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King Henry VIII Grammar School

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Slim
Another Coventry kid
1381 of 1450  Mon 27th Jul 2020 6:10pm  

On 27th Jul 2020 4:01pm, Number 1 Bus said: I don't remember this at all. I joined a year later, and as far as I was always aware, the vast majority of places were free, and most pupils got in via the 11 plus. Maybe my memory is letting me down too, but my recollection is that the only fee payers at that time were pupils who didn't get in through the 11 plus, but whose parents were prepared to pay for a place.
My recollection is: there were free places, no idea how many, but a mate of mine was a free place. There were one or two governors' scholarships, but like gold bullion, very rare and for the swats, one of whom I know had private paid-for coaching as his parents were well off. I don't recall ever doing the 11 plus - it was the entrance exam for KHVIII. I always associated the 11 plus with state schools. Fee payers - that was me that was. My dad had to stump up £30 odd or more every term, a huge sum in those days. And all because I told the truth in the exam. There was a passage about James Brindley, followed by a load of silly questions, one of which was "do you think..." I'd never heard of the bloke, knew nothing about the history of the canals, or history for that matter, so truthfully said I thought he had never existed and that the passage was a work of fiction. Well, some of the stuff was hard to believe. My answer obviously didn't impress the examiner. The class system manifested itself early on, and so did the unfairness of it all, e.g. being an only child, my parents never got one penny of family allowance, whereas the rich family down the road (the boy who was coached and got a governors') copped for a stack of family allowance they didn't need. His mother used to brag that she felt guilty, letting it build up for months then collecting a tidy sum in one go. Kept it all to herself, she did. After I left KHVIII, they changed the law so that even families with one child got family allowance. Too late for our family. Politicians... huh. The irony is that after the fuzzers, I was promoted to the A/alpha stream, so ended up two grades above my free place mate. But my dad still had to pay the fees. I often wonder if I'd have fared better at comprehensive school, as many of my friends/colleagues have done.
Schools and Education - King Henry VIII Grammar School
bohica
coventry
1382 of 1450  Mon 27th Jul 2020 8:22pm  

On 27th Jul 2020 5:07pm, Kaga simpson said: There was some education act in 1944 that changed the system completely all over the country. I'm certain of that because I had waited all my school life to go there. The war came, and then halfway through gave kids the chance to go there three years after I left school, and enlisted. I was livid.
I doubt you missed much Kaga.
Schools and Education - King Henry VIII Grammar School
bohica
coventry
1383 of 1450  Mon 27th Jul 2020 8:24pm  

On 27th Jul 2020 6:10pm, Slim said: I often wonder if I'd have fared better at comprehensive school, as many of my friends/colleagues have done.
A question I often ask myself, Slim. But we can't change what was, can we?
Schools and Education - King Henry VIII Grammar School
Kaga simpson
Peacehaven, East Sussex
1384 of 1450  Tue 28th Jul 2020 9:33am  

Slim. You said, "James Brindley... never heard of the bloke". Well, he was the only bloke in Coventry that became famous and had a statue because he got sacked!
Schools and Education - King Henry VIII Grammar School
rufford155
Lytham UK and Madeira
1385 of 1450  Sun 9th Aug 2020 4:32pm  

On 27th Jul 2020 4:01pm, Number 1 Bus said:
On 22nd Jul 2020 10:23pm, Disorganised1 said: The number of free places had risen to 30 by the time I attended the senior school in 1965. Supplemented by 5 Governor's scholarships. Possibly my memory is letting me down on those numbers, but in the Alpha stream there were only 4 of us who did not bring in the little envelopes at start of term.
I don't remember this at all. I joined a year later, and as far as I was always aware, the vast majority of places were free, and most pupils got in via the 11 plus. Maybe my memory is letting me down too, but my recollection is that the only fee payers at that time were pupils who didn't get in through the 11 plus, but whose parents were prepared to pay for a place.
I agree as well. My intake was 1955 and myself and everyone I knew was 11-plus although there were a few fee payers.
Schools and Education - King Henry VIII Grammar School
rufford155
Lytham UK and Madeira
1386 of 1450  Sun 9th Aug 2020 4:53pm  

I've not been on here for a while and most of the comments now are after my time (1955-1961). I am responding to post #1310 etc about Tramp Edwards. I thought he was a brilliant maths teacher who made the subject interesting and enjoyable. Our homework once was to determine the number of L's in "parallel"!!! Well he got me top grades in both O and A levels so maybe I'm biased. The new maths stuff like matrices and boolean algebra were maybe not in the syllabus but became useful later for technical bods when computing started to take off. I don't think the above was ever true but it still makes me laugh.
Schools and Education - King Henry VIII Grammar School
Skybluethinker
South Cambs
1387 of 1450  Sun 9th Aug 2020 5:13pm  

