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Forest Hill School

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Forest Hill School
File:Title grade.gif
Address
Map
Mayow Road

,
Information
TypeSecondary
MottoSpecialist school in Performing arts
Local authorityLewisham
OfstedReports
Head teacherPeter Walsh
GenderBoys
Age11 to 18
Enrollment1360
HousesDrake
Harvey
Reynolds
Shackleton
PublicationOur Voice
Websitehttp://www.foresthill.lewisham.sch.uk/

Forest Hill School is a comprehensive boys school located on Dacres Road, Forest Hill in the London Borough of Lewisham which opened in 1956. The school has very close ties with the girls secondary, Sydenham School which is located close by. The school is now in federation with Sedgehill School (mixed school) and Sydenham School, making the federation Hillsyde, which is the name of the sixth form federation.

In 2005 the school was given Performing Arts status for its Drama, Dance, Music and Art courses and currently has a silver artsmark by the English Arts Council [1][2]. The school has a very good reputation in the local area compared to in 2000 when it had a bad deception due to bad results. The school now is oftenly oversubscribed and the acceptance area has recently been forwarded by around 200 yards. The school also has a prestigious Investor in People award [3]

Location

Forest Hill School is located in between the London Borough of Lewisham districts of Forest Hill and Sydenham. The school's main entrance is set on Mayow Road, although there is another entrance on Bampton Road next to the sport hall. The London Buses route 75 runs outside the school and also provides a school bus service in the afternoon towards Catford.

Information

Uniform

Forest Hill School uses the same type of uniform as other schools in Great Britain. It includes the distinctive school blazer which is black in colour. Other parts of the uniform include a white shirt, black trousers, black socks and black shoes along with a jumper which is optional. The tie is a single white stripe on a black base but from Year 9 up it changes to double white stripes on a black base. House Captains in Year 11 wear a blue tie with white stripes and the Forest Hill School symbol of a horse.

Sport

The school enjoys top notch sporting facilities with the new sports hall which opened in 2006, and came to a cost of £4.5 million. There are various clubs in the school for a range of sports which include Trampolining, Indoor/Outdoor Cricket, Table Tennis, Indoor Basketball and Indoor/outdoor Football. Plus in the Sports Hall there is a professional arena with a scoreboard.

Once pupils are in Year 10, they are allowed to choose what sports they do, as part of Games (as long as they are in the double science GCSE groups. This includes all the sports mentioned above, plus swimming, sailing, canoeing and rock climbing. Certain students are also allowed to do gym and weight training. The school has a Sportsmark.

Demographics

In the area there is a high number of people from different backgrounds. The school is another part of this community as around 50% of the pupils who attend the school are from a non-white cultural background. The highest volume is of Black British individuals and mixed race.

Form System

Each year group at the school is divided into forms. There are usually nine forms per year, organised by house. In years 7 through to 11 the forms are sorted into houses which the students keep from year 7, the house colours are Blue, Green, Red and Yellow. In years 10 and 11 there are separate teaching groups from the forms in all subjects. The sixth form at the school does not use the house system.

Houses

Houses colours from left to right, Harvey, Shackleton, Reynolds and Drake

All students are assigned a House on entering the school. The four houses of Forest Hill are named after famous people of the 18th, 19th and early 20th century's, each designated a colour which determines the colour of the trim on the school blazers worn by the pupils. While the house only initially determines which form the student is in, it forms the basis of sport teams throughout each pupil's career at the school. As such, friendly rivalries exist between each house especially at the end of every school year when students from year seven, eight, nine and ten take part in a sports day at the National Athletics Stadium at the Crystal Palace National Sports Centre. The houses compete to win the most points to win the best sporting house award, and another award is given to the house who was the most supportive (noise, banners, house colours for shirts) that day.

