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229 Sentences With "senior boys"

How to use senior boys in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "senior boys" and check conjugation/comparative form for "senior boys". Mastering all the usages of "senior boys" from sentence examples published by news publications.

The senior boys cabin holds a meeting to establish cabin rules (left).
SUNDOWN Two red-blooded high school senior boys travel to Puerto Vallarta, Mexico, for spring vacation and end up involved with a crime ring.
During Labrie's trial, prosecutors argued that it was a thinly veiled attempt for senior boys to compete with one another for how many girls they could sleep with.
" The case drew national attention when it was revealed during the highly publicized trial that Chessy had been the victim of a competition among senior boys known as "the senior salute.
For more than 90 years, the junior and senior boys at Aquin High School have lined up in the school library to draw the name of their prom date out of a hat.
Even in my addled state, I could tell she was wheeling me toward the senior hallway (and maybe I had a crush on one or two...or a dozen senior boys at the time).
At Alice Lloyd, for instance, I heard a klatch of senior boys who had been on yard crews during a series of snowstorms reminisce about the late Friday night and early Saturday morning they shoveled snow with a fraternal pride I otherwise associated with a different sort of lost weekend.
The senior boys soccer team won the provincial championship in 2007.
Throughout the 1980s, Bayridge soccer teams captured many AA championships in Eastern Ontario. In 1986, the Bayridge senior boys soccer team competed at the OFSAA championships in Toronto. The Bayridge senior boys soccer team was undefeated in 2006 and was the Senior Boys Eastern Ontario Champions. The Blazers lost 3-1 in the quarter finals to the eventual champion Bishop Reding (Milton) the goal scored by forward Lee Jones, from a cross delivered by winger Scott MacLeod.
2015-2016 Senior Girls Volleyball "AAA" OFSAA champions. 2015-2016 Senior Boys Volleyball "AAA" OFSAA consolation champions.
The team won the (TDSSAA) Toronto high school senior boys basketball championship for the 2014-2015 season.
2019-2020 Guildford Park Athletics Teams: Fall: Junior Boys´ Soccer, Senior Boys´ Soccer, Grade 8 Girls´ Volleyball, Grade 8 Boys´ Volleyball, Junior Girls´ Volleyball, Junior Boys´ Volleyball, Senior Boys´ Volleyball, Senior Girls´ Volleyball, and Cross-Country. Winter: Wrestling, Hockey, GP Dance Team, Grade 8 Boys´ Basketball, Grade 8 Girls´ Basketball, Junior Boys´ Basketball, Junior Girls´ Basketball, Senior Girls´ Basketball, and Senior Boy´s Basketball. Spring: Badminton, Track and Field, Junior Girls´ Soccer, Senior Girls´ Soccer, Grade 8 Boys´ Rugby, Junior Boys´ Rugby, Senior Boys´ Rugby, Senior Girls´ Rugby, and Ultimate.
In 2008, the girls senior basketball team won the gold at OFSAA and coach Bernie Burnett became the first coach to receive a gold medal for both the senior girls and boys basketball team. The Senior Boys Volleyball and Basketball teams won CWOSSA and made it to OFSAA in the 2016-17 year. In the 2017-2018 year the senior boys volleyball team made it to OFSAA and the senior boys basketball team won CWOSSA and went to OFSAA. Rockway is a member of the eight team District 8 Athletic Association.
The Uxbridge Tigers are well known in Ontario for their success in athletics, specifically Cross- country running and rugby. In 2011 the senior boys won gold at the "AAAA" OFSAA rugby final. During the 2013 OFSAA cross country Finals, the senior girls placed first, achieving a gold medal. 2015-2016 Senior Boys Rugby 15's "AAA" OFSAA champions.
The tournament invites all public and private, junior and senior, boys' basketball teams in the City of Surrey, British Columbia to participate.
In 2010, The Senior Boys "AA" Basketball captured the NBIAA "AA" banner in the 1984-1985, 1985-1986, and 2009 - 2010 seasons.
In the 1987–88 season, the Senior Boys Basketball Team went undefeated during the regular season, only to lose a playoff game later.
Since the program's inception in 2005, Abbey Park has competed in every Halton Tier One Senior boys final except one (2013). The Senior Boys rugby team has won the GHAC Regional title four times: 2010 and 2011 as a AAA/AAAA program and again in 2015 and 2016 as a A/AA program. Abbey Park's senior boys have competed at AAA/AAAA OFSAA in 2011 where they finished 4th after being defeated by Oakville Trafalgar in the 3rd place match, played in Oakville at Crusader park. Abbey Park notably eliminated Streetsville, ranked 2nd and favorites for the title.
The school has been doing extremely well with the Senior Boys Team winning the OFSAA championship from 2007 to 2009. Also in 2010 both the senior boys and senior girls teams won OFSAA which no other school has ever done before. As of the 2015–16 season Massey has won a total of 11 consecutive WECSSAA Cross Country Championship titles.
CTA is well known for its senior boys basketball team which won the 2008 TBSSAA City Championship for "AAA" OFSAA. The team also received the bronze medal in the "AAA" OFSAA tournament. CTA is also well known for their REACH basketball program. More recently the senior boys' basketball team had won the gold medal in the 2017 "A" OFSAA tournament.
The school is home to a wide variety of athletic and academic activities. It has highly talented sports teams, such as their senior boys basketball team and Varsity Boys Baseball Team. The senior boys' soccer team has proved to be one of the most successful teams in the Durham Region, winning five Lake Ontario Secondary School Association (LOSSA) championships in a row.
In 2013–14, The Senior Boys Football Team won the city championships. In 2014–15, The Junior Boys Football team won the city championships.
More recently, the AP Senior Boys have competed in the A/AA OFSAA Rugby Championships in 2015 and 2016, finishing 6th and 9th respectively.
In 2013, the Senior Boys Soccer team accomplished a 5th-place finish in AA provincials. In 2015, the Senior Boys Soccer team won the Fraser Valley banner followed by a 2nd-place finish at the BC provincials tournament. In 2014 and 2015 respectively, the Senior Boy 'AA' Basketball team won the Fraser Valley Championship. This was followed by a Senior Boy 'AAA' Provincial Championship win in 2016.
Abbey Park run three age grades all of which compete in Tier One: bantam (gr. 9); junior (gr. 10); and senior boys (gr. 11 and 12).
On Friday afternoons, the boys were engaged in darning and similar activities. The Senior boys were in class from 1:30 to 3:30 in the afternoons. In the mornings, the Senior boys were put to work from 9 to 11:15 in chores, such as "laundry work, scrubbing dining room or dormitories, window cleaning, or polishing". They did their gardening chores from 11:15 until dinner at midday.
During the fall season of the 2014-2015 school year Longfields had 4 teams qualify for Ontario Federation of School Athletic Associations (OFSAA) championships. The Senior Boys Soccer Team, Senior Girls Basketball Team, and the Varsity Girls Field Hockey team all brought home city championships and the Senior Boys Volleyball team finished 2nd in the city to Lisgar after losing 3 sets to none in the city finals.
The school has teams for Golf, Football, Basketball, Volleyball, Curling, Track and Field, Wrestling, Badminton, and Cross Country Running Teams. Each team is successful in their respective category, and has won at least one provincial title at some point in time. The school's senior boys' basketball team has won the 4A provincial title two years in a row (2008–2009, 2009–2010). The senior boys volleyball team placed second at the Volleyball Provincials in 2011.
The school won the Provincial AAA Senior Boys' Soccer Championship on November 26, 2011. School Freestyle wrestling team competition winners; Aron Mann, Silver Medal 2012 B.C. Wrestling Champion, Karnbir Johal, B.C. Champion and Canadian Champion in 2011; Jagraj Basra, B.C. Champion in 2009; and Aaron Badasha, B.C. Champion in 2006. The Enver Creek Senior Boys' Basketball team finished third in the Surrey-wide RCMP basketball tournament in 2012. In 2011, the team won the tournament.
In the 1987–88 season, the Senior Girls Soccer Team won the city championship. In the 1987–88 season, the Senior Boys Soccer Team won the city and the Essex County championship, having the Brazilian exchange student Paulo Soares (nicknamed PIPO) as their international star. In the 1990–91 season, the Senior Boys Soccer Team again won the city championship in a dramatic penalty shootout against the Lowe Trojans. They later won the county championship.
Cassington is the senior boys hostel. It was named after Mr Cassington, who owned a large farming estate of which the lower playing fields were part of that original estate.
BCI has many sports teams that compete in the local, provincial and national levels. Teams include Badminton, Junior Girls Basketball, Senior Girls Basketball, Boys Basketball, Cross Country, Curling, Girls Fastball, Boys Baseball, Football, Golf, Girls Hockey, Boys Hockey, Midget Boys Rugby, Junior Girls Rugby, Junior Boys Rugby, Senior Girls Rugby, Senior Boys Rugby, Girls Soccer, Boys Soccer, Swimming, Tennis, Track and Field, Junior Girls Volleyball, Junior Boys Volleyball, Senior Girls Volleyball, Senior Boys Volleyball and Wrestling.
The Senior Girls' volleyball team has finished 4th ('10) in the province (AAAA). The Senior Boys' soccer team has placed 14th ('01, '09) in the province (AA). The senior girls' field hockey ('97, '06) and soccer teams ('07) have both won provincial championships since the school became a Senior High. In the late 1990s and early 2000s, the Senior Boys' basketball team were consistently dark-horse entrants to the Provincial Tournaments held at the PNE Agrodome.
The Senior Boys tennis team won the TDSSAA city championships in 2003 and 2004. In 2006, the junior rugby team won the city championship undefeated. The varsity football team made it to the TDSSAA Tier Two finals in 2007 for the first time in seven years. 2007 was also the year that the volleyball team went undefeated, winning the championship. The Senior Boys' hockey team made it to the 2007–08 TDSSAA Tier I championship, losing to the Etobicoke Rams 8–1.
Kanata Lakes has several sports associations with regular activities, the most visible being the large golf clubs (one of them right in the middle of the town), the sailing club and the bicycle club. There is also Kanata Soccer, March Kanata Tennis Club, Kanata Blazers minor hockey, Kanata Rangers Girls Hockey, Kanata Knights Football, and March Kanata figure skating club. High school sports such as Earl of March Senior Boys Basketball and All Saints Senior Boys Basketball are very popular as well.
Junior (secondary 1 and 2) boys wear light grey short trousers. Senior boys wear grey long trousers. Girls wear a green skirt. All students wear a white shirt with the school badge, and white socks.
He is currently a Grade 8 Math and Science teacher at Calgary Academy in Calgary, Alberta. He coached the school's senior boys' volleyball team in the 2016–17 season, helping the team achieve 3rd place.
In 2012, the Senior Boys Basketball, Senior Boys Volleyball, and Varsity Boys Rugby won championships in their respective sports. Varsity Boys Hockey, Girls Junior, Senior Volleyball, and Girls Softball made it to the championship games but unfortunately fell short. In 2002 the men's baseball team won Pearson's only OFSAA triple A championship at Skydome in Toronto. With continued changing of school boundaries and with the opening of Dr Frank Hayden S.S in 2013 Pearson's population dropped almost 200 students, but many of its teams were to advance to many and win OFSAA titles (2015-2018).
Between 1927 and 1932 the original St George's School in Margaret Street was reorganized into 3 departments: Senior boys, Mixed, and Infants. A new building for the senior boys located next to the Primary school was begun in 1939 and opened in 1948. Both schools became voluntary aided schools and by 1956 240 children were enrolled in the primary school and 290 boys in the secondary modern school. Discussion on the reorganisation of York's Catholic Senior schools in the late 1970s resulted in the closure of the Senior school in 1985.
