Enrolment863
HousesCaldecott, Simpson, Tait, Wheeler, Kent
Colour(s)Navy and White   
PublicationThe Weekly Word, LSS Griffin
Websitewww.lawrencesheriffschool.net

History

 
The Griffin: the Lawrence Sheriff School emblem

Foundation

Lawrence Sheriff School was founded to fulfil Lawrence Sheriff's original intentions to provide a school for the boys of Rugby and neighbouring Brownsover, which was originally carried out by Rugby School. By the eighteenth century, Rugby School had acquired a national reputation as a public school and moved to its present site.

As the proportion of pupils from outside Rugby increased and the people of the town seemed to benefit less from Lawrence Sheriff's original bequest, local concern led to the nineteenth-century proposal of a Lower School for local boys, with Foundation Scholarships to the Great School. The Lower School was opened in 1878 on the present site of Lawrence Sheriff School with a curriculum designed to meet the needs of a commercial education and preparation for Rugby School. By 1906, a compromise between the traditions of the Foundation and a proposal to hand the school over to the county, led to a Governing body chaired by the Headmaster of Rugby School and containing both Foundation and County Governors. The school was built on what before was glebe land named Market Field, at what was the east limit of the built-up area of Rugby.[2]

Second World War

Due to the need for maximum food production within Britain during the Second World War, unproductive land (sports fields, large ornamental gardens, parks, golf courses, etc.) was requisitioned for farming or allotment gardens. In this period, the School Field and a third of the Hart Field were used in the grass growing season for sheep grazing but remained in school sport use. Most of the rest of the Hart Field was ploughed and used for growing wheat, except a strip along the bottom edge border that was used for allotment gardens; that border was adjacent to existing allotment gardens which were outside the school property. Approximately one third of the school's sixth form lost their lives during the war.[citation needed]

Voluntary aided status

This partnership continued into voluntary aided status under the 1944 Act.

At the time the school opened, it was on the outskirts of Rugby town, which in 1878 was much smaller than now. The original building (now called Big School), was extended in 1909 with science wings (now used for Chemistry and Physics) on each side. The school continued to grow with several extensions, including the Jubilee Wings (1926 and 1934), the library wing (1957), and major expansion in the early 1960s, which included new biology labs and a new gymnasium. Big School was badly damaged by a fire in 1980, but was immediately restored. The school organ was damaged beyond repair and was replaced.[3]

In September 2014 Lawrence Sheriff School converted to academy status, thus ending its status as a voluntary aided school.[citation needed]

Present day

Lawrence Sheriff School is now the selective boys' grammar school for Rugby and the surrounding area. The school also has an old boys society: the Old Laurentians.

The school has been expanded greatly in the last fifteen years with the construction of a new sixth form centre and the conversion of Penrhos House, originally the sixth form common room, into a Music block, as well as the construction of a new Learning Resources Centre.

Sport

The school owns a playing field, Hart Field, a mile away east-southeastwards, with five Rugby pitches and changing rooms. Over the school year of 2009, the field was regenerated with new pitches created, including an Astroturf field, a new block of changing rooms, cricket nets and levelled playing fields.

Following funding from Sport England, the school also houses a regional and local table tennis centre.[citation needed]

Academic performance

In 2008, 2010 and 2011 the school came first in national performance tables based upon data from the Department for Education (schools were ranked by their total points score in examinations). In 2012 it came fourth in the country and in 2013 it came seventh out of 3,200 secondary schools.

