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Finchley Catholic High School | |
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Address | |
Woodside Lane , , N12 8TA England | |
Coordinates | 51°37′19″N0°10′55″W / 51.622°N 0.182°W |
Information | |
Type | Voluntary aided school |
Motto | Latin: Da Nobis Recta Sapere (Grant that we may be truly wise) |
Religious affiliation(s) | Roman Catholic |
Established | 1926 |
Founder | C. H. Parsons |
Local authority | Barnet |
Department for Education URN | 101362 Tables |
Ofsted | Reports |
Headmistress | Niamh Arnull [1] |
Gender | Boys (mixed-sex 6th form) |
Age | 11to 18 |
Enrolment | 1124 |
Publication | The Albanian |
Former names | Finchley Grammar School Challoner School |
Website | http://www.finchleycatholic.org.uk |
Finchley Catholic High School is a boys' secondary school with a coeducational sixth form in North Finchley, part of the London Borough of Barnet, England. The current head teacher is Niamh Arnull, who had previously been a member of the teaching staff in the 1990s.
Finchley Catholic High School is a faith school; it is also – up to the end of year 11 – exclusively for boys.
It has a coeducational sixth form. The sixth form has been coeducational since the 2007–08 academic year.
The school is situated to the west of Finchley's High Road (A1000), and immediately to the east of that stretch of the Northern Line which constitutes the school's western boundary. Lying adjacent to the postcode boundaries of Whetstone (N20) and Woodside Park (N12), it is roughly halfway between Woodside Park and Totteridge & Whetstone Underground stations.
Finchley Catholic Grammar School was founded in 1926 by Clement Henry Parsons (1892–1980), parish priest of St. Alban's Catholic Church, Nether Street, North Finchley. He founded the Challoner School (a fee-paying grammar school for boys who had not passed their 11+); as well as St. Alban's Catholic Preparatory School ("The Prep" – now absorbed into Woodside Park International School) as a feeder primary for the Grammar and Challoner schools. 1971 saw its two institutional forebears, Finchley Catholic Grammar School ("Finchley Grammar") and the Challoner School, merge to become Finchley Catholic High School. It was the sister school of the all-girls St. Michael's Catholic Grammar School during the grammar school era.
Its motto, Da Nobis Recta Sapere (Grant that we may be truly wise) comes from the collect (opening prayer) of the Mass of Pentecost. The school newsletter, "The Albanian", is named after the school's patron saint, St Alban, Britain's protomartyr. It is sent out multiple times a year (often each half term) to all parents, governors and other key members of the school community.
The school has a Catholic ethos. Religious education is taught five times a fortnight in Key Stage 3 (years 7, 8 and 9); and, as in all Catholic schools in England, the GCSE is compulsory (Key Stage 4 – years 10 and 11), being taught five times a fortnight.
Facilities include a recently installed full size astroturf pitch and playing fields in nearby Southover, a street in Woodside Park Garden Suburb, the other side of Dollis Brook. Of particular note was the archery club. From 1965 until 1972 they were undefeated in interschool competition.
On 26 April 2018, Finchley's year 10 football team qualified for the ESFA U15 National Cup Final overcoming Carshalton Sports College 3–1 in the Semi-final. Goals scored by Luke Ainsworth, Luke Traynor and Louis Setoudeh were enough to take the school through to the first National Cup Final in the school's history. The school played St Francis Xavier's College from Liverpool in the final at the Madjeski Stadium (Reading) on 22 May 2018. [2]
The same team that got to the ESFA U15 National Cup Final also won the Middlesex county cup three years in a row making it the first time in the history of the Middlesex cup that it had happened, their third Middlesex county cup win is most known thanks to Ehimen Osebore doing the milly rock as a goal celebration.
The show "Remember" written by Mark Sell and Lena Santos, was performed by students of FCHS and St. Michael's. It is about the remembrance of the Holocaust, and has been to Poland, where it was the first-ever performance in the Auschwitz camp itself. Music includes partisan music, and other music with Yiddish and Hebrew lyrics.
The school offers a government-funded engineering club to Key Stage 3. It is currently working on making a green energy supply to run an oxygenating system for the school pond, in the form of a wind turbine.
French or Spanish are compulsory throughout Key Stage 3, and optional at GCSE. French is also taught up to A2 level. There are after-school lessons in Latin, which is available up to GCSE (no longer available).
The school's buildings vary in age and quality:
There are two other buildings of note.
The school is made up of 6 houses, which are represented by each year's form classes, which in turn are represented by the colour of stripes on their ties. These are named after prominent Catholics (mostly with some personal connection to Finchley): Bampfield (green), Bourne (blue), Feckenham (gold), Fisher (white), Challoner (red), More (purple) and Alban (orange). Orange is not always included, but sometimes another form is made to accommodate more pupils, typically every other year.
The forms (houses) each have their own letter, which together make up the initials of the school. This is FRCHSB, standing for Finchley Roman Catholic High School for Boys, and each letter is for a different form.
At the beginning of the 2006–07 school year, another tie colour, orange, was introduced due to a complication about the number of pupils admitted that year. This was later removed for the lower school in 2014.
As stated by the school:
For some lessons, classes partner up with another one:
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