St. Mikes is well known for its athletic programs. The school continually sends teams to OFSAA, many of which have been very successful. In the 2007-08 year the Senior Girls' Volleyball team captured the Ofsaa gold for the second year in a row while the Senior Boys' team won the bronze medal. Not to be outdone the Senior Boys' Nordic ski team, consisting of Scott Weersink, Brett Weersink, Ian Hartman, and Ian Weir, won an Ofsaa Gold as a team in the 10 km ski race, and a bronze in the relay event.
Edge End opened on 10 October 1932 as Nelson Edge End Senior Boys' School. In 1948, it became Nelson Secondary Technical School, taking both boys and girls. It was renamed Edge End High School in 1972.Edge End.
Toronto Star, June 4, 1995. which he pursued after school with the Scarborough Thunder Football Club. In his final year of high school, he attended Senator O'Connor College School where he played on the senior boys football team.
In the academic year 2014-15, a Treble Girls' Choir was added. In the 71st Hong Kong Schools Music Festival foreign language section, the Senior Boys Choir won the champion, breaking the 4-year streak of Diocesan Boys' School.
The school won the senior boys' FAI All Ireland soccer championship in 2007 and 2008. In 2012, they lost the final against St. Aidans, Cork. Past students include J. P. McManus, Karl Spain, Diarmuid Scully, Kevin O'Doherty, and Ciaran MacMathuna.
He was born in 1927 in Labadi a suburb of Accra in the British colony of the Gold Coast. He had his early education at Methodist Senior Boys' School then the Accra Academy then later proceeded to the University of London.
PRDG is a member of the eight team District 8 Athletic Association PRDG made their first CWOSSA and OFSAA appearance in the 2009-2010 school year for senior boys soccer. Les chevaliers made it to the quarter finals in Windsor at OFSAA.
The school has won 6 straight WCSSAA track and field championships, 5 consecutive CWOSSA appearances for the senior boys curling team, 5 WCSSAA titles in 6 years for the cross country team, as well as OFSAA gold by badminton and tennis athletes.
Fairmead House (for senior boys' boarding) and Dominies (the headmaster's house) were sold as part of the restructuring of the school in the 1990s. All senior boarders are now accommodated in the main building and in Raftshund House--an Arts and Crafts villa next door.
The Senior boys soccer team captured the Halton Region championships in 2006 and competed at the OFSSAA Provincial championship(2006). In 2005 the Junior varsity captured the Halton Region title. The 2016 Girls Junior Varsity team went undefeated to capture the Halton Region Title.
Discipline was largely left to the senior boys in the school, with masters playing a minor role. Armitage's reforms including daily physical training and an increased emphasis on academic ability. Under his leadership, the school's Officer Training Corps became one of the best in the country.
There are three hostels, two for girls and one for boys. The girls hostel are called GH1 and GH2. The boys hostel is called SBH (Senior Boys Hostel). In addition to this there is one hostel in the Rajindra Hospital also for Doctors/Interns/House surgeons.
The boy was fair in colour. He had handsome features and grew his hair long. He was a quick learner. Though only senior boys were allowed to learn Mardal, a musical instrument, he furtively taught himself to play the instrument while the older boys worked at the paddy fields.
Three senior boys set out to prove him wrong. In the 1930s he started writing books in the science and fantasy genre. For example he wrote several books about inventions created for sinister purposes such as The Exploding Ray (1945), Crimson Rust (1946), and Valley of Doom (1947).
Henley-Smith attended Auckland Grammar School, where he was Auckland and New Zealand secondary schools senior boys 100m and 200m champion and held several records. He held the New Zealand junior men's 100m and 200m records at 10.4s and 21.7s. His 10.4s 100m record, set in 1977, stood for 13 years.
In 2008, the senior boys basketball team made it to Single A provincials, the first time the boys have made it since the 1980s. The junior boys basketball team placed first in The Northern B.C Winter Games and Regionals. The school has a girls volleyball team ranging from juniors to senior.
Throughout the last several years of being open, Heritage has won many Fraser Valley Championship banners, as well as a provincial banner in both Ice Hockey and Snowboarding, respectively. The school also plays host to the yearly Kodiak Klassic, a Senior Boys Basketball tournament held at the beginning of December.
In the 2011–2012 school year, The senior boys' soccer team won the TDSSAA City Championship. In the 2012–2013 school year, the varsity field hockey won the City Championship. In 2012–2013, the junior boys' volleyball team won City Championship. In 2012–2013, the track team won East Region Overall.
The Senior Girls soccer team won the provincials in 2012. The gymnastics team is also well-recognized. Seycove's rowing team has come in first place in the district for many years in a row, most recently during the 2009 season. The 2009 Senior Boys Soccer team placed third in the AA Provincials.
Nicknamed "Havey" by students, it contains two faculty townhouses which bookend the dorm. Carmody House is located on the upper campus and houses returning sophomore, junior, and senior boys. Identical to Havemeyer, two faculty townhouses bookend the dorm. It is named after the Carmody family, one of the founding families of the school.
St. John Brebeuf fields teams in basketball, volleyball, golf, soccer, tennis, track and field, and cross country. In the 2008–2009 school year, the senior boys soccer team won the Single "A" Provincials that the school hosted. That year, the girls soccer team finished third in the Single "A" Provincials at Nakusp.
The boarding programme is open to both boys and, since 2001, girls. They may choose between full or flexi-boarding. Senior boys reside in Castle House and junior boys and girls reside in separate sections of Foal Yard. Boarders are cared for by a team of house parents, resident teachers and boarding assistants.
Football, girls volleyball, boys and girls basketball, boys and girls rugby, golf, hockey. In 2018, the varsity football team lost in the provincial final (AA). In June 2019, the Robert Bateman Timberwolves senior boys rugby team came 2nd in the province (AAA). In 2019, the girls rugby team placed 3rd in the province (AA).
During their last year of football, the senior boys won city championship. The school was closed in 2018, to be demolished. The former football field will hold an elementary school with students from both French immersion school Agnew and English school Edgewater. The land which Churchill was on will hold the elementary school playground.
In the 2018-2019 season they were the consolation champions at the Mohawk tournament. The team was undefeated until the playoffs once again. They made it to the quarter finals this 2018-2019 season. The Senior Boys won their first ever Halton AAAA Basketball Championship in the 2006 - 2007 season by beating the Assumption Crusaders.
In 2006, the team tied for the WECSSAA AAA/A team championship even though Kennedy is considered an AA/A school. Kennedy's senior girls' A-team won the gold medal for both WECSSAA and SWOSSAA. All of this was possible thanks to Coach Hnidei. Kennedy also has had a very successful Senior Boys Soccer team.
In 1983, the La Loche Community School Senior Boys basketball team won the Saskatchewan provincial 2A basketball championship, defeating Maple Creek Composite School 76-44 in Saskatoon. The championship was notable given the remote location of La Loche, which required the team to travel several hours to play all their games in opponent schools.
Sands has several sports teams, including junior and senior level Volleyball and Basketball teams. In 2009–2010, the Senior Boys Soccer team won the AAA provincials. In 2007–2008, 2009–2010, Sands won the Fraser Valley Badminton Championships. The school also has a Field Hockey team and as of September 2010, features an Ice Hockey team.
Gary Arnold of The Washington Post wrote, "'Meatballs' is as tartly, unpretentiously funny as its title ... As the senior boys' counselor, an easygoing role model and spontaneous comic genius, Bill Murray of 'Saturday Night Live' makes a deceptively sensational debut as a film comedy star."Arnold, Gary (July 11, 1979). "'Animal House' Goes to Camp". The Washington Post. B1.
In 1923 he and Ella Christian became engaged and the following year, after Skirth secured a job at the Little Ealing Senior Boys' School and found a flat they could share in Ealing, they married,Barrett 2007, p.90. on 29 December 1924, at the Church of St Barnabus in Bexhill.Skirth and Barrett 2010, pp.334335.
St Patrick's P.S. is an all-boys senior primary school in Tuam, Co. Galway, Ireland. It is situated on the Dublin Road. The school can trace its history back to 1816 but only became St. Patrick's in 1989. It is a senior boys' primary school and is very closely linked with neighbouring sister schools, Mercy and Presentation primary schools.
The Moulsham High School was built as a senior boys school in 1938. The lack of teachers after World War II meant that classes had limited teachers. There were only 10-25 boys per class. At the end of every year, an elderly gentleman would visit the school and give a prize to the best pupil.
Wellington Secondary's athletics program includes volleyball, basketball, soccer, and rugby teams. In 2005, the Wellington Senior Boys Basketball team came second in the AAA Provincial Basketball Tournament. The Wellington Senior Girls Basketball team came eighth in 2012 and third in 2013 at the AA BC Provincial Basketball Championships in Kamloops. The school mascot is Welly the Wildcat.
2008 expedition to the Mount Everest Base Camp and Kala Patthar. Halfway through each term, the boys go on a one-week "midterm", an expedition through the Siwalik Hills or Himalayas. Senior boys make treks of up to five days, unaccompanied by teachers, camping out in tents and cooking their own food. The trips are planned by students themselves.
The Senior Boys and Girls Rugby teams both won WCCSSA championships in 2013. The Senior girls rugby team then placed in the top ten in all-Ontario competition. The BCI girls' field hockey team have won two consecutive OFSAA (Ontario Federation of School Athletic Associations) championships (2016 and 2017) while also medalling in the 2014 and 2015 campaigns.
Any potential prefect is vetted by the Cabinet, which consists of the School Prefects, the School Captains and the Director. Commoners are divided according to year. Those in Form One and Two are Junior Boys, Form Three and Four are Senior boys. Starehe also has a technical training institute called Starehe Technical Training Institute for post Secondary education.
Sports include football, hockey, cricket, and athletics. The Father Eddie Memorial Football tournament for senior boys (under 17) and the Indal Trophy (under 15) are conducted every year on St. Pauls "A" ground, while the Royceton Memorial Trophy (under 14) is conducted on "B" ground. The latter draws a large crowd with teams from Goa, Kolhapur, Mumbai, Pune, Bangalore, and other cities.
There are seven houses in the school, consisting of two senior boys' boarding houses: Orchard and School; two senior girls' boarding houses: de Winton and Donaldson's, a Co-ed day house St David's and one Lower School house, Alway House, for boys and girls aged 11–13. In September 2014, St Nicholas House opened which welcomes boys and girls aged 7–11.
The wrestling team placed third at the BC Summer Games, and sixth at the BC Provincial Championships. Two participants later competed in the Canadian National Championships. The boys' snowboarding team won the British Columbia high school ski and snowboarding zonal championship in March 2008. The senior boys basketball team reached single 'A' provincials in 2010 and 2011, placing 12th and 14th respectively.
The school is built on the site of Cockshut Hill Council School which opened in 1937 for juniors and infants. Senior Boys and Senior Girls Departments opened in 1941 and these became separate schools in 1945. The Junior and Infants Department was divided into two departments in 1943. The Infant Department closed in 1957 and the Junior Mixed Department closed in 1958.
Eastern Commerce was well known for its elite basketball program. The Senior Boys have won eight provincial championships and many students have gone on to receive NCAA scholarships. Recently, the Senior Girls team has become a success, winning provincial championships in 2007 and 2008. Despite its small size, Eastern Commerce always competed at the top level of provincial competition in basketball.
Oak cottage housed three masters, matron and more dormitories for senior boys. In 1949, a new changing room was also added to the site. By the end of the 1940s, there were in the region of 70 boarders so another House was added to the House system: Blacker-Douglass, named after another Old Boy who served in the First World War.
For 2018-Present, the Bradley Bears participate in the 1A Classification—the state's smallest classification—within the 1A 8 Conference as administered by the Arkansas Activities Association. The Bears compete in boys and girls basketball, baseball and softball. The Senior Girls basketball team has six state championships and the Senior Boys basketball team has one. The baseball team also has one state championship.
