School details

Colston's
Colston's School, Stapleton, Bristol BS16 1BJ

Enquiries & application
the Headmaster's Secretary

T:  0117 965 5207
F:  0117 958 5652
E:  enquiries@colstons.bristol.sch.uk
W: www.colstons.bristol.sch.uk

Co-ed, 3-18, Day; Boys 13-18 Boarding ,
Pupils: 929, Upper sixth 67
Fees: £2100-£2445 (Day), £6200 (Boarding)
Affilliation: HMC, SHMIS, IAPS

School details

Colston's

What it's like
Founded in 1710 and merged with The Collegiate School, Winterbourne, in 1991. It occupies a single site at Stapleton in the northern outskirts of Bristol, with 40 acres of good grounds and playing fields. The main building is the former palace of the Bishop of Gloucester; there have been numerous modern developments and facilities are of a high standard. The junior department is nearby. A broad-based education is provided and examination results are good. Being a C of E school, chapel is an important part of school life; all denominations are welcome. There are flourishing music, art and drama departments. Sport is very strong, particularly rugby. Full use is made of the cultural and other amenities of Bristol.
Pupils & entrance
Pupils: Total age range 3-18; 830 pupils, 780 day (520 boys, 260 girls), 50 boarding boys. Senior department 11-18, 600 pupils (400 boys, 200 girls). Entrance: Main entry ages 4, 7, 9, 11, 13 and 16. Common Entrance and own exam used. Any special ability is taken into account; no religious requirements. 70% new intake to senior department from state schools (plus 20% to sixth form).
Scholarships & bursaries
8 pa scholarships, 10%-50% fees. Means-tested bursaries. Parents not expected to buy textbooks; extras vary 3-100.
Parents
85+% live within 30 miles; 5% live overseas.
Head & staff
Headmaster: Peter T Fraser, in post from 2005. Teaching staff: 49 full time, 6 part time. Annual turnover 5%. Average age 37.
Exam results
GCSE: On average, 90 pupils in fifth form: 96% gained at least grade C in 8+ subjects. Average GCSE score 54 (53 over 5 years). A-levels: 67 in upper sixth: 12% pass in 4+ subjects; 72% in 3; 13% in 2 subjects. Average final point score achieved by upper sixth formers 277.
University & college entrance
85% of sixth-form leavers go on to a degree course (20% after a gap year). 11% take courses in science and engineering, 54% in humanities and social sciences, 35% in the arts. Others typically go on to non-degree courses, or straight into employment.
Curriculum
GCSE, AS and A-levels. 17 GCSE subjects, 19 AS/A-level (general studies is not examined). Sixth form: Most sixth formers take 4 subjects at AS-level, 3 at A-level. 16% take science A-levels; 52% arts/humanities; 32% both. Vocational: Work experience available. Special provision: Dyslexia for limited numbers. Languages: Spanish, French and German offered to GCSE and A-level. Regular exchanges to France. ICT: Taught both as a discrete subject and across the curriculum. 100 computers for pupil use (10 hours a day), all networked and with email and internet access. Most pupils take Clait.
The arts
Music: Up to 50% of pupils learn a musical instrument; instrumental exams can be taken. Some 7 musical groups including orchestras, 3 choirs, rock bands, wind band. Drama and dance: Drama and dance offered. GCSE and A-level drama may be taken. Many pupils are involved in school productions and majority in house/other productions. Art and design: On average, 40 take GCSE, 12 A-level.
Sports & activities
Sport: Rugby, hockey, cricket compulsory to age 13 for boys; netball, hockey, rounders for girls. Optional: badminton, squash, athletics, tennis, cross-country, swimming. 25 international players in rugby in the last 9 years. Many regional and county representatives (rugby, hockey, cricket, cross-country, tennis, squash, badminton). Activities: Pupils take Duke of Edinburgh's Award. CCF (140 cadets); 4 recent army scholarships, 1 flying. Up to 30 clubs, eg debating, chess, computing, gym, calligraphy, origami, table tennis, music appreciation.
School life
Uniform: School uniform worn throughout (some relaxation in the sixth form). Houses and prefects: Competitive houses. Prefects, head prefect, head of house and house prefects, appointed by the Headmaster. Religion: Church of England school. Attendance at religious worship compulsory (unless given special dispensation). Social: Choir, choral society and plays. Organised French and German exchanges. Pupils allowed to bring own bike to school; day pupils may bring cars. Meals self-service. No tobacco or alcohol allowed.
Discipline
Pupils failing to produce homework once might expect to do it by the following day; those caught in possession of cannabis on the premises are required to leave the school.
Alumni association
is run by T Forse, c/o the school.
Former pupils
Professor Peter Mathias (Master of Downing College, Cambridge); Chris Broad (England cricketer); Ollie Barkley, Tom Varndell, Shane Geraghty(England rugby players); John Mason (Daily Telegraph rugby correspondent); Simon Mugglestone (international athlete).