Month: October 2024

DATES

28th June – 19 July 2025: Sedbergh Senior School

19 July – 16 August 2025: Casterton, Sedbergh Prep School

The International Summer School team is looking forward to welcoming pupils from all over the world and would like enthusiastic and energetic staff to support their 2025 courses.

The roles available are:

For more details about these positions please contact Gemma Newtown, ISS Course Director, at gn@sedberghschool.org

About the Course:

Sedbergh has been running its International Summer School for more than ten years, and has welcomed thousands of students from across the globe to experience a taste of life in a British boarding school.

Our main goal is to inspire our students, so they can begin to try new things, test their limits and exceed their expectations. We expect our staff to foster a caring, welcoming environment and have positive interactions with every child. In this way, we are aligned with Sedbergh’s Thread of GOLD philosophy: Growth, Originality, Leadership and Determination are integrated into the summer school programme, with fun and enjoyment at the very heart of delivery.

In 2025, we will be running for seven weeks, welcoming up to 190 students in our busiest weeks. Students travel from Angola to Vietnam to attend between 2 and 7 weeks of the course, which is made up of English lessons, afternoon & evening activities, and exciting excursions. Students are offered a range of options, and can choose to attend differentiated courses such as our English + Outdoor Adventure programme.

About the Roles:

Activity Leaders contribute to the smooth delivery of the Sedbergh International Summer School extra-curricular programme. They lead our co-curricular programme of recreational, afternoon and evening activities to include sports, outdoor adventure and creative arts, as well as evening social events and weekly excursions.  Activity Leaders also provide support in the boarding house, assisting with residential boarding duties and supporting the House Parent team as required.

The Social Media Coordinator will work alongside other Activity Leaders, and will also manage the collection of images and videos for communication and marketing on the summer school’s social media platforms. Parents and agents of our pupils are kept up to date via social media and a regular posting schedule will prevent multiple enquiries to the school by parents who are concerned about how their child is getting on.

House Parents are the figurehead of the boarding house, and along with their Assistant House Parents, ensure excellent standards of pastoral care for the pupils on the summer school programme. Assistants will be led by their House Parents to ensure that all pupils enjoy a warm, welcoming, supportive atmosphere, and that the house is run smoothly to protect the safety and wellbeing of international pupils within the boarding house.

 

During the Commemoration of the Benefactors Service last month, Sedbergh School took the unusual step of adding three friends of Sedbergh to our list of benefactors. Tim Pick (pictured above with Norman Berry), Evans House 1941 – 45, played for the 1st XV and won the Wilson Run in 1945. After leaving school he trained as a doctor. He was a loyal friend to the School, particularly in his role as Foundation Trustee. John Merrington (Winder House 1943 – 48) also trained as a doctor. He later became a lecturer in Medicine. We were honoured that Dr Merrington chose to leave a substantial legacy to the School. Heather Hardy was the daughter of John Bannister Buckle (Hart House 1913 – 17). Heather was a long-time supporter of the School who chose to remember the School in honour of her father.

Heather Cropped
Heather Hardy with Andrew Fleck at the opening of the 1525 Society Avenue

The addition of these supporters to our benefactors list is just a small expression of our gratitude for their tremendously generous gifts. Their legacies will play a vital role in providing life changing opportunities through the Roger Lupton Scholarship and Bursary Scheme.

Katy de la Riviere

School Archivist

There was once an adage that floated around the School buildings. It was like a crane fly (daddy longlegs to use the vernacular) that drifted about lazily, annoying, but not annoying enough to do anything about.

This adage was that those from the 1960’s and early 1970’s didn’t want to re-engage with the School because, oh I don’t know, society at the time etc, or the School was a harsh place (yes indeed but was so before and after), and all sorts of other excuses that had attached themselves to this particular daddy longlegs like bits of dust after it had crawled about upon the unreachable parts of the curtains.

But old adages become normalised, they become old wives tales (can I still say that?), and the truth is somewhat lost. So, your illustrious team at the Development Den thought it was about time we challenged this, and made our plans accordingly.

The plan was simple, a reunion dinner for 50 people at Brown’s in Covent Garden. Within days we had 100 booked to attend and we had to hire an extra room. The daddy longlegs was released into the wild to be seen no more.