A game is ideally presided over by two umpires, whose decisions regarding facts connected with play are final. Each umpire carries a Yard Stick: a wooden stick used to mark the place from which yards are taken. Games were traditionally umpired by each House providing one umpire each. However, nowadays umpiring is undertaken by Beaks (Harrow Masters), House Masters and senior boys.
Cranbrook has a system of houses from year seven to twelve. This system was created in order for boys to socialise better between different year groups, where senior boys would be acting as juniors' mentors within the house. There are currently ten day houses, with about 80 boys each. There are also two boarding houses with around 40 boys each.
McCrum left Cambridge in 1962 to become headmaster of Tonbridge School, where he earned a good reputation and transformed the school, emphasising academic standards and implementing sweeping reforms, including the abolition of the old traditions of fagging and caning of junior boys by "praepostors" (senior boys).Bourne, Richard. "Eton's topper", The Observer, London, 2 December 1969. He also made the Cadet Corps voluntary.
The undefeated Senior Boys also won the Halton title in 2012 as well as the GHAC title. They then concluded their most successful season in school history by ending up 4th at OFSAA (the provincial finals). The Junior Girls won their first ever Halton AAAA Basketball Championship in the 2006 - 2007 season. It was the crowning achievement in an undefeated season.
Southridge is classified as a 'Single A' sized school. Southridge has won several Fraser Valley Championships in Basketball, Soccer and Field Hockey. In 2006, Southridge won the Provincial Championship for Tennis as well as 6th place in Senior Boys and Girls Soccer. The Junior Girls (Grades 8-9) CAIS soccer team also won 1st place in the CAIS tournaments in 2006 and 2008.
When William of Wykeham founded Winchester College, he provided for 16 boys under age 12 to sing in the Choirs. These young boys are called Quiristers, or Qs . The Quiristers are educated at The Pilgrims’ School, receiving a 40% discount on the school’s boarding fee. The lower parts of Chapel Choir are sung by senior boys from the school, some of whom were previously Quiristers.
In 2007, Langstaff established a varsity men's hockey team. They were undefeated in their inaugural season and won the YRAA Tier II championships. In 2017, the Langstaff junior boys basketball team went 13-0 the entire season and won the playoffs, undefeated, winning the YRAA Tier II championship. In 2019, the Langstaff Senior boys basketball team won the Maple Blue n' Blue Senior Classic tournament.
The institute campus is situated in the Solan district of Himachal Pradesh, India. In Baddi University there are hostels for both Boys & Girls. Girls Hostels are situated inside the campus which is adjacent to Pharmacy department while Boys Hostel of 1st-year students is just at a walking distance of 5 minutes from MBA Department and senior Boys Hostel is located outside of the campus.
Kernich-Drew was born and raised in Melbourne, Victoria. He attended Caulfield Grammar School, where he competed in basketball, volleyball and track and field. He led the school's basketball team to the 2008 McDonald's Cup Senior Boys State Championship, where he was named the tournament MVP. Caulfield went on to capture the National School Basketball Tournament (NSBT) Championship, defeating Mountain Creek State High School.
Six of his teaching staff volunteered for the armed forces, as did sixty of the senior boys. As well as coping with a reduced staff and apprehension and restlessness among the pupils, Fisher had to deal with the mixed legacy he had inherited from his predecessor. Although Temple was described as "religiously inspiring and intellectually stimulating",Hein, p. 8 he was no disciplinarian or organiser.
Although there was a slight decline in traffic in the early 1960s, this reflected a similar dip which had occurred 12 years previously and was modest when compared with the subsequent increase in numbers. On Saturday 7 October 1961 a group of senior boys attending Steyning Grammar School organised an exhibition in the waiting room at Steyning station that celebrated the line's 100th anniversary.
The senior boys' rugby team was considered the top in the city, years 2006-08. The junior basketball team was considered the top in the city in the year 2008-09. Hillcrest's varsity girls' hockey team claimed the tier 2 championship, two years in a row 08-09 and 09-10. Also notable is their track team's long history of success at the city and provincial levels.
In the summer of 2008, the school senior boys 4 × 100 m team qualified from the Ulster heats to reach the All Ireland School Athletics Finals. The team won the title in a time of 43.67 seconds, less than a tenth ahead of second place Castleknock College. In 2009 the team retained the title, making them only the 6th school to ever do so.
King's College had its own magazine before the war with a reproduction of a drawing of the main entrance to the school on the cover. The latest number before the war is the December 1939 issue. The greater part of the work was done by a capable little group of senior boys who formed themselves into a magazine committee. During the war, all normal activities ceased.
Lincoln has various sports teams representing the school that play under the school's mascot of a lynx. During the 1990s their senior boys basketball team contended for both the Peel title and for the provincial playoffs (OFSAA). In 2007 they got a junior football team, followed by a senior team in 2008. Their football team competed for the Peel title in 2009, finishing as the runner-up.
Sports at Glendale include Junior and Senior Girls Volleyball and Basketball, Girls and Boys Hockey, Junior and Senior Badminton, Curling, Junior and Senior boys Volleyball, Junior and Senior Boys Basketball, Football, Golf, Wrestling, Girls and Boys Soccer, Track and Field, Boys Rugby, Swim Team, Cross Country and Curling. Clubs and activities that students may be a part of are: Students' Council, Athletic Council, Spirit Council, House Council, Key Club, Senior/Intermediate/Stage Bands, Yearbook, Grad Council, Prom Committee, United Nations, Sears One Act Plays, Terry Fox, Art Club, Peer helpers, Crimestoppers, Sound Crew, Chair/Floor Crew, Ushers and Ontario Students Against Impaired Driving (OSAID). Students acquire points toward their school letter for their involvement in the various clubs, sports and activities. Glendale is known for its academics, community involvement, arts programs, and sports teams, particularly the boys basketball teams who have won numerous OFSAA "AA" championships over the years.
By 1955, Hillside had expanded to include girls. It relocated first to one, and then to two large houses in Worcester Road, facing the Malvern Link Common. The lower building was acquired later than 1955, at 179 Worcester Road and opposite the junction of Cockshot Road. It housed the senior boys' department and nursery/kindergarten, while the upper building, three houses along westwards, contained the girls' and junior boys' departments.
Having observed the deplorable state of diocesan schools during his collecting tours, Treacy advocated to the Catholic Education Committee a rise in teachers' salaries and a training college. State aid was withdrawn from church schools around 1880. Treacy offered to train as teachers senior boys selected from his own system. There were no funds for a teachers' college but his further offer to inspect metropolitan schools was accepted.
The parents chose the name, Ron Pettigrew, a coach/teacher/principal at Bethel Christian School(now named Mountain Christian School). Ron Pettigrew was killed in a car accident in 1988, along with five members of the senior boys basketball team. Before the accident, the school was known as Bethel Christian School, but in 1989 RPCS moved to its own building. In 1992, it built the facility it currently uses.
Berwick Grammar School (BGS) is the senior boys campus of St Margaret's and Berwick Grammar School, located in Officer, Victoria, Australia. The St Margaret's senior girls campus and co-educational junior school are both located in Berwick. The head of campus is Steven Middleton, with the current school principal being Annette Rome. BGS has approximately 180 enrolled students and is part of the Victorian School of Performing Arts.
The volleyball program has also grown to acclaim in past years, with a combined fourteen Surrey championships and three Fraser Valley championships. It is consistently ranked in the top 3 Senior Boys' AAA provincial rankings. One of Fraser Heights's academic programs is a joint venture with Simon Fraser University called Science Academy. This is an all- year course extending over a period of two years, from grade 11 to grade 12.
The Rev. J. E. Philipps also founded the Community of St Denys; in addition to training women for work abroad, in 1890 the Anglican nuns of the community established St Monica's School for Girls, and until 1959 also ran the Orphanage of Pity. In September 1996, the St Denys building re- opened as a boarding house of Warminster School, for senior boys from Year 9 to the Upper Sixth.
Thomas Benjamin Lowne was born 15 May 1919, St Pancras Hospital, London NW1 to James Richard Peter Lowne and Alice Amy Lowne (née Ellson). He was the 11th of 14 children. Lowne became a boxer while attending Medburn School, St Pancras, and was also a member of the school football and cricket teams. In March 1930 he received the Medburn Senior Boys School, Champion Under 4 Stone Boxing Championship certificate.
The Welsh School (later St David's School) was founded in 1857. Its building north of Ashford railway station is Gothic Revival, designed by Henry Clutton. St David's School is now defunct, but in 2010 its buildings and playing fields were the premises of St James Senior Boys School. The former Ashford County Grammar School after Inland Homes plc tried to demolish it Ashford County Grammar School was founded in 1911.
It became a Senior Comprehensive School for Girls in 1970, when Swansea switched to the comprehensive education system. There were 898 girls enrolled. In 1971, it was merged with the (then) Bishop Gore Senior Boys Comprehensive in Sketty, although the girls and boys remained at the separate sites. In autumn 1972, when new buildings were completed, the girls moved to the Bishop Gore site as Bishop Gore Co-educational Comprehensive school.
In 1995, the Lincoln Cathedral became the third English cathedral (after Salisbury and Wakefield Cathedrals) to allow girl choristers. All choristers are educated at the school as scholarship holders.Past, Present and Future Although "chorister" is a general term, at Lincoln it is reserved for the four senior boys and girls, distinguished by their dark ‘copes’ or cloaks. Boys and girls who have passed their probationary stage are known as 'chanters'.
Dr Andrew Bell invented a system for educating hundreds of children with only one Master assisted by senior boys. This became known as the monitorial system. 1,000 children (600 boys and 400 girls) were educated by this system in a new building which was erected in Davenant Street. The charity school continued to function in the original buildings which were eventually enlarged in 1818 to accommodate 100 boys and 100 girls.
Lord Byng sports teams are named for their school mascot, the Grey Ghost. Lord Byng sports teams include Cross-country, Bantam Boys Rugby, Juvenile Boys Rugby, Bantam Girls Volleyball, Juv/Junior Girls Volleyball, Senior Girls Volleyball, Swimming, Girls Basketball, Bantam Girls Basketball, Juvenile Girls Basketball, Jr/Senior Girls Basketball, Boys Basketball, Bantam Boys Basketball, Juv/Junior Boys Basketball, Senior Boys Basketball, Bantam Boys Volleyball, Grade 8/Juvenile Girls Soccer, Senior Girls Soccer (Tier II), Girls Premier Soccer (Tier I), Tennis, Gymnastics, Ultimate, Girls Softball, Track & Field, Junior Boys Rugby, Senior Boys Rugby, Badminton, and Golf as well as inter-mural sports, such as hand-ball. Some of their recent wins include their Cross Country team's Team Aggregate Championship award and the Grade 8 Boys Rugby City Championship for defeating Charles Tupper 15-12 in the finals. They also won the Tier II Senior Girls Basketball City Championships in the 2011 - 2012 season.
Seycove's ski and snowboard team has won the district championship for two consecutive years. Seycove's cross country team has won the AA division banner the last three years running, with many athletes qualifying for the provincials. The school's rugby team has had two consecutive championship seasons as well, winning the Tier Two "New Zealand Shield" in the 2006 season and defending it in 2007. The Senior Boys soccer team won the provincials in 2006.
The school was divided into four houses, named after rivers in the North-East of Scotland: Deveron (red), Dee (green), Spey (yellow) and Don (blue). Boarders slept in dormitories in the main school building, although for a period senior boys were accommodated in the neighbouring Glebe House. Dormitories were originally given simple topographical names but were later renamed with an ornithological theme. The boys' dorms included: Tower (which became Buzzard), South (Eagle), East (Harrier).
For particulars apply to:—THE HEADMASTER, The Oratory Preparatory School, Caversham Park, Reading.” In 1941 Caversham Park was sold, and the prep school merged temporarily with Worth School at Downside. Two terms later, the Oratory School re-established itself for senior boys at Woodcote House, and three cottages in Exlade Street were used for classes for a few boys aged about 10 to 13, pending the re- establishment of a Prep School.