I joined in 1967 via the 11+. It was my understanding that KHVIII had something like 90 LEA (free) places whereas Bablake had about 60. This is born out by the fact that I placed Bablake as my first choice and KHVIII second. As the 11+ tests placed pupils in rank order it's my understanding that I was placed outside the top 120 but inside the next 30 boys so got a place at KHVIII. Both schools awarded about 5 governors scholarships, so the remaining intake numbers would be fee payers. Unfortunately I had sat the entrance exam for Bablake so had to sit the exam for KHVIII at a later date. Somehow I managed to mess up the exam and unfortunately started in 2D. This motivated me to work hard and I secured annual promotions to 3C, 4B and LVSc in successive years!
Alec Porter

Schools and Education - King Henry VIII Grammar School
Skybluethinker
South Cambs
1388 of 1450  Mon 17th Aug 2020 12:23pm  

Apologies for an error in my last post. I should have said I joined the school in 1960. 1967 was in fact the year I left. Senior moment I fear!
Alec Porter

Schools and Education - King Henry VIII Grammar School
Slim
Another Coventry kid
1389 of 1450  Fri 21st Aug 2020 9:17pm  

On 9th Aug 2020 4:53pm, rufford155 said: The new maths stuff like matrices and boolean algebra were maybe not in the syllabus but became useful later for technical bods when computing started to take off.
You've heard the quote: there are 10 types of people: those who understand binary, and those who don't.
Schools and Education - King Henry VIII Grammar School
Slim
Another Coventry kid
1390 of 1450  Tue 25th Aug 2020 8:57pm  

On 9th May 2020 5:24pm, Exilium said:
On 9th May 2020 9:04am, Slim said: Fred Perry had a Morris Minor, first a Traveller, then a van. Jack Wrench had a new yellow BLMC sports car, an MGB, maybe Triumph. We thought it odd that a bloke of his age should get a boy racer's car. Bob Griffiths had a little Mini and he, like me, was often the first one off the premises at 1600 hours! Kitty Fisher had a green Riley 1500, reg JJE 176.
Awesome recall of owners and their cars, Slim! D R Hughes, "Slug" to the initiated, had an Austin Maxi. The model name, no doubt, being his "buying signal". Jack Wrench, to further enhance his rakish image, used to don a flat tweed check cap before driving off in his MGB GT. Was the sports car a sign of a mid-life crisis?... No!... No!... Surely not in my own particular case!
Amazing how the human brain works. I have just had a flashback. Fred Perry's Traveller number plate was NUE 5F. At the time, UE meant Warwickshire (Dudley after 1974).
Schools and Education - King Henry VIII Grammar School
bohica
coventry
1391 of 1450  Tue 25th Aug 2020 9:31pm  

IIRC, Fred lived at Napton? 'F' reg would be 67/8
Schools and Education - King Henry VIII Grammar School
Slim
Another Coventry kid
1392 of 1450  Tue 25th Aug 2020 9:58pm  

He certainly did. Windmill Cottage, Napton on the Hill to be precise.
Schools and Education - King Henry VIII Grammar School
Classicist
Coventry
1393 of 1450  Sat 26th Sep 2020 10:45pm  

To return to the topic of teachers' cars, I am astonished that no one has mentioned the two most prominent cars of my time - Wog Kolisch's red Volkswagen beetle (the same colour as the Oxo tin in which he kept his chalk) and Pope Harris's Ford Popular with the lollipop direction indicators.
Schools and Education - King Henry VIII Grammar School
Slim
Another Coventry kid
1394 of 1450  Sun 27th Sep 2020 9:37pm  

Hello Classicist Dr Kolisch's red Beetle - was that before or after his red Skoda? I only remember his Skoda. Pope Harris never taught me; he was only there in my last year or two. I seem to recall a black car...? Lollipop indicators... do you mean trafficators, the ones that popped out from the side of the car?
Schools and Education - King Henry VIII Grammar School
bohica
coventry
1395 of 1450  Sun 27th Sep 2020 10:57pm  

I remember Dr K's Skoda, didn't remember it being red though. Blush Pope had a Triumph Herald IIRC? I seem to remember an incident with him 'chasing' pupils around the playground in it.
Schools and Education - King Henry VIII Grammar School

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