These houses are:

  • Drake (Red)
  • Harvey (Yellow)
  • Reynolds (Light Blue)
  • Shackleton (Green)

However When the school opened in 1956 there were 6 houses and Head Of Houses(HOH) were called House masters they consisted of

Drake(Dark Blue) Harvey (Yellow) Reynolds(Light Blue) Shackleton (Green) Browning(Red) Newton(Brown)

The new housing system started in 2006, where you still have the F and G forms in that year making up a year in that house. You also may have an E form group which is an extra form added to only one house that year. Now there is also a S form which is the same as the E but added to a different house in that year. Pupils are recognised by what house they are in by the code such as R9F(Reynolds, year 9, F(French MFL) form) or S11E (Shackleton, Year 11, E form group).

The letters stand for:

  • F - these groups do French only, as their modern foreign language
  • G - these groups do German only, as their modern foreign language
  • E - this stands for extra, these groups do French only for a language (However, the 'E' groups do not exist any more (from September 2007)
  • S - this stands for Spanish, these groups only do Spanish (which was added in the 2006/07 term) for a language

Students who come to the school can not choose which language they do, as they are put in tutor groups randomly. The only time they can choose the subject they do is when they change to Key Stage 4 in Year 10 and pick their choices.

Sixth Form

The sixth form at the school is not put into houses but just classes for the subjects that they do as the sixth form at Forest Hill is part of the Hillsyde consortium, mixed with Sydenham and Sedgehill (hence the name), so if they were put into groups this would lead for people to travel to another school after registration at another one.

Management

The new main building of Forest Hill School seen during redevelopment in September 2007

Headmaster

The current headmaster of the school is Peter Walsh, who has been credited on turning the school's fortunes around in 2001 as the school was suffering from very poor GCSE results.

Senior Management

There are many members of the senior management team at Forest Hill School, the figures as they currently stand include:

Forest Hill School recruit teachers by assessing the way they teach a particular subject, go through an interview with someone from the Senior Management team and a student governor and since 2007 additional members of the Senior Management Team have had to go through another interview with four students from the School Council.

Student Leadership

At the end of the Spring term, new Year 11 prefects are chosen, two from every form group (usually four from every house). Leadership roles amongst the prefects include the Head, Deputy Heads and four House Captains for the student council. Other school prefects are divided between the roles of Duty Prefect and Form Prefect. The school also includes a school council which takes care of student issues and passes them on to the senior management and the headteacher. The school council works similar to the way that the form groups work, as two school councilors are chosen from each tutor group and in Year 9 a selected amount of them may become trainee prefects throughout year 10, this gives them a better chance to become prefects and house captains in Year 11.

Redevelopment

Sports Hall

In 2006 the school's new £4.5M state-of-the-art sports facility was opened with lottery funding and help with Sport England and The FA Charter Standard Schools Program[4]. The facility features a large air conditioned sports hall with basketball nets, indoor cricket, indoor football markings and goals and a scoreboard. The other part of the gym includes a fitness suite, cafè, space for trampolining and table tennis, new changing room facilities with showers and also two of the old three gyms (although gym two is being used as the dinner hall while the redevelopment). The sports centre opened on top of Gym 3, but was also expanded towards Bampton Road on the other side of the school.

Main building

The new school during redevelopment

The school also begun a major redevelopment project which started in July 2006. The project is expected to take 18 months but work has gone faster than anticipated and is expected to be done by December of this year [5]. During the re-build many of the classrooms have been replaced by portable buildings.

The only part of the school which will remain unchanged is the current art block, which was built recently. The rest of the school will be entirely demolished and rebuilt from the ground up with the current three floor plan changed to a higher four story building.

The names of the buildings of portable buildings near the Bampton Road entrance is called The Village or V. The main portable building consists of 10 large classrooms and around 4 offices on two floors for use for activities such as Maths, English, Geography and History. The other portable building consists of four classrooms for Drama and Design & Technology. The room numbers in the portable buildings are organised so not to be confused with the old building. They all start with a V - . Such as V5 or V17.