It was a spectacular afternoon with some of the finest people I have had the pleasure to meet. They came from far and wide, indeed even from the USA and Thailand. Some hadn’t seen their friends for 60 years but within an instance they were back, remembering their roots, and remembering their friendships.

Thank you to all those that made the journey to London to celebrate our past. Come back soon, in 2025, to celebrate our future.

Jan van der Velde

This year we held a very special OS weekend. It was our last before the School turns 500 and just as one likes to retain one’s youth until that inescapable moment when the big day arrives, we wanted to sign off in a meaningful way that did justice to the School and its people before the dawn of a new age.

One important aspect was the memorial service for Ned Campbell, former Housemaster, Deputy Headmaster, and English teacher who was an icon of Sedbergh. Much loved now, as he was then, people returned to attend his memorial service and to support his wife, Maz Campbell, and her family. It was a very moving service, and in the context of the 499th year, highlighted how very important the staff of Sedbergh have been in the history and progression of the School throughout the ages. The service was recorded and can be found here:

At the OS dinner that evening we welcomed our special guests from our Schools in China and Vietnam, along with Will Carling and his wife Lisa, and Trevor and Janet Kidd who had joined us to witness the enrolment of Heather Hardy as a Benefactor on the Sunday.

Dan Harrison, Headmaster, spoke well and with confidence. The message was simple. We are strong and we are prepared. The School had done much to alleviate the burden of VAT on parents and as a result numbers are amongst the highest ever.

We were fortunate to have Archie Glover (P 18-23) return to Sedbergh. Archie was a music scholar who left Sedbergh a year ago and is now reading music at Trinity College Cambridge. He entertained us with a virtuoso performance of the Khachaturian Toccata, a very dramatic piece that was played with great gusto and feeling. Thank you Archie, it was quite spectacular.

Towards the end of the evening Will Carling (W 79-84) took the stage and gave an outstanding speech. I have written about this separately but it was a fitting tribute to Sedbergh, to the 499 years, to the staff who have laboured over the centuries, to the parents who have made such sacrifices, and to the Sedberghians who hold the School in such high affection.

The only fly in the ointment was caused by yours truly who, in trying to make sure people didn’t start singing ‘Winder’ before they were meant to (a perennial problem), I told everyone to wait for the customary two bars before bursting into song. Turns out, as chance would have it, that no one knew what two bars were (honestly, what kind of School raised them!) and so no one sang at all. I had to shout to the Organ Meister, Archie Glover, to stop while I berated the audience, much to the amusement of the catering staff who thought all this extremely funny. Well ha, ha, and all that. I am glad to report that our second attempt was much better and the 499th year was serenaded in true Sedbergh style.

As always, thank you to the School for allowing us to use their facilities, and to all the staff, premises and catering, who helped to make us feel so welcome. It was, as always, a brilliant weekend.

Jan van der Velde

It was with great delight that we welcomed Will Carling (W79-84), former Captain of England Rugby Union, back to Sedbergh on OS weekend.

It is a while since Will had been back. Although he was two years younger than me he was such a good sportsman that he played some matches on the 1st XV while I lumbered around Busk as a second row forward, cursing every time the ball was dropped (not by Will of course!) resulting in the inevitable scrum.

I hadn’t seen Will for years and just as I was a little bit apprehensive, being my guest and all, it turns out he wasn’t quite sure what to expect either.

He had volunteered to talk to the 1st XV on the Friday night before their home game against Ipswich and I found him overlooking Busk, deep in thought. Later he was to admit that Busk still holds special memories for him and, as he said to the 1st XV, it was where he played the game he loved with the people he counted as friends. In the close knit community of Sedbergh he found his motivation for the sport through the camaraderie on the pitch.

His talk to the 1st XV, (who subsequently had a convincing win the next day) was personal and profound. There were two takeaways above all others. One was mental preparation (Will used to spend an hour each day thinking about how he played and how to improve), and the second was that if you want to succeed in rugby, and indeed in life generally, then you need to think what point of difference you can bring. Will of course was famous for changing how England played and became the most capped Captain of England of all time.

Will Os Weekend

On the Saturday evening Will spoke to 170 guests at the OS dinner. Again, none of us were quite sure what to expect, a recitation of his victories perhaps, or tales of Twickenham? Well, I can tell you that while such things were referenced briefly, Will gave an electrifying speech, full of candour, pathos, humility, and humour. If someone would have dropped a pin it would have sounded like Big Ben in full fury. People listened with attentive eagerness as Will described his return to Sedbergh in a very personal, and I have to say, emotional way. It was rounded off by a few questions from the floor, a first for OS Weekend, and Will received a very warm round of applause with shouts of ‘bravo’ from a very appreciative audience.