Mr Parry took over as Headmaster in 1938, on the eve of the Second World War. During the war, the site was bombed, which resulted in the loss of the original Victorian pavilion and fives courts. These were rebuilt in the late 1940s along with the Oak and Chestnut cottages, which needed to house the growing number of boys and staff. Chestnut was used as married quarters for staff and accommodation for senior boys.
The Eltham Stallions Senior Boys Football Team won the 2013 School Sports Victoria State championship, led by football coach Steven McCrystal and Peter Nicholson. Eltham High School also has an award-winning volleyball program that is currently led by Greg Thomas. The school recently won its 30th VSSSA pennant since 1996. The program has produced many outstanding volleyballers that have continued on to represent both Victoria and Australia at many championship competitions.
McRoberts is a school known for its strong athletic program. Most notably rugby and volleyball. The senior boys' rugby team has finished no lower than seventh in the province (AA) every year since the '99 - '00 season, however the team has never won a provincial championship, coming in second place in 2003, 2004 and 2006. Former Canadian International Gary Hirayama is one of the coaches of both the junior and senior teams.
He continued to play for Ripon into his early forties. He played in England's 23-6 victory over Australia at Twickenham in January 1976. Squires also performed a stint at Harrogate Grammar School as games teacher, coaching the senior boys primarily in rugby union, but also in other sports such as cricket, hockey and athletics. He is currently the Business Development Manager for Wharfe Bank Brewery in Pool in Wharfedale, near Otley in Yorkshire.
Coached by Brian Nesbitt, the Blazers' senior boys volleyball team experienced a great deal of success in the mid 1990s. They captured four consecutive KASSAA and EOSSAA championships from 1994–97, and competed at the provincial championships, OFSAA, each of those years. From 1994 to 1996, they were led by captain Bryan English, who after graduating, went on to captain the Queen's University volleyball team, and twice was an OUA all-star.
In 2005, a number of students competed in the Pacific School Games and brought home a number of Gold medals. PISA sport is also offered and includes T-ball, senior girls softball, senior boys cricket, boys and girls soccer, girls netball, boys rugby league (mod-league) and mixed AFL. The School is a member of Combined Independent Schools (CIS) which allows a highly competitive pathway for individuals in a large array of sports.
Teams compete in three divisions: the Junior Boys division (13 to 15 years of age), the Senior Boys division (16 to 18 years of age), and Girls Softball (up to 18 years of age). League schedules run from May through August. Teams compete in regional tournaments in order to compete in the RBI World Series, which began in 1993. The RBI World Series is aired on the MLB Network and can be streamed on MLB.
Ross's Junior Boys' basketball team lost the 2011 District 10 City Championship to Orangeville Bears in a lopsided affair, before advanced to CWOSSA and losing in round Robin to St. Mary's of Kitchener. The Senior Boys' Basketball team lost in the District 10 quarter-final game to the Orangeville Bears. They advanced to CWOSSA and the Final before losing to St. Mary's of Kitchener. They did advance to OFSAA with a second-place finish.
In 2005, the team won the University of Windsor Tournament by beating L'Essor in the final by a score of 5-0. The Senior Boys Soccer team also won the OFSAA championship in 2010. They were the hosts of the tournament and won it in their home field. In addition, they won the WECSSAA AAAA/AAA championship by defeating Brennan in the final, 7-1, even though Kennedy is considered an AA/A school.
After 110 years in the King's Manor, the accommodation was condemned, and the school moved to the former premises of York Industrial School on Marygate, with the aid of a £3,800 grant from the National Society. By 1932 the school enrolled 400 senior boys. In the early hours of 29 April 1942, a Luftwaffe bombing raid on York resulted in a direct hit on the Manor School building, the headmaster arriving at 5am to find the building 'in ruins'.
The original school was built in 1908 and housed a separate infant, junior, senior boys and senior girls schools. After the 1944 Butler Education Act the secondary school formed part of the Tripartite System of education in which children were tested and streamed at the age of eleven. During the 1950s and 1960s the school consisted of Vaughan Road Infants School & Vaughan Road Junior School, both located on the ground floor. The upper floor housed New Brighton Secondary Modern.
Therefore, The Organizing Committee of the aforesaid event takes the pleasure to invite Taekwondo teams to participate in PAG Open International Taekwondo Championships – 2019. The championship is open to Fresher / KG / Sub – Junior / Junior / Senior (Boys & Girls) categories. To download the application in PDF Formant vist the following link: 1st PAG Open International Taekwando Championship-2019. The last date of submission is 20 October 2019 along with 2 passport size photos and relevant documents requested in the forms.
The North Toronto CI's Girls' Field Hockey team won the TDSSA championship in 2005, 2006 & 2008\. In the 2010/11, the North Toronto Junior Girls Basketball Team won the City of Toronto Championship. The TDSB Tier 2 Senior Boys' Rugby league team has won the last two championships after undefeated seasons. In the 2012/2013 season, The North Toronto Women's Varsity Field Hockey A Team won the Tier 1 conference championships, and moved onto the City Championships.
Alfred was born on 17 June 1920 at Pampanso; a village in the Eastern Region to Hansen Dowuona-Hammond and Madam Beatrice Nettey. He had his early education at Sempe Government Junior Boys' School and Rowe Road Government Senior Boys' School (Kinbu Secondary Technical School), Accra. He had his secondary education at Mfantsipim School, the Accra Academy and O 'Reilly Educational Institute where he obtained his Cambridge School Certificate with exemption from the London Matriculation Examination in 1940.
The school's was formerly named after Brumby village, now a suburb of Scunthorpe: the place- name is of Viking origin, derived from the personal name 'Bruni' and the Old Danish word 'by', meaning village or farmstead. The school was opened in 1929 as Brumby Senior Boys School. In 1930, girls joined the school for one year before moving to Ashby Girls Secondary Modern School. It became Brumby Comprehensive School in 1968, while education in Scunthorpe was being reorganised.
Dutcher developed an understanding of the dynamics of Howard's relationship with his grandmother. While other coaches, such as Lute Olsen, almost ignored her during the recruiting, Dutcher understood that she was the key influence on his life, and understood that Kirskey also had sway with Howard. He encouraged Fisher to hire Kirskey for a summer basketball camp that, which became the young athlete's introduction to Ann Arbor, Michigan. Howard was the president of Vocational's Senior Boys' Council.
According to Dahl's autobiography, Boy: Tales of Childhood, a friend named Michael was viciously caned by headmaster Geoffrey Fisher. Writing in that same book, Dahl reflected: "All through my school life I was appalled by the fact that masters and senior boys were allowed literally to wound other boys, and sometimes quite severely... I couldn’t get over it. I never have got over it." Fisher was later appointed Archbishop of Canterbury, and crowned Queen Elizabeth II in 1953.
In the BSN, he played with the Mets de Guaynabo, Cangrejeros de Santurce and returned to his rookie team, the Piratas de Quebradillas. He also played with Halcones Xalapa in Mexico's Liga Nacional de Baloncesto Profesional. Dalmau returned to Bayamón in 2017, retiring from playing basketball at the end of that season. In 2018, Dalmau became head coach of the senior boys basketball team at Central Pointe Christian Academy, a small prep high school in Kissimmee, Florida.
There is a wide variety of extracurricular sports are offered throughout the year such as soccer, volleyball and skiing. ; Fall season Cross country running, girls' field hockey, boys' rugby, boys' premier soccer, Junior soccer, swimming, girls' volleyball, junior and senior boys volleyball ; Winter season Wrestling, snowboard, skis, ice hockey and basketball for boys and girls. ; Spring season Girls' soccer, bantam and juvenile boys volleyball, track and field, girls' rugby, ultimate, softball, golf for boys and girls, tennis and badminton.
During the Second World War the St Margaret's Camp was a London County Council Senior Boys School for evacuees – boys from London. The school closed one week after the end of the war in Europe when all the boys were returned to their homes in London. Since 1984 it has been the Amaravati Buddhist Monastery. From Nettleden to Frithsden goes the Roman Road or Spooky Lane, named in reference to the ghost of an Ashridge monk.
This annual run, held in January, is aimed at inculcating an athletic culture among students and raising awareness of the importance of staying healthy. This event usually involves approximately 1500 participating individuals, both students and teachers. Both the boys and girls have to run routes of seven kilometres and five kilometres, respectively. The top ten students of the four categories, the senior boys and girls as well as the junior boys and girls, will each receive a trophy.
Barnard Castle School The race takes place annually at the end of the first half of the Spring Term. The girls' and younger boys' race is 2¾ miles while the senior boys' is 4 miles. Historically the Barnard Run was a seven- mile course which began at Towler Hill Farm, ran to Cotherstone suspension bridge, with an undetermined route back to the school. In 1898 a 4-mile junior Barnard Run was created for 11- to 14-year-olds.
The Senior boys' football team has been the Kingston AA representative in provincials for the past couple of years, with their best finish coming in 2008 in the EOSSAA final, before losing to a strong Gananoque Trojan team. The sir team in the 2010s found great success in the second half with a 2016 kassaa championship win over the frontenac falcons and they followed that up with AA EOSSAA championship and a AA ofsaa national capital bowl championship.
In the years leading up to the First World War Paul Smyth visited and painted on Canvey Island, Essex many times. It was here that he met Elsie Mulley whom he married in Highgate, London on 20 July 1918. Now living in Highgate and from 1922 teaching at Whittington School (Highgate), Smyth began to hold numerous painting exhibitions. Paul Smyth was Headmaster of Upper Marylebone St. London County Council School from 1929 and Headmaster of Old Oak Senior Boys School from 1933.
However, Colonel By is most mostly recognized in the city and province for its strong volleyball program. Colonel By has also competed at OFSAA for a few ski and snowboarding events in the 2006/2007 season. In addition, the Colonel By Badminton team has done well in Junior and Senior events.The Colonel By Nordic Ski team has also done well in the past finishing 4th last year in Junior Combined and now looking for the NCSSAA championships for the Senior Boys.
The school had teams in football, rugby union, gymnastics, baseball, wrestling, volleyball, field hockey, basketball, swimming, tennis and golf. The Senior Boys football team captured the Shrine Bowl Provincial Championship in 1969, beating Maple Ridge Secondary 13-9 at Empire Stadium.Varsity Champions of the Past, Subway Bowl program Dec 1, 2007 The team was coached by former Canadian Olympian Bill Parnell.Vancouver Sun, In Memoriam, September 13, 2008 Murray Wimbles won outstanding lineman and Martin Smith won outstanding back for the game.
Athletics Waterloo-Oxford is most notable for its Rugby teams. The Senior Boys Rugby team has won twelve WCSSAA Championships, including the 2015 title. In addition, the Junior Boys have won nine WCSSAA titles, including the 2013 title and the girls Rugby team has eight WCSSAA titles. Also, the Girls Basketball teams have had a great run since 2011, winning both a Senior and Junior WCSSAA title and appearing in two CWOSSAA championship games and losing this year's WCSSAA title after going undefeated through the regular season.
Donevan Collegiate supported numerous male and female sports clubs including ice hockey, volleyball, basketball, soccer, lacrosse, tennis, badminton, etc. The Senior Boys Volleyball team captured AA LOSSA (Lake Ontario Secondary School Athletics) championships in both the 2006 and 2007 seasons, earning the team the opportunity to compete in the OFSAA (Ontario Federation of School Athletic Associations) tournament both years. Donevan's ice hockey team also fared well over the years, with the Junior Boys team capturing the AA LOSSA championship in the 2004/05 season.
During the 2007–2008 school year, Westgate's Parkour and Free Running Club was founded by Ethan Gillingham and James Peotto. They won the Thunder Bay Free Running Championship – Amateur division title, and represented the city in Timmins for the Provincial title, where they finished 4th. In the 2008–2009 season, the senior boys basketball team put forth a Hoosiers-esque season and won the city title for the first time in 33 years. The Westgate cross country running team is the two time defending SSSAA champions.
