Newsletters

December 2020 Friends Newsletter- updated

From Headteacher Mark Grady

So, here we are a week from the end of the most challenging year I think many of us in education have ever known.  We have made it, we’re still going, and what has been at the heart of this fantastic achievement has been that Rugby High School ethos of kindness, care and respect.  Since March, we have looked after each other via a host of online sessions, we’ve chatted over the phone, made videos and audio recordings, we’ve tried to stay in touch with weekly newsletters, and a daily greeting throughout the first full lockdown for staff and for students. 

​​​​​​​​​​​​​​Education is about making connections, about the cut and thrust of debate and chat in the classroom, and to have that removed, and then only partially re-instated has meant that we’ve had to change and change quickly.  Staff, overnight, got to grips with a variety of online platforms in order to continue to support student education.  The pastoral team had to adapt where and how they continued to support the wellbeing of students, and as departments and teams, we had to work out how best to stay connected, and informed. 

Not only did we have to ensure the safeguarding and education of our community, but we had to contend with the challenges of submitting centre assessed grades for exams, we had to support our outgoing year 11 and 13 students who lost out on those all-important rites of passage: leaving assemblies and Prom.  We had to support the school and students through the ins and outs of DFE decisions about OFQUAL algorithms and make sure they got off to university, or onwards to A-Levels of their choice.

We had to find a way through the “return to school” in June for small numbers of students and in September for the whole school.  We regularly clock up many many more miles of walking in the school day, due to the one-way systems, and our water and cleaning bills have gone through the roof as over a thousand hands are cleaned a considerable number more times a day than they ever used to be.

We have dealt with the occasional case of Coronavirus, pushing through periods of self-isolation, but staying connected through live lessons and remote learning.

We have ensured some aspects of the RHS calendar still happened:  The Sixth Form Entertainment, Foundation Day, creative writing club, and we have used the words “unprecedented” and the “new normal” an unprecedented number of times, until the point where they really are, the “new normal.”

We have achieved so much as a community, we should be finishing 2020 positive that despite the great challenges faced, and the difficult times some of our community have faced, we have got through it together, with heights firmly set in our hearts.

As we see 2021 on the horizon, RHS is still going strong, still a beacon of joy and curiosity in learning, still a kind and warm place to be each day.  I, of course, mean emotionally warm.  Not physically.  With all the windows open for ventilation, it is never warm! 

Even in our year group and form group bubbles, even though we don’t congregate in numbers and we haven’t come together in one room as the school community since last December, we know we are all part of the one community of RHS.  Each of our actions every day has the capacity to change the world, and, if we take each day as it comes, like we have done since March, then step by step, day by day and week by week, we will continue to grow stronger together!

Have a very peaceful Christmas, and I wish a safe and healthy New Year to you all!


Pictures from the Past

At first glance, this looks photo looks as if it might contain some computer generated buildings.  But no, the pre-fab buildings were here in in about 1992 prior to the building of the Sixth Form Centre.

Two of them (the ones on the left) were the sixth form common rooms (one lower sixth, one upper sixth), the others were used  primarily for English lessons.

They were knocked down and replaced by the Acorn block in about 1999/2000, but the two common rooms stayed until 2003, when they were replaced by the SF Centre.

According to Friend of Rugby High and current Head of Psychology and Sociology, Olivia LePoidevin, "They were generally pretty cold and very loud when it rained or was windy!  The common rooms were particularly awful – one had a hole in the wall where a Sheriff boy kicked it!  We had old second hand sofas and a dodgy radio – happy times!"


Foundation Day 2020

This year  Foundation Day was played out online and students watched the pre-recorded 40 minute event from the (cold) comfort of their form rooms.  Speeches from Mr Grady, our current and former senior student team and from RHSOGS were interspersed with interludes from our musicians and performers.  

When asked afterwards, students all said that they enjoyed different aspects of the recording, from Mr Grady's speech outside, Alisha Naik's inspiring and encouraging words, the musical interludes underpinning the images of the school past and present and a beautiful montage of artwork. For the first time, it was possible to include some drama snapshots too. Of course, nothing surpasses the feeling of being a whole community when we can physically assemble in one place and can all sing the School Anthem together - as tricky as it might be - and hopefully this time next year shall see a very different Foundation Day again.

A virtual event does have other advantages too, one of which is that everyone in our school community has the opportunity to watch it!    

We are delighted to share this link allowing you access to our Foundation Day 2020: https://youtu.be/zr2tV0rpfT4 . It will be available until early January 2021.

Focus on  a Friend: Sam Fair (née Cowie)

Which year did you leave Rugby High? 

1994 (Where has the time gone?!)

What A Levels did you take?

French, German and English Literature and Language

Who was your favourite teacher? 

This is a very difficult question to answer! I enjoyed doing all of my A Level courses so much and that was due to the fantastic teaching I was lucky enough to experience so it’s really hard to choose a favourite teacher… but for pushing her trolley into mine in Sainsburys five years ago so that I couldn’t ignore her (I really wasn’t trying to I was just in a complete daze, I think!) and for going from being one of the scariest, if not THE scariest, teacher when we were in Lower School to being so much fun in Sixth Form, I think it has to be Gillian Forsyth.

What is your best memory?

I feel so lucky that I seem to have so many to choose from - great ski trips, long lunchtimes in Summer lazing under the shade of a tree chatting and laughing with friends, taking part in all those debating contests -  but it probably has to be walking right from the back of the hall down the to the front of the stage with a captive audience, hanging on my every word, as I did my best Mr (Gordon) Jackson impression in our sixth form entertainment (Willy Walker and the Thornton’s Chocolate Factory) - I ….can…. make ….a …..sentence……last…. ten….hours!

Favourite school food? 

It’s got to be the chocolate cracknel at break times, with the chocolate peppermint slices and Eccles cakes coming a close second. The cheese and potato pies at lunch times were also pretty great, especially if you’d had one put aside for you for after netball practice!

What are you doing now? 

I teach French and Latin at Rugby High – the world works in mysterious yet wonderful ways!

If you could give advice to your 16 year old self, what would it be? 

Probably to stop spending all that money on perms! And, on a more serious note, to listen to what YOU want to be NOT what you think other people want you to be.


We hope you have enjoyed reading this newsletter.  Please do forward it to any other former students you may be in touch with.  They too might like to become a Friend of Rugby High by completing this form: Join Us Form


Season's Greetings and a very Happy New Year from us all at Rugby High School