In 2013 75% of boys gained the English Baccalaurate. Comparing this to local selective schools in the area 87% of King Edward VI pupils, 73% of Bablake pupils, 66% of Rugby High School pupils and 64% of Rugby School pupils gained the certificate.[citation needed]

In 2014 97% of boys gained the English Baccalaurate, placing the school third in the country according to the performance tables published in the Daily Telegraph on Thursday 29 January. The same table showed that the school's average points score placed it fifteenth in the country.[4]

In January 2009 the school achieved an average point score of 792,[5] whilst in January 2011 it came top again, with an average point score of 757.4.[6]

Recent changes

 
Lawrence Sheriff School: two new buildings spreading into the School Field, 25 June 2008

The school operates a vertical tutoring system, in which forms consist of students from each year group. This was implemented to allow older students to mentor and support younger students. It also provides tutors with increased opportunities to support individual students and to check their progress more closely.[7]

The school is partnering with Lutterworth High School in order to sponsor a primary school in the area. However, Peter Kent, the school's headmaster, stated that the new school will not become a feeder school for Lawrence Sheriff.[8]

A new science building was completed in 2021.

Historically, the positions of head boy and, once the sixth form became mixed, head girl were filled through a competitive election cycle including speeches and teacher and student voting. The head student position was abolished in 2021.

Notable Old Laurentians

Former pupils at the school are called Old Laurentians and include:

Houses

There are five houses: Caldecott (Purple), Simpson (Green), Tait (Red), Wheeler (Blue) and Kent (Yellow). There are many inter-house competitions between the five. These competitions can range from sports or academic competitions. At the end of each year, the house with the most points for each competition wins a trophy. In 2020, Kent house was established to fit the increasing number of students being admitted.

Wheeler house was renamed from "School House" in 1963.

Tait house was named after a local auctioneer and parent- Edwin Tait. In 1891, an altercation broke out between Mr Tait and the headmaster Mr Weisse over the flogging of his son. The situation was resolved and Mr Tait subsequently presented a cup for the Champion Athlete.[11]

Kent house was named after Dr Kent once headmaster who departed the school at the end of the 2021 autumn term.

Local Government Ombudsman Report

On 19 May 2014 the school was found at fault by the Local Government Ombudsman for failing to provide an appeal to a child whose place was withdrawn for 2013 entry.[12]

Student convicted of terror offences

In 2022, LSS student, Paul Dunleavy (age 17) [13] who was part of a banned neo-Nazi group, was jailed for preparing acts of terrorism for 5.5 years. He is apparently the youngest person convicted of terror offences. [14]

Harassment against the school

In 2015 at the Coventry County Court, the School successfully applied for an injunction against a parent who for many years harassed senior members of the school through a number of different channels. The judge ruled that the parent had "crossed the boundary between unattractive or unreasonable conduct to conduct, which is, indeed, oppressive and unacceptable. It has plainly involved a deliberate and persistent course of, in my view, unreasonable and oppressive conduct, which was calculated to, and did, cause alarm, fear or distress…”[15]

Other information

Notes

  1. ^ "Home". Retrieved 3 April 2022.
  2. ^ "Lawrence Sheriff School, Rugby". Our Warwickshire. Retrieved 22 February 2022.
  3. ^ NPORView G00126
  4. ^ Weekly Word Vol18 No 1 Friday 5 September 2014. www.lawrencesheriffschool.net. Retrieved 12 September 2014
  5. ^ Beckford, Martin (15 January 2009). "School League Tables 2009: Best school shows boys can make the grade". The Daily Telegraph. London. Retrieved 23 January 2009.
  6. ^ "Secondary league tables: Best GCSE results". BBC News. London. 12 January 2011. Retrieved 1 March 2011.
  7. ^ "Lawrence Sheriff School, Rugby: Schools in Rugby". Schooletc.co.uk. Retrieved 13 February 2014.
  8. ^ "Lawrence Sheriff School and Lutterworth High School set for joint work in new trust". www.rugbyadvertiser.co.uk. Retrieved 27 December 2017.
  9. ^ "Reginald Foort Cinema organist". Our Warwickshire. Retrieved 22 February 2022.
  10. ^ Biographical Index of Former Fellows of the Royal Society of Edinburgh 1783–2002 (PDF). The Royal Society of Edinburgh. July 2006. ISBN 0-902-198-84-X.
  11. ^ Weekly Word Vol24 No 18 Friday 29 January 2021. www.lawrencesheriffschool.net. Retrieved 29 January 2021
  12. ^ . www.lgo.org.uk. Archived from the original on 11 February 2017.
  13. ^ https://www.thelawpages.com/court-cases/Paul-Dunleavy-30576-1.law
  14. ^ https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/5742d3f4-2068-11eb-8696-f5d5fcef88fd?shareToken=6cb873548fc7f4a165ad34f9f8af6147
  15. ^ "Dealing with parents who post online".