Approximately 1/3 of pupils aged 7 to 13 board full-time at the school with the majority staying in at weekends. A full programme of activities takes place evenings and weekends. There are three boarding houses: Blackford (girls), Lankester (junior boys) and School House (senior boys) the latter being in the historic Hazlegrove House itself. The boarding was last inspected as part of the Integrated ISI Inspection in the Autumn Term, 2015 and again as part of the Regulatory Compliance Inspection in September 2018.
His other vocal works consist of songs with piano accompaniment, mostly published, and the school song for the then Portway Senior Boys' School in nearby Shirehampton. Although Kingsweston was known as a welcoming place for musicians and a centre for music, Miles did not court fame as a composer. His works occasionally had performances in his lifetime in London and at the Hereford for the Three Choirs Festival, and at least one broadcast (of the "Lyric overture"). No recordings of his music are known.
At the beginning of World War II, Paul Cranfield Smyth was the headmaster of Wormholt Park London County Council, Senior Boys School and was evacuated to Oxford with 500 children. Living in lodgings in Iffley Road, he painted extensively in the city and held an exhibition of his work to raise money for the war effort in 1941. He retired from teaching in 1943. Post-war he founded the Finchley Art Society in 1949 About the Finchley Art Society and was its first president.
Nelson Haden Senior Boys' Secondary Modern School and Nelson Haden County Girls' Secondary Modern opened on the site that is now the Clarendon Academy on 16 September 1940. In August 1974 both sets of school buildings became Clarendon School, when Wiltshire County Council implemented the comprehensive education system in Trowbridge. In 2005 the school became the Clarendon College, a specialist Language College. It converted to academy status on 1 December 2012 and was renamed the Clarendon Academy, with the sponsorship of the Education Fellowship.
Upon arrival, staff and senior boys dug air raid shelters before settling into life outside of Southampton. Andover Grammar School had their lessons in the mornings while Itchen carried out theirs in the afternoon and evenings, generally between 13:30 and 17:30, and allowed alternate Saturday mornings off. This schedule posed difficulties for the students, as classrooms were full of stale air and they had to conduct lessons using gas lamps with blackout curtains up at the windows. Finding accommodation was also difficult.
The senior boys' volleyball team won both TVRAA and OFSAA in AAAA for the fourth straight year in 2007, the only team in Ontario history to accomplish this feat. Saunders is considered one of the best volleyball high schools in Canada, having many of the provinces' elite young players. The Saunders junior football team won the city championships in 2007 for the first time in ten years. Nigel Wilson, a former teacher at Saunders was also a volunteer coach at the University of Western Ontario.
Female sports teams at the school are often called the Aldershot "Lady Lions". Hockey and baseball teams are referred to as the "Aces". All other teams are referred to as the Lions. The school's performance in athletics has been marked by numerous regional wins, despite being one of the smallest schools in Halton (in Halton D3 football, Aldershot is half the size of the next smallest school, Lester B. Pearson) such as senior boys' volleyball OFSAA (Ontario Federation of School Athletic Associations) favorites in 2006 and 2007.
Lawrence Waddy took over as headmaster in 1949. The Tonbridge he inherited was still a largely Victorian institution; fagging and ritual caning were still in place, and sport was considered more important than academia. Over the next 40 years personal fagging was abolished (ending in 1965), and the intellectual life of the school was revitalised (particularly under the headmastership of Michael McCrum). McCrum, headmaster from 1962–70, abolished the right of senior boys to administer corporal punishment, taking over for himself the duty of administering routine canings.
Thomas Gnielka (1928–1965) was a West German journalist. Aged 15, he was one of a group of senior boys from his Berlin secondary school to be conscripted for war service. The boys were sent to a base near Auschwitz. Given a number guard assignments at the concentration camp during the second part of 1944, Gnielka became aware of various Shoah atrocities several months before the arrival of the Red army in January 1945 opened the way for the Nazi atrocities to become more widely known.
The school offers numerous opportunities to high- performing students for growth. The school enters boys annually into a number of prestigious competitions such as the UCT Mathematics Competition and the South African Mathematics Olympiad, and many students often qualify for the provincial or national Mathematics teams. The school also participates in the Eskom Science Expo, with many students progressing to prestigious fairs such as ISEF. Senior boys write the National Science Olympiads, with students regularly breaking top 10 in the country, or even winning outright.
V.C.R.A.C Crabbe was born on 29 October 1923 at Ussher town in Accra, Gold Coast to Richard Arthur Crabbe, the Chief Registrar of the Courts (the most senior staff of the Judicial Service of the Gold Coast), and his wife Stella Akoley Lartey. Charles's father died eleven months after he was born. Crabbe attended the Government Junior Boys' School near the James Fort Prison and continued to the Government Senior Boys' Schools, Kinbu. In 1939 he entered the Accra Academy where he sat for the Cambridge Junior and Senior School Certificates, completing in 1943.
In 1996 Grindal House was turned into an "International Centre", where students from the Far East could be taught English and other subjects outside the mainstream teaching environment of the school. In 2000 this policy was ended, and the teaching area of the International Centre was transferred to the former Matron's area in Foundation. Grindal became once again a day and boarding house, this time for senior boys. Also in 2000 Barony House was entirely refurbished after years of neglect and updated into a state-of-the- art musical facility.
Regiopolis- Notre Dame currently fields teams in both boys (15) and girls (14) divisions - including soccer, basketball, volleyball, football, field hockey, track and field, badminton, tennis, hockey, wrestling and cross country. RND sports teams use the name "Panthers" - the previous "Redskins" name was dropped due to its insensitivity. School colours are Garnet and Gold. Regi's senior boys' volleyball team has become a perennial provincial contender at the AAA level, having won OFSAA gold on four separate occasions - first in 2002, then winning back to back titles in 2009 & 2010 and most recently in 2014.
Cricket is more popular, however, with boys doing it for both leisure and competitive purposes. The school often produces two cricket teams – the seniors and juniors – which usually compete against schools in Bulawayo and Beitbridge, its most popular rivals being Centenary and Masiyephambili Junior School, against whom it shares a long-standing rivalry. It is during this term that senior boys (Grade 7) sit their external 11+ exams and the rest of the school sit internal assessment tests. Three REPS boys wearing full sports colours at a swimming gala in 1992.
The children living at the hostel attended Hartley Street School or the Our Lady of the Sacred Heart Convent School. In 1958 a new accommodation block, for senior boys, was built on the site alongside a new kitchen\laundry. This meant that, in 1959, Griffiths House could host 55 children. From 1961 - 1964 demand for accommodation decreased, partially due to severe drought and, by 1964, numbers were down to 33 (21 boys and 12 girls; 7 of whom were Aboriginal) and this led to its closure in 1965.
Duration: 54 minutes The third film follows the protagonist of With Morning Hearts, as he moves to Jaipur House, one of the five main houses at Doon. He is shown studying, participating in field hockey, gymnastics, singing, and struggling to settle into the house and accept the authority of senior boys. The film captures his response and reactions, as he negotiates new situations, his changing surroundings, and tries to make a mark. While the film is largely observational, at some points MacDougall engages in informal conversations with the boys.
Christine Horne attended this school. Singer Chantal Kreviazuk In 2005, The Senior Boys Cross Country Team won the gold medal in the OFSAA Championships. This capped an impressive career for the squad which included winning the YRAA gold medals three years running (2003–2005), the most decorated and successful single team in any sport in the recent history of the school. In 2007, Kaitlyn Oliver won an OFSAA gold medal in cross country. In 2008, she also won an OFSAA gold medal in the 3000m and an OFSAA silver medal in cross country.
From 2014 to 2016, the senior boys football team won 3 straight OFSAA championships. Along with the OFSAA championship in 2016, the team also finished the season ranked 2nd in Canada, and finished those past 3 seasons with a combined record of 24-1. The Junior team has also enjoyed major success over the past several years, and as the case with the seniors as well, have won multiple zone and divisional (Niagara Bowl) titles. Although one of the most notable successes was in 2013, when they won the Junior Metrobowl.
The play opens with the discovery that a pupil named Martineau has hanged himself after being caught by a teacher having sex with another boy. The first act follows the reaction of some of the students to his death as the senior boys try to keep the scandal away from both the parents and the outside world. Barclay, the Head of Gascoigne's House, moves towards nervous breakdown, blaming himself for the boy's despair. Bennett, the only openly gay member of the school, pretends nonchalance but is deeply troubled by the suicide.
The school has been named 4A School of the Year for Newfoundland and Labrador in each of the last 4 years, as well as 5 of the last 6. Teams include: Boys Ice Hockey, Girls Ice Hockey, Boys Ball Hockey, Girls Ball Hockey, Senior Boys Basketball, Junior Boys Basketball, Girls Basketball, Girls Volleyball, Boys Volleyball, Track & Field, Boys Softball, Girls Softball, Badminton, Wrestling, Table Tennis, Boys Broomball, Girls Broomball, Curling, Boys Soccer, And Girls Soccer. Stephenville High's teams go by the name of Spartans, which was carried over from the former St. Stephen's High.
Wolseley Barracks has been continuously occupied by the Canadian Army since its creation, and has always housed some element of The Royal Canadian Regiment. At present, Wolseley Hall is occupied by the Royal Canadian Regiment Museum and the Regiment's 4th Battalion, among other tenants. The white pith helmet still worn as part of the full-dress uniform of the RCR (pictured in the caricature above from Punch) is known as a Wolseley helmet. Wolseley is also a Senior Boys house at the Duke of York's Royal Military School.
Despite its long-standing roots, the rowing team is largely considered a new addition to the athletics program as it is still awaiting its first notable victory. Confidence is held, however, that the team will manage small victories in the regatta held in Barrie, Ontario, a large deal for many. In 2007 the team celebrated its first appearance in the Canadian Secondary School Rowing Association (CSSRA) Finals. Trevor Neelin and Nick Sarchuk placed 5th overall against teams from across Canada and the northern United States, in the Senior Boys Heavy Pair event.
Ratu Banuve Lalabalavu Tabakaucoro (born 4 September 1992 in Suva, Fiji) is a Fijian sprinter who specializes in the 100 and 200 meters. In the 2011 Coke Games Tabakaucoro ran his personal best in the senior boys 100 and 200 meters finals on the 29 and 30 April; he also helped his school win the 4 x 100 metres relay. He now holds the national record in the men's 100 meters and 200 meters for Fiji. Tabakaucoro is a product of the Sports Science Academy at Marist Brothers High School and graduated in 2013.
The Ryde Gold Medal is awarded each year to the "best all-round boy" at Trinity. The Ryde Gold Medal is the highest honour that the school can bestow. It is awarded on the result of a secret ballot conducted among the senior boys and the staff whose votes, together with that of the principal, each count as one. While this system makes deadlock possible, it is only on four occasions that the Medal has not been awarded as a result of the three votes going to three different people.
The senior boys' teams were provincial champions in 1994 and 1998 and finalists in 1995 and '96. The impact of full funding was realized on May 4, 1990, when the Ministry of Education announced the allocation of $7,036,000 to build Phase I of the New St. Joseph's Catholic High School. On February 4, 1994, the new school was opened to welcome five hundred students. The new school building provided students with an expanded academic and co-instructional program including Instrumental and Vocal Music, Drama, Physical Education and Fitness, Environmental Science and Technological Studies.
Reflecting later, Milburn contended that "maybe my father's intentions were the best in the world...but that thrashing laid the foundations for an inferiority complex I've fought all my life to overcome". When he was twelve, Milburn moved to Hirst East Senior Boys School and was selected to play right-wing for the school football team. His father promised to award him a penny for every goal he scored. He duly earned two pence for scoring twice on his debut in a 6–4 win against Linton School.
