Fitzalan High School

Fitzalan High School
Ysgol Uwchradd Fitzalan
Address
Lawrenny Avenue
Leckwith
Cardiff, CF11 8XB
Wales
Coordinates 51°28′37″N 3°12′47″W / 51.477°N 3.213°W / 51.477; -3.213
Information
School type Co-Educational Comprehensive (Community)
Motto ‘Veritas praevalebit’ (Truth will prevail)
Founded 1953
LEA Cardiff
Headteacher Mrs C Bradshaw
Staff 80+
Age range 1118
Pupils 1500+
Medium of language English
Colour(s) Green/Black/Maroon
Publication Fitzalan News/Newyddion Fitzalan
Website http://www.fitzalan.cardiff.sch.uk/

Fitzalan High School (Welsh: Ysgol Uwchradd Fitzalan) is an 11-19 mixed, large, co-educational, community comprehensive secondary school in Cardiff. The school is located in the Leckwith area of Canton in Cardiff, Wales. The school serves some areas which are economically disadvantaged. Over 40 different languages are spoken within the school community. There are currently (2010) 1,440 pupils on roll including 254 students in the sixth form.

The school's catchment area covers Canton, Butetown, Grangetown, Riverside. Principal feeder schools are Kitchener, Radnor, Lansdowne, Severn Road, Ninian Park Primary, St. Mary the Virgin, Grangetown and Mount Stuart.

History – the origins

Fitzalan High School has links to Cardiff's first municipal secondary school at Howard Gardens, Adamsdown in 1884. The school later became Howardian High School and a Grammar School in 1941. Much of the school was subsequently destroyed by incendiary bombs in the Cardiff Blitz [1] during the night of 3–4 March 1941 in World War II. The school's girls and boys relocated to newly built buildings, Lady Margaret High School for Girls (1948) and Howardian High School for Boys (1953), in Penylan.[2]

After the war the building at Howard Gardens was partially repaired.[3] A new technical school was opened in September 1953 with around 200 boys. It was officially named ‘Fitzalan Technical High School’ in December 1953.

The Howard Gardens site was to be re-developed (as Cardiff School of Art & Design) and Fitzalan Technical High School acquired new premises on the present site in Lawrenny Avenue, Canton, Cardiff. It was opened on Tuesday 3 March 1964. In January 1968 the school was renamed Fitzalan High School (dropping 'Technical'), becoming a comprehensive school.

Organisation and communications

Pupils are grouped according to their abilities with the more able pupils placed in an express set. Pupils with special educational needs receive specialist support in class to ensure that they can access the curriculum fully.[4] The school has four Houses: DEWI, LLEWELLYN, GLYNDWR, and HYWEL. The school has a website, and issues a regular newsletter on school activities. A School Council exists for pupils to raise any issues through this forum. It has many community links and local residents and interest groups, who are allowed to use the extensive facilities. The school has an established and published policy on 'anti-bullying' for all pupils. A Parent Teacher Association (PTA) was formed in 1978 called the ‘Friends of Fitzalan‛. It supports the school, raises funds, and helps organise social events.

In 2007 the school embarked on a program to reduce its carbon footprint after an audit by the Carbon Trust. Steps taken included installing "eco-quiet" computers, one of which was to be powered by a demonstration wind turbine.[5]

Fitzalan claims it has the highest ratio of interactive whiteboards to classrooms of any secondary school in Wales.[6] The school was awarded the NAACE Mark for excellence in the use of ICT in November 2005. Six new thirty station ICT suites have been installed since 2006 with state-of-the-art computers and software.[6]

Organised Sports and Arts

The school campus includes 2 gymnasia, a multi use dance studio, 2 indoor multi use halls, 2 fitness suites, a sports hall, a swimming pool, 4 grass football/ rugby pitches and an artificial cricket square. In addition daily access to the Gol Centre, comprising 12 five-a-side artificial football pitches, the Welsh International Athletics Stadium and artificial sports pitches. BTEC sport lessons take place in both school and in Cardiff City Football Club.

Facilities

Head teachers

Mr Fred. C. Oram, B.A. BSc., Viriamu Jones Secondary Technical School, 1951-1953
Mr Harold C. Eyre, B.A., Fitzalan Technical High School, Howard Gardens, 1953-1963
Mr Harold C. Eyre, B.A., Fitzalan Technical High School, Leckwith, 1963-1967
Mr Peter L. Goble, M.A., Fitzalan High School, Leckwith, (as a Comprehensive), 1968-1983
Mr Angus Dunphy 1983-2004
mr Huw Jones-Williams 2005-2008
Mrs Cathrin Bradshaw 2008

School inspections

Fitzalan High School is inspected every six years by the independent statutory body Estyn, as part of the Welsh national programme of school inspection, funded by the National Assembly for Wales.[10]

Notable alumni

Notes

  1. Bomb damage at Howard Gardens Board School, Cardiff, 1941 (photo), www.peoplescollectionwales.co.uk
  2. Childs, Jeff (2012), Roath, Splott and Adamsdown: One Thousand Years of History, The History Press, pp. 180–1, ISBN 978-0-7524-8257-6
  3. Cardiff Schools & the Age of the Second World War, The Log Books: A Documentary History 1938-1945, Keith Strange, (undated document)
  4. FITZALAN HIGH PROSPECTUS 2010
  5. "High school kicks off city’s ambitious plan". Western Mail. 2007-06-28.
  6. 1 2 3 4 "10 Facts You May Not Know About Fitzalan". Fitzalan High School. 28 January 2008. Retrieved 2010-01-23.
  7. "Fitzalan did city proud in beating best of England". Fitzalan High School. Retrieved 2010-01-23.
  8. O'Reilly, Margaret (5 July 2002). "Pupils are kings of the chess board". South Wales Echo. Retrieved 2011-10-14.
  9. "Fitzalan Makes a Splash With New Facilities". Sport Wales. 2009-03-12.
  10. "Report: Fitzalan High School Inspection 1115 October 2004" (PDF). Estyn. 2004-12-13.

References

External links

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