The Bolitho School Sixth Form
 
Applications
 
  1. 1.Overseas Boarders
  2. 2.Scholarship
  3. 3.Day pupils
 
Fees
 
 
 
Photo albums
 
 
London trip
February 05
 
May 2006
 
 
 
 
What Can The Bolitho 6th Form Offer
 
The Sixth Form at the Bolitho School is a very exciting place. With International and English students and with Day and Boarding students in equal numbers, it is a superb environment for Sixth Form study. Existing friendships continue and new ones are made. Teaching groups are small and the standard of teaching is extremely high.
 
The Sixth Form has its own newly renovated centre on the site of the former St. Erbyn’s Preparatory School in Clarence Street. Known as Clarence House, it was once the site of the School itself. The Bolitho School Sixth Form Centre provides first-class accommodation including several classrooms, two science laboratories, a library and IT facilities, Common Rooms and lunchtime dining facilities. Clarence House remains an integral part of the whole School. However, it provides Sixth Form students with the opportunity to begin to develop the independence required for university and the workplace.
 
While there are a considerable number of Boarding schools around the country that offer the International Baccalaureate, (IB) we are the only Independent School locally to offer such a course. This provides our Sixth Formers with a lively and demanding curriculum that involves the study of six subjects within an international framework. Recognised as a hallmark of academic excellence by every university in the UK, the EU and USA, the IB aims to help students to think for themselves and to learn to work independently.
 
Our Sixth Form’s success is evident in the achievements of our students, most of whom leave us to take degree courses. As undergraduates, the independent study skills and independence of thought that they acquire at The Bolitho School stand them in good stead.
 
 
 
 
 
Curriculum
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The school
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The School was founded in 1889 and moved to its present site, which had been the Bolitho family home, in 1918.  It was originally called the Church of England High School, and then became The School of St. Clare shortly before the war.  On becoming co-educational it was renamed The Bolitho School.  The author Rosamunde Pilcher is an old girl of the school, and her recently televised novel “Coming Home” depicts life at the school in the inter war era.  Much has changed since those days, but the caring, family ethos - which has been such a feature of the school throughout its history - is touchingly portrayed in her book.