September is, I think, my favourite time of the school year. We are
all at our freshest and most enthusiastic as we meet new pupils, new
teachers and sometimes new subjects. It is my eleventh year as Head and
the thirty seventh of my career and as I write these numbers, I can
scarcely believe them. The ten years I have been in post in BGS have
been the fastest of my life and the most fulfilling of my career. I
remember vividly my first day as a paid teacher and most particularly
that sinking sense as I realised how consistently early I was going to
have to get up in the morning. I am no slouch now; it gets easier as I
get older, but I cannot match the self-discipline of some colleagues,
one in particular, who come in to School well before 7.00am, even in the
darkest depths of the winter.
So now is a singularly appropriate time to introduce our new staff.
They are formidably gifted and among the most talented intakes I have
met, of course in their pedagogic skills, but also, and in some ways
more importantly, in their enthusiasm, attitudes, values and generally
humane qualities which are what in the end truly define the great, the
memorable, the influential and inspirational teachers. So,
in scrupulously alphabetical order, let me present our new colleagues.
David Creighton has been appointed for one year to
the PE and Geography departments. An old boy of Campbell College, David
comes from a distinguished teaching family and is a graduate of the
University of Ulster in Sports Studies. He has wide experience of
working in schools as a classroom assistant and as a highly regarded
rugby coach. David began his time with us during the summer holiday when
he accompanied one of the Scripture Union house parties to Moffat in
Scotland.
Rachel Douglas has been appointed for
a year to the Modern Languages Department to teach French and Spanish,
covering for Schanelle Chapman, who is on a career break. A former pupil
of Sullivan, she is a graduate of QUB and has extensive experience
having taught in the Royal School, Dungannon, and in Our Lady and St
Patrick’s College. Among her many accomplishments is music: she has a
grade 7 in piano and a diploma in flute and I suspect she may play an
important part in our musical life.
Janet Gray
joins the RE department to cover Sarah Crawford’s maternity leave. A
former pupil of Grosvenor Grammar School, and another new member of
staff with teaching in her DNA, she graduated in Theology and Religious
Studies from Glasgow University. After a PGCE at Strathclyde, her
probationary year within the Scottish system was spent in Woodfarm High
School. Returning home, she taught in Bloomfield and Strathearn. Let us
hope that she will not find it too much of a gender culture shock
adjusting to the all-boys classroom. She too started her BGS career at
Moffat during the summer.
Another graduate of Glasgow University, also trained in Strathclyde, joins the English department in a permanent capacity. Hamish Matheson
was educated at the John the Baptist School, Woking, and taught for
two years at the Oasis Academy School in Coulsdon, part of Greater
London. There he was the co-ordinator of the Gifted and Talented
programme, experience we shall, no doubt, be able to draw on. Apart from
his enthusiasm for rugby, Hamish plays the bagpipes, which suggests
that his contribution to our extra-curricular life may be wide and
varied!
Katy Megaw joins the Modern Languages
department for a year to teach French and Spanish in pace of Mary
Sheeran, who, when her maternity leave is finished, will be joining the
staff of BRA. Like Rachel, Katy is an old girl of Sullivan, a tribute to
the quality of languages teaching there, and a graduate of QUB where
she also did her PGCE. She has had much experience with young people,
having worked with street children in South America, as a boarding
mistress in Methody and as a youth fellowship leader. She comes to us
with a wide range of interests, including sport, especially hockey, the
Scripture Union and community action.
The already extensive Robinson franchise on the staff is extended by one in the person of another Stephen Robinson,
who, somewhat confusingly, joins the first, and we thought unique,
Stephen Robinson in the Maths department to cover Claire McGilton’s part
of the job share with Sally Forbes. Stephen is a Grammarian and the
third of our new staff with teaching as their birthright! He graduated
from, and did his PGCE in, QUB. He will be able, in his short time with
us, to contribute to the work of the Hockey Club.
Claire Taylor
has been appointed permanently to the Geography department, replacing
Jeff Shields, who has decided to make his home in New Zealand. A former
pupil of Wellington College, Claire had a glittering academic career in
QUB. With a PGCE from Ulster, she has had wide teaching experience in
Sullivan Upper and Bangor Academy. She is a qualified hockey coach and
is working towards her hill walking qualifications, which suggests that
she may well have a part to play in our outdoor pursuits programme by
way of the Duke of Edinburgh’s Award Scheme or World Challenge.
While
Jonathan Rea pursues his extensive musical interests on a career break,
his capacious space on the conductor’s podium is filled by Andrew Thompson.
Andrew is an Instonian and his first degree was in mathematics.
Subsequently graduating from the Royal Welsh College of Music, his
musical abilities are impressive, with expertise and qualifications in
piano, saxophone and clarinet. He has taught in London and in the City
of Belfast School of Music and has performed in a wide variety of
ensembles and orchestras, not least the New Irish, in which Jonathan has
a large interest.
I welcome them on behalf of the School as a whole, colleagues, boys,
parents and governors, and wish them success, fulfilment and happiness
during their time with us.
No comments:
Post a Comment