Thomas Hopper Alderson GC (15 September 1903 – 28 October 1965) was a British Air Raid Precautions (ARP) warden in Bridlington, and the first person to be directly awarded the George Cross shortly after its creation in 1940. Alderson was fifth of six children. He went first to his local village school and then continued his schooling at Elwick Road senior boys' school, West Hartlepool, becoming Head Boy. During World War I he witnessed the bombardment of West Hartlepool by the German High Seas Fleet on 16 December 1914.
The science block was completed soon after the school opened and later a gymnasium and two technical blocks were added. It was decided to build only one of the three proposed dormitory blocks, "Rosmini House", but a house bought on land in Kakapo Street opposite the school was renovated as a hostel for senior boys. It was named St Paul's Without the Walls and known as St Paul's. The school chapel, built to an interesting and unusual design conducive to a prayerful atmosphere of peace and serenity, was opened in 1978.
The BC Basketball Provincial Champions of 2006/2007 In the 2006-2007 year, Pinetree's grade 9 basketball team were the provincial champions, while Pinetree's Junior tennis team were the Fraser Valley champions. For 10 consecutive years, the Pinetree Senior Badminton Team placed in the top 8 of the province. During this decade of Pinetree's dominance at provincials, they placed 1st overall in 2010, 2nd in 2011 and 3rd three times. In 2004 Pinetree landed their first BC Senior Boys Track & Field provincial gold medal in the 4x100m relay.
In 1966, while playing for the Argonauts, Dick Aldridge began working as a teacher at his former high school, Runnymede Collegiate Institute. He moved to Westview Centennial Secondary School in 1968, and in 1975, his CFL playing career having ended, he moved to a new teaching position at Banting Memorial High School in Alliston, Ontario. He and his family settled in Tottenham, where they later purchased and ran the local Stedmans franchise. In addition to his teaching duties at Banting, Aldridge coached the senior boys' football and basketball teams.
Every year the school holds the Exmoor Run, essentially a cross-country run across Exmoor. The Senior Boys' Run is reputed to be the longest school cross-country run in the country, with a walk of eight miles to the start and a run of ten miles back to the finish (the school). Senior girls are required to walk six and to run seven and a half miles. Junior boys walk out five miles and run back five and a half, while Junior girls walk four and run four.
The Nairobi School is a national secondary school in Nairobi, Kenya. It was founded in 1902 by the British settlers who had made Nairobi their home after the construction of the Uganda Railway. In 1925, Lord Delamere and Sir Edward Grigg, then Governor of Kenya, separated the European Nairobi School into a senior boys' school (Prince of Wales School), a senior girls' school (Kenya High School) and a junior school (Nairobi Primary School). In 1931, a new school was built on the site at Kabete, the main school buildings being designed by Herbert Baker.
Fairmead House, a former girls' school, was purchased for use as a senior boys' boarding house in 1946, with the war-time huts in the garden being put to various uses, and in 1952, Austral House, renamed "Dominies", was added as the headmaster's house. On the death of the founder in 1960, an advisory council was established to govern the school, chaired by Rt Rev'd Kenneth Riches, Bishop of Lincoln. The school became a charitable trust in 1964 and became co-educational in 1980. The school is named after Saint Hugh, Bishop of Lincoln but also Little Saint Hugh of Lincoln.
The system of fagging, whereby younger pupils were required to act to some extent as personal servants to the most senior boys, was phased out during the 1970s and 1980s. More than half of HMC schools are now either partially or fully co- educational. Of the Clarendon nine, two are fully co-educational (Rugby and Shrewsbury), two admit girls to the sixth form only (Charterhouse and Westminster), two remain as boys-only day schools (St Paul'sSt Paul's admits a small number of boarders. and Merchant Taylors') and three retain the full- boarding, boys-only tradition (Eton, Harrow and Winchester).
Involvement in the athletics program is mandatory in all three terms for all students, in accordance with their age, ability and interests. Despite being a small school, Stanstead College fields a number of interscholastic teams and has achieved success at the regional, provincial and national level. In 2014, the senior girls' soccer team won the school's first- ever CAIS national tournament title at BCS. The senior boys' basketball team won three consecutive Visser Provincial Basketball Tournaments (2014, 2015, 2016), while the senior girls won the MacLeod Provincial Basketball Tournament in 2017 for the first time ever, repeating in 2018 and 2019.
Founded in 1995, it began as a small school with 40 students but has since grown to possess a student body of over 1,000 pupils, with about 80 of those boarding on site. The school began as a response to cater for the growing number of expatriate families whose jobs were based in the Eastern Seaboard of Thailand. After 1995 the school saw a five-year period in which it grew rapidly. In the same year St. George’s Boarding House for Senior Boys and St. Andrews for Juniors was erected and the student body then stood at 440.
Senior prefect: the senior prefect is the most senior of prefects, responsible for assisting the head boy and his deputy, as well as looking after senior boys, their discipline and welfare. The senior prefect and head boy are heads of dorm at Warspite, the Grade 7 dorm. Monitors: also known as "dorm monitors", these boys are responsible for making sure that dormitories are well looked after, the boys are well behaved and deal with any bullying claims. Monitors at Victory House are responsible for the "training" and induction of new boys, which involves acquainting them with the school's rules, values, and culture.
The school first opened on April 2, 1855 as the Berlin Senior Boys' Grammar School (Kitchener was formerly named Berlin, but changed at the time of World War I). It initially was located in a building at the corner of King and Eby streets in the downtown area, and tuition cost five shillings per month. From 1857 to 1871, it occupied space in the Berlin Central School (now Suddaby Public School) on Frederick Street. Girls were first admitted to the school in 1866. With increasing numbers at the Central School, the school then moved to the former Swedenborgian Church on Church Street.
Streetsville Secondary School offers many athletic opportunities, including: Rugby, Basketball, Volleyball, Track and Field, Hockey, Swimming, Badminton, Flag Football and 7's Rugby. Streetsville recently won Senior Boys ROPSSAA (Region of Peel Secondary Schools Athletic Association) Gold Medal in Rugby, as well as an OFSAA Gold Medal, finishing their 2012 season with 32 wins and 0 losses. The school also has an Archery team that does exceptionally well each year winning many Olympic class Gold, Silver and Bronze Medals in ROPSSAA and OFSSAA. Streetsville won its only hockey championship in 2005, coming from behind in both the semi-final and final.
All girls and the younger boys are housed in dormitories in the main building, which also contains an Infant Department and Junior School classrooms, a music room and practice rooms for piano, staff and students' dining rooms, lounge, library, craft room, and administrative offices. Senior boys (from class 10 to 12) reside in Fernhill and students from class 7 to 9 in the Round Hostel, opened in 1977, while junior boys reside in the Stewart Building, built in 1963. The Stewart Building also includes six classrooms for the senior school, and laboratories for physics, chemistry, biology, and geography.
TAS currently has six school boarding houses, named Abbott, Croft, Dangar, Tyrrell, and White, and an as yet unnamed 64-bed girls' boarding house which opened its doors in 2018. The senior boys' boarding houses (Abbott, Croft and Tyrrell) each accommodate up to 60 students, with 10 to 15 boys in each year group. In the lower years boys are accommodated in dormitories, and as they progress through the school are moved into private study/bedrooms. Middle School boys are accommodated in White House, whilst Middle School girl boarders will soon reside in Dangar House, the school's original primary school.
The incoming freshman girls are also hazed; they are rounded up in the school parking lot by senior girls, covered in mustard, ketchup, flour and raw eggs and forced to propose to senior boys. As day fades to night, freshman Mitch Kramer escapes the initial hazing with his best friend Carl Burnett but is later cornered after a baseball game and violently paddled. Fred O'Bannion, a senior participating in the hazing tradition for a second year after failing to graduate, delights in punishing Mitch. Pink gives the injured Mitch a ride home and offers to take him cruising with friends that night.
Richard was born on 14 August 1977 in Pontypridd to a Jamaican mother, Lee, and a Welsh father, Derek Parks. Richard grew up in Newport, Wales and attended Rougemont School, Newport and Monmouth School. Richard first started playing Rugby at the age of 11 at Rougemont School and progressed quickly through the school ranks playing at flanker throughout. He was selected for Welsh Schools at under 18 level and then had a brief spell with Newport youth before spending a year in South Africa in 1996 at Michaelhouse, a boarding school for senior boys in Durban.
In the 2011–12 season once again one swimmer qualified for OFSAA, winning a bronze medal for SC. The Storm basketball team has won several city titles in its history, including the most recent visit to the NCSSAA championship in the 2008–09 season. The South Carleton Junior Boys' soccer team captured the 2008 NCSSAA Gold Medal after an undefeated season. The Senior Boys' Soccer team won the 2016 NCSSAA final and qualified for OFSAA. South Carleton's football team had reached the NCSSAA finals in 2006 and 2008, losing both times, and lost in the NCSSAA semi-finals in 2007.
The former Senior Boys and Senior Girls Departments later became Cockshut Hill Secondary School. The school gained a specialism as a Technology College in the early 2000s and was renamed Cockshut Hill Technology College. An Ofsted report of the school in December 2015 deemed the school to 'require improvement' overall. This was explained to be due to there not being "good enough teaching to ensure students make rapid gains in their learning", lessons "failing to stimulate and engage students" and also due to the fact "leaders have not effectively evaluated the impact of development work and initiatives".
The 2005/2006 track season proved to be very successful for Colonel By. They sent several athletes to the East OFSAA and OFSAA track and field meet, which achieved provincial recognition. Another notable achievement came from the 2002/2003 senior boys soccer team who became the first Colonel By boys soccer team to compete at OFSAA in more than a decade. The Colonel By Boys soccer team has just qualified for AAAA OFSAA in Mississauga after 9 years of not doing so. Senior girls basketball is also a notable team at Colonel By, along with senior girls soccer.
Reaction to the first episode of the show was mixed. Jonah Barrington, radio critic of the Sunday Chronicle provided the doubled- edged observation that Bunter was the greatest TV character since Muffin the Mule. Newspaper reviewers generally agreed that the casting of Gerald Campion as Bunter and character actor Kynaston Reeves as Mr Quelch were successful – although some dissenters felt that Reeves' interpretation was closer to Upper Fourth master Mr Hacker than Mr Quelch. The portrayal of the senior boys was generally viewed as adequate, but most reviewers agreed that the portrayal of the junior schoolboys was much less successful.
The school has achieved two city National Capital Secondary School Athletic Association championships for the Varsity lacrosse (2018 & 2019) and junior boys rugby program. In 2008, the senior boys basketball team won the provincial OFSAA AA championship, the first Ottawa high school to win a provincial basketball championship in 59 years. In 2009, the varsity boys non-contact hockey team won the city championship. The Snowboard & Ski Club is the largest club at the school with regular multi-day excursions during the winter months to Le Massif and Mont-Sainte-Anne, as well single day trips to Mont-Tremblant.
The school uniform was a black blazer, grey trousers, and white shirt for Senior Boys and a grey shirt for Junior Boys, worn with the school tie which had broad pale blue and navy blue diagonal stripes. The school badge was a white dove descending on a black background, with the letters Q.M.S.B. beneath. A subfusc suit could also be worn in place of the blazer and grey trousers, but latterly the habit had declined. Boys in the lower school, up to 4th form, wore a black peaked cap with a silver emblem of the dove descending.
On 1 October 1929, Barnfield Senior Boys’ School opened in Silkstream Road, Burnt Oak, Edgware with 267 boys. In January 1964 it amalgamated with Brent Secondary Modern School on its site in Sturgess Avenue, West Hendon. Brent Modern School, a mixed school, had opened on 7 January 1936 having been formally inaugurated the previous October by Princess Louise, Duchess of Argyll, the daughter of Queen Victoria. In readiness for the joining of the Barnfield and Brent schools, new buildings were erected in St David's Place, and the two adjacent sites became one school named St David's after its location.
