Madras College: Difference between revisions
vandalism in notable alumni |
|||
Line 23: | Line 23: | ||
* [[Rob Dewey]] - Scottish Rugby International |
* [[Rob Dewey]] - Scottish Rugby International |
||
* [[KT Tunstall]] - Singer/Songwriter |
* [[KT Tunstall]] - Singer/Songwriter |
||
* [[Thom Davies]] - Main force behind [[The Fashion Sense]], the indie-electropop band |
|||
* [[Dogs Die In Hot Cars]] - Indie Band |
* [[Dogs Die In Hot Cars]] - Indie Band |
||
* [[Andrew Lemoncello]] - British Long Distance Runner |
* [[Andrew Lemoncello]] - British Long Distance Runner |
Revision as of 15:57, 1 March 2008
Madras College is a secondary school located in St. Andrews, Scotland. The school is split into two sites, with pupils in the first three years being taught in the Kilrymont Road building and those in years four to six at the South Street building, both of which are listed. The current rector (headteacher) is Mr. Ian Jones.
History
Madras was founded in 1833 by Dr Bell who established the Madras System of Education, a method of teaching in which older students schooled the younger ones, named after his experiences in Madras, India. Dr Bell was born in St. Andrews in 1753, the son of a local magistrate and wig-maker. He studied at the University of St Andrews where he distinguished himself in Mathematics. He spent time in Virginia as a tutor to a prominent plantation family but as a Loyalist had to return on the outbreak of the American War of Independence. He became a clergyman of the Church of England and took up an appointment as the chaplain to the regiments of the East India Company in Madras. One of his duties was to educate the soldiers' children. Because there was a shortage of teachers, he used the older boys, who had been taught the lesson by the master, to instruct the younger pupils. The pupils who assisted the teacher were called 'monitors'. This method of education became widely used in schools at home and abroad. After his return from India, Dr. Bell made it his life's work to travel the country and encourage schools to adopt 'the Madras system', as it had come to be known. By the time of his death in 1832, over 10,000 schools were using his methods.
To make sure that his educational ideas would be preserved for the future, he made arrangements for the fortune his success had brought him to be used to found a school in his native town St Andrews. By selling some land he owned he was also able to give money to the neighbouring town of Cupar so that in the end he founded two schools. One is the present Bell Baxter High School in Cupar, which was originally called Madras Academy. The other is Madras College in St. Andrews. The senior part of the school is still on the original site in South Street where the modern school has grown up behind the impressive 1833 quadrangle. The original Quadrangle cost £270,000 to built, which is equal to about six and a half million pounds.
Dr. Bell also left money for schools in Inverness (Faraline Park which is now Inverness Library), Glasgow, Edinburgh and Leith (Commercial Street).
Madras College in its present form is the result of two amalgamations of St. Andrews schools. The first took place in 1833 when the old Grammar School was joined with the "English" school to form the original Madras College. The origin of these names being that the Grammar School was taught mostly in Latin while the "English" school in English only. (The Grammar School stood on the grounds between Blackfriars' Church and Lade Braes Lane; the "English" school was on the grounds behind the Church of Holy Trinity.) The school building in South Street served as a secondary school for St Andrews and beyond until 1889, when the Burgh School in Abbey Walk was erected by the School Board. From then on, the two schools existed side by side in the town. The Burgh School was the junior secondary, and Madras College the senior secondary until 1963 when Fife decided that all secondary schools should become comprehensive. Then the Burgh School and Madras College were joined to form the present Madras College.
There are now two buildings 1.5 miles apart. In the 1950s and 1960s major extensions were added to the original building in South Street. It now accommodates about 750 S4, S5 and S6 pupils.
In 1962 it was decided to rehouse the old Burgh School in the Kilrymont area on the south side of the town. Madras College, Kilrymont Road, is a building with adjacent playing fields and was opened in 1967. It is attended by over 1,000 S1, S2 and S3 pupils.
The school is the only secondary school in Scotland with a split site. Also, most of the pupils are bussed in from surrounding towns and villages such as Leuchars, Wormit, Tayport, Newport and Gauldry.
The badge and motto, It is a chevron between three bells - a reference to Dr. Bell. The Latin motto is "Pro Rege et Grege" which literally means "For King and flocks" but is always translated to mean "For King and people". It reminds us of the importance of the idea of service to the community.
Notable Alumni
- Rob Dewey - Scottish Rugby International
- KT Tunstall - Singer/Songwriter
- Dogs Die In Hot Cars - Indie Band
- Andrew Lemoncello - British Long Distance Runner