As part of Will’s visit he agreed to be interviewed. It is full of insight, about his time at Sedbergh and about leadership. If you remember that he took on the Captaincy of England at the age of 22, he must have had to rely on natural qualities as much as experience. As for Sedbergh he says this, ‘at Sedbergh, we were fitter than other schools; we were closer as friends than other schools.’  Very true, and still holds true today. The video is well worth watching:

Thank you Will, and to Lisa. Together you brought a lot of joy to our weekend and to our community. Just don’t make it so long before you come back next time!!

Jan van der Velde

Director of Development

Sedbergh School

As part of our work at the Development Office we look to inspire the young as they think about their future careers. One such way is through a series of career interviews with exceptional people.

Earlier this year Jan van der Velde caught up with Andrew Stott (W 67-72). Andrew has had an outstanding professional career in banking and consulting, including 11 years as Head of Western Europe for Oliver Wyman, subsequently leading the entry of Oliver Wyman into China and India. Since leaving Oliver Wyman, he has combined roles as Independent Non-Executive Director for BBVA Group and Barclays Spain, chairing the Board Risk Committees in both cases, with activity as a successful business angel in the tech sector, where he built a portfolio of 12 companies. Prior to Oliver Wyman, Andrew led the Capital Markets and Financial Risk Management practices for Price Waterhouse (now PwC) London and spent 11 years in international banking in London, Spain and Hong Kong. More lately Andrew was a founder partner at Hermes Partners SI.

We are enormously grateful to Andrew for all his work on the Sedbergh StartUp, a forum for entrepreneurs and investors to share ideas and provide an environment  for those wishing to start their own business.

You can watch the video here:

Jan van der Velde

Lupton House 1977-1982

Director of Development

“Everyone is trying to leave the past behind them and find a place of safety,” William said, when telling me about his new book. “It’s what they do when they get there that counts.”

There is a real zeitgeist about this novel because although the Kosovan War in 1999 forms the heart of the story, the issues of migration have never been more relevant.

Based on real events linked by fiction, William has drawn on his time as a solicitor acting for Kosovan refugees seeking asylum, to contrast the hardworking entrepreneurs starting over with the professional criminals looking to exploit their hosts.

This book has all the ingredients for a blockbuster. Tobacco smuggling, money laundering, MI6, GCHQ, and an ex-SAS operative working for a covert special forces unit called 14 Intelligence Company. And despite what he says about leaving the past behind him, there are clear references to Sedbergh in the SAS training session. “Easy after the Wilson Run!” William says.

And then there is Inga with her ice blonde hair and alternative sense of fashion. But does anyone know who she really is?

“This is a real page-turner,” said Ben Collins, the School’s Alumni Director. “You will struggle to put it down.”

William was born and raised in Ripon, where he still lives today with his wife, son and two dogs. During his last year at Sedbergh School, he won a national writing competition, whereupon he was invited to attend the illustrious Savile Club, in London’s Mayfair. A top book publisher said at the time that, although he had “an obvious talent for writing,” William needed “more experience of life.” After a highly successful legal career this, his third novel, shows he certainly has that.

‘Refuge’ is published by Fisher King Publishing and is available from Amazon and other major retailers.

Watch William’s video here:

https://youtube.com/shorts/rCV6BpXF9QM

On the fourth day of the opening Test against Pakistan in Multan, Brook’s remarkable knock was part of an England record partnership of 454 with Joe Root (262) – his sixth double-ton and new career best – and came at quite the rate too, his 317 taking all of 322 balls as England amassed the fourth-highest Test score of all time, 823-7 declared.

An incredible achievement!

Read more HERE.

After appearing twice for Flatts in the Athene T20 Knockout Cup last weekend, Brianna Ray wants to serve as an inspiration for Bermudian female cricketers.

Read full article HERE

Huge congratulations to OS Jamie Potts and Dad, John, who have climbed Mount Kilimanjaro to raise money for Lincolnshire and Nottinghamshire Air Ambulance.

They have currently raised an amazing £23,000 If you’d like to support their cause and donate, you can do so HERE.

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