The summer term usually commences one week after each new year. During this term, new boys (known as "lighties") join the school whilst existing boys progress to the next grade, which requires moving into a new dormitory house ("dorms"). Unlike the other two terms, all boys must take part in compulsory cross country running every morning and sometimes in the afternoon too. Junior boys (grades 3 and 4) complete a 3 kilometre course known as the "sadac" because its route winds around SADC headquarters, while senior boys (grades 5 to 7) take a longer route colloquially referred to as the "dip tank" which is approximately 5 kilometres.
Born in Dublin, County Dublin, Judge began his career at St. Joseph's Boys in Sallynoggin and appeared for the club's Senior Boys team. In 2006, Judge joined the academy at Premier League club Blackburn Rovers. He turned professional at age 17 and was a part of the reserve team which won the 2006–07 Lancashire Senior Cup. He made his debut for the senior team as a substitute in a 4–1 League Cup second round win over Grimsby Town on 27 August 2008 and his first start followed in a narrow FA Cup third round victory over Blyth Spartans on 5 January 2009.
The younger daughters, Chris and Button, encourage the boys of Donkin's house to defy the headmaster's latest and furiously-resented diktat: heedless of Marbledown's long tradition of rowing, Ovington has cancelled the school's participation in the local regatta, and placed the town and the river out of bounds for the duration of the regatta. The boys of Donkin's house openly defy Ovington and go into town en masse. Faced with this comprehensive defiance of the headmaster, Donkin feels obliged to offer his resignation, which Ovington instantly accepts. Sir Berkeley Nightingale, uncle of one of Donkin's senior boys, uses his influence to have Ovington offered a suffragan bishopric.
Roberts is also a Senior Boys house at the Duke of York's Royal Military School. The Lord Roberts Centre – a facility at the National Shooting Centre built for the 2002 Commonwealth Games, and HQ of the National Smallbore Rifle Association (which Roberts was fundamental in founding) is named in his honour. On 29 May 1900 Pretoria surrendered to the British commander-in-chief, Lord Roberts. Due to the prevalence of malaria and because the area had become too small, he relocated his headquarters from the vicinity of the Normal College to a high-lying site 10 km south-west of the city – hence the name Roberts Heights.
Part of the findings of the 1923 report was that there had been undue severity in some punishments at Mount Penang and it recommended a lessening of the use of the cane by officers working there. A second inquiry in 1934 investigated the punishment regime more closely, and found that it was common practice for more senior boys to administer punishment on junior inmates. Until 1934, this type of punishment often went unsupervised by staff and was open to serious abuse. One example of these forms of punishment had the offender being required to fight up to five other boys, with or without gloves.
The Blue Coat School (in this case Christ's Hospital, London) as drawn by Augustus Pugin and Thomas Rowlandson for Rudolph Ackermann's Microcosm of London (1808-11). The picture shows the Great Hall on St. Matthew's Day, September 21st. Two senior boys destined for scholarships to Oxford and Cambridge Universities, known as Grecians, gave orations in praise of the school, one in Latin and the other in English. The Anniversary Meeting of the Charity Children in the Cathedral of St. Paul, 1826 Leeds Charity School Blue Plaque Charity schools, sometimes called blue coat schools, or simply the Blue School, were significant in the history of education in England.
Varsity Award winners, Subway Bowl program December 1, 2007 The team also competed annually with North Vancouver High School for "The Helmet" in football and "The Shoe" in basketball as well as with neighbouring Carson Graham High School in football for "the Cage". The Senior Girls basketball team finished second in the British Columbia tournament in 1962.North Shore Outlook The Senior Boys basketball team won four consecutive league championships with their best season being 1966-67 when they had a 26-7 won-lost record.UBC Archives The Senior Tennis team won the 1968 BC provincial championships led by singles winners Michelle Carey and David Johnston.
The school at every step, big or small, is guided by the comprehensive educational philosophy of Bhagawan Baba who emphatically advocates "Education should be for life; not for mere living" This non residential school is an English Medium school for boys and girls affiliated to the Central Board of Secondary Education, New Delhi [CBSE]. The syllabi and textbooks followed at the school are those prescribed and recommended by the Central Board of Secondary Education, New Delhi. The school is located inside the 'Sri Sathya Sai Vidya Giri' complex of Prasanthi Nilayam and is housed between the Senior boys hostel and Junior boys hostel, behind the Sri Sathya Sai Hill view stadium. The school provides quality education free of cost.
Selective secondary independent schools (of approximately equal distance of less than three miles from the centre) are Hampton School (for boys) and Lady Eleanor Holles School (for girls) in Hampton, Sir William Perkins's School (for girls) in Chertsey, Halliford School (for boys) in Shepperton and St James Senior Boys School in Ashford. Local Preparatory Schools include Hampton Preparatory School, formerly Denmead School in Hampton, (part of the Hampton School Trust), Newland House School in Twickenham, Twickenham Preparatory School in Hampton, and Staines Preparatory School in Staines-upon-Thames. An alternative, progressive form of independent education for boys and girls aged 3 to 18, is provided by St Michael Steiner School in Hanworth Park.
St Birinus School, previously known as Didcot Boy's County Modern and Didcot Senior Boys, is a boys' comprehensive academy in Didcot, Oxfordshire, England. St Birinus was founded in 1936 as a secondary modern before becoming a comprehensive in 1973. In September 2012 the school became an academy with the same name. St Birinus' key catchment area includes the town of Didcot and the surrounding rural area, from Harwell in the west to South Moreton in the east and from Long Wittenham in the north to Chilton in the south, however the school also caters for parents in other parts of Oxfordshire who wish their children to be educated in a single-sex environment.
Chesham is the location of a nationally renowned Special school, Heritage House School which first opened in April 1968 and caters for pupils between the ages of 2 to 19 with severe learning difficulties.Heritage House School A Further education college Amersham & Wycombe College was founded in 1973 and has one of its four campuses in the town on the former Cestreham Senior Boys School at Lycrome Road. The college caters for a range of student cohorts with 2000 students on full-time courses and 5000 on a part-time bases.Amersham and Wycombe College Adult learning comprising a range of provision including academic, vocational and leisure courses, is provided a four sites in the town.
By the 18th century, the ceremony had changed to a glorified flag day. Salt was no longer scattered on scholars; instead, pinches of salt and little blue tickets were sold to passers-by (the blue ticket – inscribed on alternate celebrations with 'Mos Pro Lege' or 'Pro More et Monte' – acted as a ticket of exemption from further contributions) for 'salt' – money that went towards the anticipated expenses of the Captain of the School (the senior Colleger) at King's College, Cambridge. Collecting was restricted to two 'salt-bearers' (also senior boys at the college) and ten or twelve 'servitors' or 'runners' who between them covered all the roads around Eton and Windsor. Until 1758, Montem was held annually in January.
Sir Charles Tupper Secondary School is known for its outstanding athletic achievements. In 2009-2010, the school's Wrestling, Bantam Boys Basketball, Bantam Boys Volleyball team, and most notably the Senior Boys Basketball (who ended Kitsilano Secondary school's 8 year streak) were Vancouver City Champions for the VSSAA (Vancouver Secondary Schools' Athletic Association) League. There have been many notable accomplishments at the provincial level, as well as various past successes in sports over the years. The school offers a wide variety of sports throughout the school year, including volleyball, rugby, cross country, and badminton in the fall, basketball and wrestling in the winter, and rugby, soccer, volleyball, softball, tennis, track and field, and ultimate frisbee in the spring/summer season.
"In 1888, Miss Beauclerc was accorded the high honour of the appointment of Teacher of Shorthand at Rugby School". This was the first time shorthand had been taught in an English public school and the first appointment of a female teacher in an English boys' public school. There were one hundred boys in her classes and Dr. Percival, headmaster at this time "expressed his satisfaction at the excellence of the teaching and the progress made by the pupils". Beauclerc also taught senior boys at the Birmingham Blue Coat School and in addition to achieving as a female teacher of predominately male students in the fields of shorthand and typing, Beauclerc was a teacher of dancing and callisthenics.
Born in Accra, Gold Coast, on 26 March 1924, Asante attended the O’Reilly Educational Institute, Tudu, Government Junior Boys’ School, Adabraka, and Government Senior Boys’ School, Kinbu, from 1927 to 1937. He also attended Achimota College Upper Primary and Secondary School from 1938 to 1942, where also he taught mathematics (1945–48). He then proceeded to Durham University in Britain, where he obtained a BSc Mathematics in 1952. He became a member of the Institute of Statisticians in 1953, before returning to Achimota College, where from 1953 to 1955 he taught mathematics. He worked for six years at The Flagstaff House, and was Principal Secretary at the African Affairs Secretariat (1960–66).
In 1930, an inquest into the death of a 14-year-old schoolboy from Sedbergh School heard that, rather than return there after his holidays, he took his life because of his dislike of the fagging system. The jury returned a verdict of suicide and recommended that the fagging system in public schools be abolished. During the late twentieth century, fagging fell out of use in British public schools, as attitudes to boarding education and child development changed. Despite the reluctance of senior boys who had served their time and expected to enjoy the benefits of the system, between the 1960s and 1980s first the duties became less onerous and then the system was abolished at most major public schools.
An whole form would be subdivided into groups, each responsible for studying one aspect of a particular subject, whose collective work would be combined to form an overall result. Pupils were encouraged to be "Dalton-like", and to pursue original research of their own. The senior boys also took part in what were called "conversaziones": presentations to their peers (and others) of practical experiments in the sciences, categorised into physics plus mechanics, chemistry, biology, or workshop. These took place in the spring term, and boys who participated were allowed four or five days off all other work immediately before Speech Day, for work on their presentations, although at any other time work was expected to be done outwith school hours.
Duration: 110 minutes The focus of this film is the younger boys, aged twelve, at school. MacDougall had not intended to focus on the new students at school, but while filming and sheltering from rain one day, he found himself in Foot House, a "holding house" where boys spend their first year. It caused a shift in tone for the film, as MacDougall envisaged that the viewers, and he himself, could become co-participants with the new boys, as they discovered the school for themselves. The film follows the experience of one boy and his close friends, who overcome their initial homesickness and ultimately, at the end of the year, join the "main house", where senior boys live, and begin their communal journey proper.
North China Herald and North China Daily News, Shanghai, China, 1912, Soon after this memorable parade, nine senior boys left the 1st Baden- Powell Troop to continue or complete their education in England. Thus, the 1st Shanghai Troop of Baden-Powell Scouts was able to make a presence at the “Imperial Scout Exhibition” in Birmingham, July 1913, as the “Dragon Troop” of Shanghai wearing their original dark uniforms of 1909. (1st Baden-Powell had changed to khaki in 1911.) By April 1914, without any senior members of the Shanghai Public School left in the 1st Baden-Powell Troop, the remaining Cathedral School Scouts were registered as the 1st Shanghai Cathedral School Troop, thus becoming the 1st Baden-Powell. Their first Scoutmaster was L.R.Wheen.
Mr Doyle was once asked why the senior girls from Dover Heights Girls High and senior boys from Vaucluse Boys High could not move to the Blake Street site, and instead move the junior boys to Vaucluse. His response was that the school would be a selective school for boys in the area only. Construction of the Blake St site commenced at the beginning of that year and completed for the start of the school year in 1969, when it was officially opened. During the 1970s it was known for applying corporal punishment beyond a reasonable measure, although during the period 1967 to 1972 this form of punishment was being phased out, with Masters only being able to administer such punishment.
Other schools to form the school are the Quarry Bank Senior Girls and Quarry Bank Senior Boys when in Staffordshire on Coppice Lane which became the Quarry Bank Secondary Modern School, and another was the Mill Street Technical College. The site on Coppice Lane closed in 1977. In September 2008, it became a trust school, part of The Stourbridge Educational Trust (TSET), along with other Stourbridge secondary schools, [Pedmore Technology College], [Redhill School, Stourbridge] and [Ridgewood High School, West Midlands]. On the College site over the past year, Thorns Community Learning Village has been developed,Thorns Community Learning Village comprising Thorns Primary School, Thorns Community College and a school for students with special needs, which will replace the facilities currently provided by Old Park School.
