Hamilton College (Scotland)
Although it is a Christian school, there is no church affiliation, and the school has pupils from other cultural backgrounds.
History
Hamilton College was opened in 1983 by Charles Oxley. The Nursery opened on the same campus in 1995. The building had originally opened as a teacher training college in 1964. Hamilton College was the third school Oxley opened. He had already founded Tower College (1948) and Scarisbrick Hall School (1964) in North-West England.
The school badge is inspired by the scripture "to grow in the grace and knowledge of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ". This verse from 2 Peter 3:18 provided the original inspiration for the College’s Growing Together theme.
In July 2016, Tom McPhail was appointed as acting principal, replacing John Taylor.
After Tom McPhail retired in December 2019, Katie Morton was appointed Chief Executive officer, with Richard Charman as Headteacher.
Curriculum
All S1 and S2 pupils at the school study English, Maths, Biology, Chemistry, Social Subjects, French, German, Art, Music, Innov8 (consists of Admin + IT, Business, Accounts, Computing, and Engineering), PE, RE, and Lifeskills. They have the option to continue these.
The college has high academic standards. In 2019 it had a 93% pass rate at SQA Higher, with a 100% pass rate in many subjects, including mathematics. In 2020, the pass rate increased to 95%.
Notable former pupils
- Scott Forrest, retired professional rugby player and current coach of women's rugby
- Katie Leung, actress
References
- ^ "StackPath". www.hamiltoncollege.co.uk. Retrieved 5 August 2021.
- ^ "School of excellence: Hamilton College". The Scotsman. 22 April 2008. Retrieved 4 November 2015.
- ^ "Hamilton College History".
- ^ McDonald, Craig (3 July 2016). "Head of top Scottish private school quits after only one year". Daily Record. Retrieved 21 January 2017.
- ^ "Hamilton College Staff".
- ^ https://www.hamiltoncollege.co.uk/userfiles/hamiltoncmvc/documents/S1%20and%20S2%20Curriculum.pdf
- ^ "StackPath". www.hamiltoncollege.co.uk. Retrieved 5 August 2021.
- ^ "Scott Forrest". Scottish Rugby. Retrieved 3 November 2015.
- ^ Katie Leung, Internet Movie Database
External links
- Official website
- inspection reports on Education Scotland website
- profile on Scottish Council of Independent Schools website