External links

  • Official website
  • The Old Laurentian Website
  • Regional Table Tennis Centre
  • Local Government Ombudsman Report 2014

lawrence, sheriff, school, boys, grammar, school, rugby, warwickshire, england, school, named, after, lawrence, sheriff, elizabethan, founder, rugby, school, founded, 1878, order, continue, sheriff, original, bequest, free, grammar, school, boys, rugby, surrou. Lawrence Sheriff School is a boys grammar school in Rugby Warwickshire England The school is named after Lawrence Sheriff the Elizabethan founder of Rugby School Lawrence Sheriff School was founded in 1878 in order to continue Sheriff s original bequest for a free grammar school for the boys of Rugby and surrounding villages which had originally been fulfilled by Rugby School until the latter moved to become a fee paying public school in the 19th century The school s name is often shortened to LSS or often just Sheriff The school has historically run in partnership with Rugby High School for Girls a nearby grammar school Lawrence Sheriff SchoolAddressClifton RoadRugby Warwickshire CV21 3AGEnglandCoordinates52 22 17 N 1 15 20 W 52 3713 N 1 2555 W 52 3713 1 2555 Coordinates 52 22 17 N 1 15 20 W 52 3713 N 1 2555 W 52 3713 1 2555InformationTypeGrammar school AcademyEstablished1878Local authorityWarwickshire County CouncilDepartment for Education URN141277 TablesOfstedReportsHead teacherTeresa Mpofu 1 Faculty69GenderMale only Years 7 11 Mixed Gender Sixth Form Age11 to 18Enrolment863HousesCaldecott Simpson Tait Wheeler KentColour s Navy and White PublicationThe Weekly Word LSS GriffinWebsitewww wbr lawrencesheriffschool wbr net Contents 1 History 1 1 Foundation 1 2 Second World War 1 3 Voluntary aided status 2 Present day 2 1 Sport 3 Academic performance 4 Recent changes 5 Notable Old Laurentians 6 Houses 7 Local Government Ombudsman Report 8 Student convicted of terror offences 9 Harassment against the school 10 Other information 11 Notes 12 External linksHistory Edit The Griffin the Lawrence Sheriff School emblem Foundation Edit Lawrence Sheriff School was founded to fulfil Lawrence Sheriff s original intentions to provide a school for the boys of Rugby and neighbouring Brownsover which was originally carried out by Rugby School By the eighteenth century Rugby School had acquired a national reputation as a public school and moved to its present site As the proportion of pupils from outside Rugby increased and the people of the town seemed to benefit less from Lawrence Sheriff s original bequest local concern led to the nineteenth century proposal of a Lower School for local boys with Foundation Scholarships to the Great School The Lower School was opened in 1878 on the present site of Lawrence Sheriff School with a curriculum designed to meet the needs of a commercial education and preparation for Rugby School By 1906 a compromise between the traditions of the Foundation and a proposal to hand the school over to the county led to a Governing body chaired by the Headmaster of Rugby School and containing both Foundation and County Governors The school was built on what before was glebe land named Market Field at what was the east limit of the built up area of Rugby 2 Second World War Edit Due to the need for maximum food production within Britain during the Second World War unproductive land sports fields large ornamental gardens parks golf courses etc was requisitioned for farming or allotment gardens In this period the School Field and a third of the Hart Field were used in the grass growing season for sheep grazing but remained in school sport use Most of the rest of the Hart Field was ploughed and used for growing wheat except a strip along the bottom edge border that was used for allotment gardens that border was adjacent to existing allotment gardens which were outside the school property Approximately one third of the school s sixth form lost their lives during the war citation needed Voluntary aided status Edit This partnership continued into voluntary aided status under the 1944 Act At the time the school opened it was on the outskirts of Rugby town which in 1878 was much smaller than now The original building now called Big School was extended in 1909 with science wings now used for Chemistry and Physics