Ofsted Report

The school has received some very encouraging reviews from the school regulator Ofsted according to the 2004/05 prospectus.[6] The regulator commented on the school in general and also on the pupil/staff relationship saying that it was "very close". They also said:

Pupils are known, valued, cared for and supported very efficiently in order that they can achieve well.

They also said in the report that:

The quality of the curriculum, supported by very good opportunities outside the formal lessons, provides pupils with a good range of learning experiences. The programme is particularly well managed and has successfully helped create an ethos not only where success is recognised but where trying to succeed is recognised.

[7]

Ofsted inspectors have also recently reviewed the school, between the 18 September and 19 September 2007, although the report is yet to be written.

Lewisham City Learning Centre

Forest Hill School is the home to the Lewisham City Learning Centre (or Lewisham CLC). It was where the first BBC School Newsday was held, which featured Forest Hill School, since that many other schools in the borough have participated in the event there. The slogan of the CLC is Teaching Tomorrow's ICT Skills Today...Through Innovation...Providing Information. After the redevelopment it will be moved to another school in the London Borough of Lewisham. The CLC provides many courses including a popular BTEC 3D one. The new BTEC Award 3D Modelling and Award for Film and Games is now being live piloted in two London Schools. The two schools are John Kellys' Girls Technology College in Neasdon and Dr Challenors Boys Grammar School in Amersham.

The centre was a purpose built ICT resource centre for use by schools and the local community. It has flexible teaching spaces for small groups and whole class activities. The rooms are equipped with 'state of the art' ICT facilities with industry standard software and specialist educational programs.

All 4 rooms are equipped with IWB, and Internet connection. 3 of the rooms have an interactive learning environment which offers a simple but very effective tool for audio, video, written communication between teacher and students or between students. There are full video conferencing facilities in 2 of the rooms, 1 of which can be used for small meetings, training and conferences, and other specialised equipment is available in some rooms.

Lewisham City Learning Centre

Room 1

Room 1 has 14 student workstations and a teacher's computer, is equipped with our highest specification computers and digital multimedia lab. In addition to normal uses it is used for digital arts courses. Lewisham CLC is an Alias authorised academic training centre.

Room 2

Room 2 has 30 student workstations and a teacher's computer and digital multimedia lab which allows video to be streamed to and stored on each workstation, so this room is excellently equipped for use as a language laboratory. It can be used by secondary schools for design and control technology using Fischertecknik models, a Denford Microrouter, and a computer controlled desktop vinyl cutter.

There are 2 desks in this room that can be electronically adjusted to accommodate any wheel chair users that can't use other workstations. The room also contains a large format laser printer.

Room 3

Room 3 has 30 student workstations and a teacher's computer and digital multimedia lab which allows video to be streamed to and stored on each workstation, so this room is excellently equipped for use as a language laboratory. It is also equipped for use by primary schools for control technology, data logging and has a class set of digital microscopes. This room also has full video conferencing facilities using ISDN or IP.

Room 4

Room 4 contains 10 workstations and a teacher's computer on a lectern. It is used most of the time as on on-line classroom where a group of year 10 students take part in lessons delivered across the Internet. The work stations in this room can be quickly stored inside the desks to provide a small meeting or conference room and is equipped with full video conferencing facilities using ISDN or IP [8].

Hillsyde Sixth Form

Hillsyde Federation logo
Hillsyde Federation logo

The sixth form at Forest Hill is combined with Sydenham School and Sedgehill School, the official name is the Hillsyde Consortium. The sixth form provides one of the best choice in South London, and was established over 30 years ago. Each school in the consortium contributes to the courses on offer, and has dedicated Sixth Form facilities. Students who attend the sixth form will be based at one Sixth Form Centre for tutorial and form groups, and then theycan choose courses at any of the schools. A shuttle bus service runs at lunchtimes between the schools for students following courses at different sites. The motto is The Best of Three Schools. The Hillsyde Federation Leader is Chris Matthews.

References