La Salle's team colours are black and gold. Their athletic teams are all known as the "Black Knights". The school competes in many sports including cross-country, soccer, hockey, rugby, football, basketball, cheerleading, curling, field hockey, badminton, skiing, skateboarding, and tennis. La Salle Secondary School is a AA-level school, a designation determined by enrollment levels. This creates a disadvantage in athletics; however their senior girls' basketball team won KASSAA in 2007 and 2008, and won the EOSSAA AA championship in 2008-2013. Their Senior boys' rugby team has also been very competitive, winning KASSAA, going undefeated for three straight seasons in 1999, 2000, 2001 also in 2013 , also winning back to back years in 2007 and 2008, and winning AA EOSSAA in 2006, 2007, and 2008.
From then on Chambers trained more regularly and enjoyed quite a lot of success at O.T.F.A. (Ontario Track and Field Association) meets. At the beginning of the '93 high school track season Chambers was preparing himself with Guthrie for the first of three possible senior boys 100's, as he was only in grade 11 at this time. But the Catholic separate school board had a "work to rule" strike and as a result Chambers' school did not send athletes to O.F.S.A.A. The following indoor season Chambers trained intently and won a 60m Gold medal at the York University high school Track and Field invitational. Chambers ran a hand-timed 10.2 at the city track meet (ROPSSAA) and he went to the O.F.S.A.A. ranked #1 in the province.
Originally confined to the United States, the use of the words fag and faggot as epithets for gay men has spread elsewhere in the English- speaking world, but the extent to which they are used in this sense has varied outside the context of imported US popular culture. In the UK and some other countries, the words queer, homo, and poof are much more common as pejorative terms for gay men. The word faggot in the UK also refers to a kind of meatball, while fag is most commonly used as a slang term for "cigarette". The terms fag/fagging, have been widely used for a practice of younger pupils acting as personal servants to the most senior boys for well over a hundred years in England, in the public school system of education.
The school was previously known as Farmer Road School. It started in 1900 in temporary premises; a permanent building was constructed during 1902 and opened on 15 June 1903 as an elementary school with separate departments for boys and girls aged 5 to 14, which was the statutory school leaving age at that time. In 1932, this changed to senior boys, junior boys, and mixed infants, but in 1942 the junior department became mixed again. In 1948 the school became a secondary modern school for boys. In 1968, Waltham Forest adopted the Comprehensive system and it became a "Junior High School", catering for 11- to 14-year-old boys. In 1986, it was re-organised again: it became co-educational, admitting both boys and girls from 11–16 years.
Known to his students simply as 'The Man', he combined a spirit of camaraderie with strict discipline (corporal punishment was meted out with a fives bat for maximum sound and moral effect). He was a firm believer in allowing the boys to govern themselves as much as possible and entrusted to them many branches of school activity: he developed the prefectorial system, appointed senior boys instead of masters as officers in the cadet corps, and handed over the production of the school magazine to the students. Sport became an organised element of the curriculum, for Empson saw it as an important medium for the development of loyalty, physical potential and personal and team skills. Another innovation, adopted from Loretto School in Scotland, was the introduction of shorts and open-necked flannel shirts as the school uniform.
At the time of Dart's headmastership, Ballarat Grammar was a small Church of England boys’ school of up to two hundred or so students, at least half of them boarders from country towns and farms, especially in the Mallee, Wimmera and Western District regions of Victoria. Dart was an active gardener who valued manual work. He encouraged students in outdoors projects and in small farming enterprises which developed the school's self- sufficiency, for example by producing vegetables and eggs for the school kitchen. The school ran a piggery and at one stage kept two draught horses. In the early 1960s, some senior boys designed and built a students’ common room that later became the school's library for a time, and from the mid-1960s students and teachers laid many square metres of brick paving around the school.
CEC has also shown success in track and field, with the team winning seven championship banners at the NSSAF track and field championships at Beazley Field in Dartmouth in 2017. The cougars set a new NSSAF individual record and three new school records, by winning the overall Division I title, Intermediate Girls and Boys, and Senior Girls and Boys divisions. This marks the second time a Nova Scotia school has done so, the first being 25 years ago (also accomplished by CEC). The CEC track and field team were champions in the following categories: \- Intermediate Girls Provincial Champions with 107 points \- Intermediate Boys Provincial Champions with 135 points \- Intermediate Banner (Combined Boys and Girls) with 242 points \- Senior Girls Provincial Champions with 134.5 points \- Senior Boys Provincial Champions with 171 points \- Senior Banner (Combined Boys and Girls) with 305.5 points \- Div.
At the height of the Malayan Emergency in May 1954, Lt. General Sir Geoffrey Bourne, the military commander of the British Forces, officially opened a group of temporary hutments for the education of servicemen's children. From that day the school grew in size and prestige until the name of Bourne became an accepted part of the educational pattern in Malaya and the Federal capital In September 1957 the first boarding houses were opened to accommodate the children of service families stationed elsewhere in Malaya. In the same year Headquarters Malaya Command was moved to Seremban and, as the families gradually followed, the need for boarding accommodation increased. Girls and junior boys were boarded in Arakan House near the School and Istana Hostel, a former palace of the Sultan of Selangor, was taken over for the senior boys.
The original school was built at a cost of £1.25million and opened in November 1970 (official duties being performed by politician Peggy Herbison), around the same time as the neighbouring housing scheme at Whitlawburn was completed. In 2008, the old buildings closed and the school moved to a new campus that also houses a nursery and a special school, Rutherglen High School, on a site occupied by some of the old school's playing fields, north of its buildings, which were redeveloped for housing (the Cathkin Rise estate by Barratt). View of the main school building, 2013 the school had 1004 pupils on the school roll and 88 Full-time equivalent staff. In May 2018, the school won the Scottish Senior Boys Shield in football for the first time, after beating St Ninian's High School, Giffnock on penalties in the final.
When he died in Inverness, six years after his retirement from the post, his popularity was clear in the extent of the activity surrounding his funeral; when his body was returned to Lewis the flags on the island were at half mast and all businesses were closed at noon. All schools throughout Lewis were closed and 'the senior boys of Nicholson Institute headed the funeral procession, which included the Lewis Pipe Band, the Brethren of the Masonic Lodge, the Provost, Magistrates and Councillors of Stornoway and members and officials of all the other public bodies'. In addition, 'there was a very large and representative attendance of the general public, including people from all parts of the island'. Sir George Macdonald, the Secretary of the Scottish Education Department, extolled his virtues and said 'Few men in our time have laid their native country under so deep an obligation as he has done'.
In the early days of the school the headmaster was the sole master, his school being a one-story stone building (now the school's main dining room). In the nineteenth century, St. Bees School began to expand thanks to the proceeds from mineral royalties, legally won in part by the efforts of Headmaster William Wilson,Todd, John The Headmaster, the Provost and the Earl: the Affair of the St. Bees School Mineral Lease, 1812–1817 Transactions of the Cumberland and Westmorland Antiquarian and Archaeological Society Volume LXXXIII Kendal 1983 pp163-171 and in 1844 the headmaster moved into the newly built south wing of the "Quad", the quadrangle of sandstone buildings which makes up the main and oldest part of the school. In 1886, a purpose built home was constructed called the "School House", part of which today serves as a senior boys' boarding house.
The inception of the Air Cadet League of Canada took place at the start of the Second World War when Minister of National Defence for Air, Charles G. Power, identified a need to develop a volunteer-based organization with the goal to train youth in aviation skills. The need to have young men trained and ready to support the military efforts during the Second World War was the foundation of the Air Cadet League during this formative time period. By 1940, Order-in-Council PC6647 authorized the creation of the Air Cadet Movement in Canada where the Junior (boys aged 12–14) and the Senior (boys aged 15–18) Cadet Corps began. During the early developmental stages of the League, a partnership with the Royal Canadian Air Force helped boost the success of the Air Cadet Movement in Canada as a result of the availability to flying scholarships and training centres.
From 2003 to 2010 Vaughan was invited by former manager Len Ashurst to coach at the Premier League exit trial, for under 18/19 scholars who were released by their clubs where he work for four years. His son Gareth and daughter Erin are both working as Director Of Coaching for Issaquah Soccer Club Gunners in Seattle WA. Erin played for Shrewsbury & Aston Villa Ladies and the Wales women's national football team, she is also who played for Issaquah Soccer Club Gunners ladies team. In 2010 Vaughan signed a three-year contract with Albion Hurricanes FC in Houston (Texas) as Boys Director and was helped by Danny Hill, Dave Hill and Gregg Munslow. On his birthday in May 2013 Vaughan joined Texas Rush in The Woodlands, North of Houston where he is currently Director Of Coaching the senior boys in The Woodlands (U15s to U19s) and in this time he passed his USSF "B" coaching licence.
Recent research published in Picturing the closet: male secrecy and homosexual visibility in Britain, by Dominic Janes, found that between 1900 and 1914, the "Black Book" (the school discipline record) recorded 38 instances of immorality within the pupil community; punishments for this activity ranged from caning to expulsion, most of the activity was performed in groups, with Janes concluding "what we are seeing here is [not] the victimisation of couples, but the periodic purges of small cadres of peers". Immediately after this period, when Geoffrey Fisher became headmaster in 1914, an account was as follows: "homosexuality was rife. Fisher immediately expelled two senior boys and began to rule with a very firm hand". Fisher would go on to become Archbishop of Canterbury, but his tenure as headmaster has been linked to "blithe.. extraordinary violence and psychological cruelty". Harold Abrahams, pictured here at the 1924 Olympics, joined the school in 1914 Harold Abrahams CBE, the Olympic champion in the 100m sprint in the 1924 Paris Olympics, depicted in the 1981 film Chariots of Fire, joined the school in 1914.
In more modern times, the school had a clean-sweep as champions of the under 13, under 14, under 15 and under 16 age-groups of the South East Hampshire Netball League in 2014. This was the fourth consecutive season SJC had won the under 15 league. Also in 2014, the under 18's lifted the Hampshire Rugby plate and in 2015, the under 15's won the rugby NatWest vase. More rugby success arrived in 2018, when the college won the Society of Heads Bowl in rugby 7's. SJC yearbook Cover-to-Cover 2015 In 2017, the College came third in the senior boys indoor British Independent Schools Ski Championships and in 2018 won the Senior Southern Regional ski competition (u/16).. Other noteable sporting successes at county level include winning the Hampshire boys hockey tournaments in 2016 (u/13); 2017 (u/13); 2018 (u/13); 2019 (u/14); and 2020 (u/14), with the SJC girls winning the Hampshire County Championships in rounders in 2016 (u/15) and in hockey in 2017 (u/13).
It now contains a Design studio, Art rooms, a photography room, a craft room and kiln, Music teaching rooms, and several practice rooms as well as a music technology room. In 1973, a purpose-built Sixth Form House was added to the School to facilitate the introduction of girls to the Sixth Form at Rendcomb, at the time an innovative move for a boys’ boarding School. In 1982, Prince and Princess Michael of Kent officially opened The Dulverton Hall, an assembly, concert and performance space recognising the many benefactions of Lord Dulverton and his Trust. Godman House, named after Colonel John Godman who was Rendcomb's Chair of Governors for 35 years, followed a year later and is now a Girls’ Boarding House for the younger age group. Lawn and Stable Houses were formally opened by the Duke of Gloucester in December 1989 and these houses now accommodate middle and senior boys and girls, respectively. The trustees gave the College use of a house in the village ~ number 20 ~ to use for students in their final year, who live together in small groups for a week at a time managing budgets, meals (and laundry!) in preparation for University life.

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