The Cathedral School, Llandaff
Established |
c.9th Century 1880 (current school) |
---|---|
Type |
Independent school Choral foundation school |
Religion | Anglican |
Head | Clare V Sherwood |
Custos (Chairman) | Gilbert Lloyd |
Founder | Dean John Vaughn and Canon Nathaniel Woodard |
Location |
Cardiff CF5 2YH Wales |
Local authority | Cardiff City Council |
DfE URN | 402015 Tables |
Students | 700 |
Gender | Co-Educational |
Ages | 3–18 |
Colours |
Black, Maroon and Gold |
Former pupils | Old Llandavians |
Website |
www |
The Cathedral School, Llandaff is a coeducational independent day school located in Llandaff, a district north of the Welsh capital Cardiff. Originally established as a choral foundation to train choir boys for the affiliated Llandaff Cathedral, it is now part of the Woodard Schools foundation and continues to provide choristers for the cathedral. It is the only surviving Anglican choir school in Wales and is a member of the ISC, IAPS and the Choir Schools Association.[1]
History
While Roald Dahl was a pupil at the school, he was involved in the "Great Mouse Plot of 1924", which he later described in his autobiography, Boy: Tales of Childhood. This is the first of numerous occasions in which he outlines in great detail the perceived cruelty of corporal punishment in schools. The headmaster at this time was Mr T. R. Coombes.
Structure
The Cathedral School consists of three sections: Infant School (ages 3–7), Junior School (ages 7–11) and Senior School (years 7–13). Sixth form teaching began in September 2013. In the 2012 Estyn inspection, the overarching judgements made by the inspectors were that the school's current performance was Excellent and that the school's prospects for improvement were Excellent.
Curriculum
Junior School
Modern Language education begins early, generally during Key Stage 2. In the 2005 inspection, pupils were reported to have performed well above the national average in National Curriculum tests.
Senior School
A traditional academic education, with sciences separately taught by specialists, along with a range of modern languages (French, Spanish, German, Welsh) in addition to Latin, is delivered alongside very competitive sport (senior pupils have an unusually generous amount of time allocated to sport) and opportunities in the Arts. Pupils have generally performed well in the GCSE exams. The school was ranked top co-educational school in Wales in 2012 for GCSE success.[2] Every pupil up to Year 9 receives music tuition for 45 minutes per week in class. Interested pupils may choose to take GCSE music.
Pastoral Care
Every pupil in the Senior Section is a member of one of three senior Houses, named after the Llandaff saints: Dyfrig, Euddogwy and Teilo. The pupils are cared for by one of five house tutors, who in turn are overseen by a housemaster or housemistress. Housemasters and housemistresses, assisted by their tutor teams, are responsible for pupils' pastoral care, oversight of their academic progress and personal development.[3]
Activities
Music
The boy choristers have sung in the Wales Millennium Centre, with Welsh National Opera, Bryn Terfel and Carlo Rizzi. Music is very strong at the Cathedral School with several pupils at Grade 8 standard. The music department is housed in the Jubilee building, with a full range of instruments available and specialist teachers of twenty instruments. There are numerous musical groups including the School Orchestra, the Swing Band, the Flute Group and the Senior Chamber Choir.
Drama
Drama has thrived only recently in the school but is rapidly expanding. Pupils writie their own work for 'gala evenings' and many pupils are on the books of National Youth Theatre.
Sport
Over twenty sports are played at the school, with pupils at international level in cricket, badminton, rugby, gymnastics and sailing. Unusual for a choral foundation school, the school also offers scholarships based on athletic ability.
Notable Old Llandavians
Former students of The Cathedral School, Llandaff are referred to as Old Llandavians.
- Roald Dahl, Author
- Robin Sowden-Taylor, Wales international rugby player
- Simon Hughes, MP
- David Rowe-Beddoe, Baron Rowe-Beddoe, Chairman of the Wales Millennium Centre
- T. C. Worsley, Theatre & television critic
- David Mahoney, Member of Only Men Aloud[4]
- David Bevan, Sang in the choir at Westminster Abbey for the Queen's Coronation (1953) – received Coronation Medal for 'Personal Service to the Sovereign" – Dean's Scholar and Captain of Rugby in 1954)
- Donald Box, MP
- Charlotte Church, singer and TV personality
- John Morgan (bishop)
- John Robins (Cardiff and Wales rugby)
- Peter Temple-Morris, Baron Temple-Morris of Llandaff in the County of South Glamorgan and of Leominster in the County of Herefordshire, politician
- Richard William Leslie Wain, Victoria Cross
- Edward William Williamson, Bishop
- Rex Willis, Welsh Rugby player
- Peter Wingfield, actor
- Rakesh Aggarwal, CEO of beauty retailer, Escentual.com
Headteachers
- The Revd C.E. Butler (1880–1883)
- The Revd E. Owen (1883–1889)
- The Revd J.E. Stevenson-More (1889–1905)
- The Revd P.R. Cleave (1905–1912)
- G.L. Robanthan & R. Brice-Smith (1912–1919)
- T.R. Coombes (1919–1946)
- N.L. Westbury-Jones (1946–1957)
- R.J.B. Hulland (1957–1975)
- G.L. Hill (1975–1983)
- J.C. Knapp (1983–1993)
- D.A. Evans (Acting Head) (1993–1994)
- P.L. Gray (1994–2008)
- S. Morris (2008–2016 )
- C.V. Sherwood (2016-present)
Head Boys and Head Girls
Since the building of the school sixth form
- Arthur Wotton and Grace Alston (2015–2016)
- Jake Maddocks and Nicole Singh-Clark (2014–2015)
Previously:
- Mannat Chopra and Emily Liepa (2012–2013)
- Robert Lindsay and Angharad Clemens (2011–2012)
- James Groves and Rose Stevens (2010–2011)
- Matthew Chapman and Holly Lidbury (2009–2010)
- William Searle and Rhiannon Hickinbottom (2008–2009)
- Piers Kennedy and Phillipa Donovan (2007–2008)
References
- ↑ http://www.choirschools.org.uk/
- ↑ The Times, 1 September 2012
- ↑ Senior School – Pastoral Care
- ↑ "Only Men Aloud member judge Cathedral School musical talent". South Wales Echo. 8 November 2010.
External links
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