on each side The school continued to grow with several extensions including the Jubilee Wings 1926 and 1934 the library wing 1957 and major expansion in the early 1960s which included new biology labs and a new gymnasium Big School was badly damaged by a fire in 1980 but was immediately restored The school organ was damaged beyond repair and was replaced 3 In September 2014 Lawrence Sheriff School converted to academy status thus ending its status as a voluntary aided school citation needed Present day EditLawrence Sheriff School is now the selective boys grammar school for Rugby and the surrounding area The school also has an old boys society the Old Laurentians The school has been expanded greatly in the last fifteen years with the construction of a new sixth form centre and the conversion of Penrhos House originally the sixth form common room into a Music block as well as the construction of a new Learning Resources Centre Sport Edit The school owns a playing field Hart Field a mile away east southeastwards with five Rugby pitches and changing rooms Over the school year of 2009 the field was regenerated with new pitches created including an Astroturf field a new block of changing rooms cricket nets and levelled playing fields Following funding from Sport England the school also houses a regional and local table tennis centre citation needed Academic performance EditIn 2008 2010 and 2011 the school came first in national performance tables based upon data from the Department for Education schools were ranked by their total points score in examinations In 2012 it came fourth in the country and in 2013 it came seventh out of 3 200 secondary schools In 2013 75 of boys gained the English Baccalaurate Comparing this to local selective schools in the area 87 of King Edward VI pupils 73 of Bablake pupils 66 of Rugby High School pupils and 64 of Rugby School pupils gained the certificate citation needed In 2014 97 of boys gained the English Baccalaurate placing the school third in the country according to the performance tables published in the Daily Telegraph on Thursday 29 January The same table showed that the school s average points score placed it fifteenth in the country 4 In January 2009 the school achieved an average point score of 792 5 whilst in January 2011 it came top again with an average point score of 757 4 6 Recent changes Edit Lawrence Sheriff School two new buildings spreading into the School Field 25 June 2008 The school operates a vertical tutoring system in which forms consist of students from each year group This was implemented to allow older students to mentor and support younger students It also provides tutors with increased opportunities to support individual students and to check their progress more closely 7 The school is partnering with Lutterworth High School in order to sponsor a primary school in the area However Peter Kent the school s headmaster stated that the new school will not become a feeder school for Lawrence Sheriff 8 A new science building was completed in 2021 Historically the positions of head boy and once the sixth form became mixed head girl were filled through a competitive election cycle including speeches and teacher and student voting The head student position was abolished in 2021 Notable Old Laurentians EditSee also Category People educated at Lawrence Sheriff School Former pupils at the school are called Old Laurentians and include Steve Beebee author and journalist Arthur Bostrom Crabtree in Allo Allo head boy at the school Will Carruthers musician Michael Claridge professor of entomology at Cardiff University from 1983 99 and president of the Linnean Society of London from 1988 91 Wayne Clarke award winning broadcaster Ben Croshaw producer of Zero Punctuation Valentine Cunningham professor of English language and literature at the University of Oxford since 1996 Reginald Foort organist 9 John L Harper CBE plant biologist Thomas Hedley media magnate Robert George Spencer Hudson geologist and president of the Paleontological Association from 1957 59 Ralph Hudson Johnson FRSE 1933 1993 neurologist 10 Mark Mapletoft former England rugby player and season top point scorer in English rugby union premiership David Mowat Conservative MP for Warrington South from 