School details

Harrow
Harrow School, Harrow on the Hill, Harrow, Middlesex HA1 3HT

Enquiries & application
the Admissions Secretary

T:  020 8872 8007
F:  020 8872 8012
E:  admissions@harrowschool.org.uk
W: www.harrowschool.org.uk

Boys, 13-18, Boarding ,
Pupils: 800, Upper sixth 150
Fees: £8275
Affilliation: HMC

School details

Harrow

What it's like
Founded in 1572 under a royal charter of Queen Elizabeth, it is scattered over Harrow Hill across some 360 acres, only 10 miles from the City of London. The school is in a village and includes a lake, a conservation area, a golf course and a farm. First-class accommodation and facilities of every kind are provided. The school has a notable reputation for its teaching and all-round academic achievements. Standards are high and examination results excellent. The majority of sixth formers take a gap year before going on to university; large numbers go on to Oxbridge. It is very strong in music, art and drama. There is an extensive variety of sports and a number of county and national representatives. There are numerous extra-curricular activities, catering for most interests.
Pupils & entrance
Pupils: Age range 13-18; 800 boarding boys. Entrance: Main entry age 13, with some at 16. Approx 20% are sons of former pupils. Common Entrance used; for sixth-form entry, interview, school report and 6 GCSEs at grade A. No special skills or religious requirements. Feeder schools include Aysgarth, Caldicott, Cothill, Edge Grove, Ludgrove, Papplewick, Summer Fields, Sunningdale, Wellesley House.
Scholarships & bursaries
30 pa scholarships at 13, value 5%-10% fees (can be supplemented further if proven need): 15 academic, 2 art, 9 music, 10 sport/IT/acting. Parents not expected to buy textbooks; extras include music tuition, outings.
Parents
15+% in industry or commerce; 30+% are doctors, lawyers etc; 10+% in armed services. 40+% live within 30 miles; up to 10% live overseas.
Head & staff
Head Master: Barnaby Lenon, in post from 1999. Educated at Eltham College and the universities of Oxford and Cambridge. Previously Headmaster of Trinity School, Croydon, Deputy Head Master at Highgate and Head of Geography at Eton. Teaching staff: 85 full time, 36 part time (almost all music). Annual turnover 10%. Average age 30.
Exam results
GCSE: 160 pupils in fifth form: all gained at least grade C in 8+ subjects. Average GCSE score 73. A-levels: 160 in upper sixth: 25% passed in 4+ subjects; 75% in 3 subjects. Average final point score achieved by upper sixth formers 441.
University & college entrance
99% of sixth-form leavers go on to a degree course (50% after a gap year), 20% to Oxbridge. 8% take courses in medicine, dentistry and veterinary science, 30% in science and engineering, 15% in law, 35% in humanities and social sciences, 5% in art and design. A few go directly in to the armed services, agriculture.
Curriculum
GCSE, AS and A-levels. 25 AS/A-level subjects. Sixth form: Most sixth formers take 4 subjects at AS-level (75% mixing arts and sciences), 3 at A-level. No general studies. Key skills are integrated into courses; not examined except ICT. Vocational: Work experience available. Special provision: Full-time special needs co-ordinator. Languages: French, German, Spanish, Italian, Japanese and Mandarin offered at GCSE and A-level. Regular exchanges for sixth form. ICT: Taught both as a discrete subject and across the curriculum. 460 computers for pupil use (15 hours a day), all networked and with email and internet access. Fibre-optic cabling to all academic departments and boarding houses.
The arts
Music: Up to 66% of pupils learn a musical instrument; instrumental exams can be taken. Some 10+ musical groups including orchestra, wind band, concert band, string orchestra, choral society, choirs etc. Finalists in National Schools Chamber Music Competition in the past 6 years. Drama: Drama offered; A-level theatre studies may be taken. Some pupils are involved in school productions and majority in house/other productions. Annual Shakespeare production. Art and design: On average, 40 take GCSE, 30 A-level. Design, pottery, photography, sculpture also offered. Regular entrants to art college.
Sports & activities
Sport: Rugby, cricket, soccer expected in early years. Optional:ΓΓ‚  shooting, swimming, water polo, athletics, tennis, golf, badminton, fives, rackets, squash, fencing, cross-country, archery, volleyball, basketball, riding, polo. Activities: Choice between Duke of Edinburgh's Award Scheme, CCF, community service or conservation. Up to 30 clubs, eg academic, art, history, chess, fishing, conservation, film, climbing, photography, debating.
School life
Uniform: School uniform worn throughout. Houses and prefects: Each Housemaster appoints head of house, house prefects (house monitors). School monitors appointed by Headmaster. Philathletic Club (senior boys organising games), Guild (senior boys organising cultural activities). Religion: Church of England. All Anglican boys attend weekday chapel twice a week and once on Sunday; Holy Communion celebrated daily. 3 chaplains (2 C of E, 1 RC); visiting instructors for Jewish and Muslim pupils. Thought for the Day option to Chapel. Social: Joint choral works, plays with local girls' schools; visits to London for concerts, plays etc. Trips to eg Jordan, Greece, Austria, Namibia; recent sports tours to eg Zimbabwe, South Africa, Malaysia, India; exchanges with schools in Germany and Bejing. School shops sell clothes, books, tuck and photographic items. No tobacco allowed.
Discipline
Pupils failing to produce prep once might expect to repeat it plus extra work; those caught in possession of cannabis could expect expulsion.
Alumni association
Harrow Association, is run by Perena Shryane, c/o the School.
Former pupils
Winston Churchill; King Hussein; Lord Shaftesbury; 7 Prime Ministers; Nehru; Terence Rattigan, Sir Keith Joseph; Earl of Lichfield; Lord Deedes; Lord (Robin) Butler; Earl Alexander of Tunis; General Sir Peter de la Billiere; Richard Curtis.