2010 17 Mark Pawsey Conservative MP for Rugby since 2010 Jason Pierce singer Mike Powell Warwickshire cricketer Ric Todd former Ambassador to Poland 2007 11 and Governor of the Turks and Caicos Islands 2011 2013 Andrew Rawnsley political journalist Walter Sweeney Conservative MP for Vale of Glamorgan from 1992 97 Maj Gen Anthony Trythall CB director of Army Education from 1980 84 Kevin Warwick computer scientist Norman Wooding CBE chairman of Courtaulds from 1978 83Houses EditThere are five houses Caldecott Purple Simpson Green Tait Red Wheeler Blue and Kent Yellow There are many inter house competitions between the five These competitions can range from sports or academic competitions At the end of each year the house with the most points for each competition wins a trophy In 2020 Kent house was established to fit the increasing number of students being admitted Wheeler house was renamed from School House in 1963 Tait house was named after a local auctioneer and parent Edwin Tait In 1891 an altercation broke out between Mr Tait and the headmaster Mr Weisse over the flogging of his son The situation was resolved and Mr Tait subsequently presented a cup for the Champion Athlete 11 Kent house was named after Dr Kent once headmaster who departed the school at the end of the 2021 autumn term Local Government Ombudsman Report EditOn 19 May 2014 the school was found at fault by the Local Government Ombudsman for failing to provide an appeal to a child whose place was withdrawn for 2013 entry 12 Student convicted of terror offences EditIn 2022 LSS student Paul Dunleavy age 17 13 who was part of a banned neo Nazi group was jailed for preparing acts of terrorism for 5 5 years He is apparently the youngest person convicted of terror offences 14 Harassment against the school EditIn 2015 at the Coventry County Court the School successfully applied for an injunction against a parent who for many years harassed senior members of the school through a number of different channels The judge ruled that the parent had crossed the boundary between unattractive or unreasonable conduct to conduct which is indeed oppressive and unacceptable It has plainly involved a deliberate and persistent course of in my view unreasonable and oppressive conduct which was calculated to and did cause alarm fear or distress 15 Other information EditThe Parents Association is in the Guinness Book of Records as the UK s oldest Parents Association citation needed The school has a partnership with Rugby School and is twinned at Years 12 and 13 the sixth form of education with Rugby High School citation needed Notes Edit Home Retrieved 3 April 2022 Lawrence Sheriff School Rugby Our Warwickshire Retrieved 22 February 2022 NPORView G00126 Weekly Word Vol18 No 1 Friday 5 September 2014 www lawrencesheriffschool net Retrieved 12 September 2014 Beckford Martin 15 January 2009 School League Tables 2009 Best school shows boys can make the grade The Daily Telegraph London Retrieved 23 January 2009 Secondary league tables Best GCSE results BBC News London 12 January 2011 Retrieved 1 March 2011 Lawrence Sheriff School Rugby Schools in Rugby Schooletc co uk Retrieved 13 February 2014 Lawrence Sheriff School and Lutterworth High School set for joint work in new trust www rugbyadvertiser co uk Retrieved 27 December 2017 Reginald Foort Cinema organist Our Warwickshire Retrieved 22 February 2022 Biographical Index of Former Fellows of the Royal Society of Edinburgh 1783 2002 PDF The Royal Society of Edinburgh July 2006 ISBN 0 902 198 84 X Weekly Word Vol24 No 18 Friday 29 January 2021 www lawrencesheriffschool net Retrieved 29 January 2021 LGO Internet 13 004 713 www lgo org uk Archived from the original on 11 February 2017 https www thelawpages com court cases Paul Dunleavy 30576 1 law https www thetimes co uk article 5742d3f4 2068 11eb 8696 f5d5fcef88fd shareToken 6cb873548fc7f4a165ad34f9f8af6147 Dealing with parents who post online External links EditOfficial website The Old Laurentian Website Regional Table Tennis Centre Local Government Ombudsman Report 2014 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lawrence Sheriff School amp oldid 1129561638, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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