Investing in the Future As Winchester Continues Annual Report 2013 to Play a Leading Role on the Global Stage

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Investing in the Future As Winchester Continues Annual Report 2013 to Play a Leading Role on the Global Stage Our Founder’s vision remains just as relevant today as it was in 1382 Investing in the future as Winchester continues Annual Report 2013 to play a leading role on the global stage. A message from the Warden 02 Sir David Clementi We are in a good place 04 Dr Ralph Townsend A message from the Bursar 06 Jeff Hynam Playing on the global stage 10 Ryan O’Keeffe War Cloister: ‘We will remember them’ 12 Gordon Baker Disturbing the Universe: Dreams of Earth and Sky 16 Freeman Dyson Just Reward: the benefits of the bursary programme 20 Laurie Harris Entrepreneurial Fruit: an interview 24 with the co-founder of Innocent Drinks Jon Wright Ladakh: expanding the Founder’s vision 28 beyond our borders Oli Wettern A report from the Chairman of the 32 Finance Committee Charles Sinclair Summary statement of financial activities 34 Summary balance sheet 35 Reflections of the Director: Looking back on his ten years ‘in Development’ 36 David Fellowes Acknowledgements: donations and legacies 38 Lorna Stoddart & David Fellowes Governing Body and Committees 48 Cover image: The gate through to Meads in the east wall of War Cloister. 2 Winchester College Annual Report 2013 Welcome to the Annual Report of Winchester College In this year’s Annual Report our Guest Editor, Ryan O’Keeff e (C, 1996-98), Partner at RLM Finsbury, a global leader in strategic communications, reports on a breadth of activities at the School that refl ect our charitable endeavours and scholarly achievements. his Report celebrates another successful year for Winchester. Four of this year’s fi ve stories demonstrate the wide-ranging activities T and involvement of Wykehamists, whether young or old, both at home and abroad, whilst the fi fth story, ‘War Cloister’, helps us all to refl ect in this, the fi rst of vefi centenary years, on the immense contribution made by so many Wykehamists and others in the First World War. An Old Wykehamist recently volunteered his view on why he felt proud of what the School had to off er its pupils. He wrote: ‘Winchester appears still to be providing a uniquely broad education which stimulates analysis, curiosity, logic and learning; its approach also encourages Wykehamists to make contributions of value in the course of their careers.’ All fi ve stories serve to illustrate this statement, which in itself perhaps encapsulates the themes of excellent teaching and the development of the mind, together with the encouragement of a humanistic approach which is tolerant and contributory. This Report aims to provide you with a further insight into the School’s activities and also its fi nances and their dynamics. There still remains much to be done and Winchester welcomes interest from all-comers in what it seeks to achieve, and commitment and contribution from all those who may wish to support it in achieving its aims. Winchester College Annual Report 2013 1 A message from the Warden Sir David Clementi (E, 1962-67) am pleased to report that 2013 has position is the generosity of many Old Wykehamists, been another good year. The School supporters and parents who have contributed is full, registrations remain strong with signifi cantly to a number of Wykehamical causes, I most particularly our ambition to increase our ability signifi cant competition for House places, to provide bursarial support where it is appropriate. and our academic standing remains high. Our capacity in this area has continued to grow and The quality of the music, art and drama currently, from our total School number of 680, is excellent; and the breadth of the sporting we are supporting 82 pupils with bursaries costing the activities available to the boys is immense, School nearly £1.7 million. Of this number 52 are with many teams achieving signifi cant success. receiving bursaries in excess of 50% of the school fees. Amidst all the activity up to books, up to House, and the many activities in-between, the Governing We are supporting 82 pupils with Body seeks to stay close to its charitable objectives. Our links with the primary schools in the Lambeth bursaries costing the School nearly LEA and our Academy partner Midhurst Rother £1.7 million. Of this number were covered in last year’s Report, but it is important to note that Midhurst Rother has continued its 52 are receiving bursaries in progress, and last year received an Ofsted report of excess of 50% of the school fees. ‘Outstanding’, an immense achievement given that it was in Special Measures in 2007. Just as Winchester continues to fl ourish, I am happy In addition to the generosity of our many supporters to report that the School’s fi nances are in good through our bursarial campaign and through the health. Included in this Annual Report is a report growing Goddard Legacy Society, I like to think from Charles Sinclair, who chairs the Governing the School has been helping itself, through proper Body’s Finance Committee, together with a summary management of its Endowment Funds, the management statement of our Financial Accounts. One of the key of which is overseen by our Investment Committee, factors which allows us to report a sound fi nancial chaired by Mark Loveday. Our funds have grown well 2 Winchester College Annual Report 2013 Sir David Clementi (E, 1962-67) Warden over the last few years and I am hopeful that at some point we will get a further signifi cant boost from our One of the key factors which allows us interest in Barton Farm. For those who don’t know, to report a sound fi nancial position is the Barton Farm is a farm of some 300 acres north of Winchester. It was sold many years ago to CALA, generosity of many Old Wykehamists, a property company, but on the basis that the School supporters and parents who have retained a material economic interest in the application contributed signifi cantly to a number CALA then made for planning permission for the site. After many years of going backwards and forwards, of Wykehamical causes. outline planning consent was eventually obtained in 2012, and an application has now been made for detailed planning consent. There still remains a large entry policy for Winchester, but this is undoubtedly number of uncertainties, as regards both any monies the direction in which the Governing Body and the we might receive and the time over which we might Common Room wish to travel; and it is a direction receive them. I refer to it here because our economic of which I have no doubt our Founder would have interest in Barton Farm is owned in our Endowment; thoroughly approved. and if signifi cant proceeds do come through, they will I hope you will fi nd this Report interesting. remain in the Endowment and allow us to take another In addition to a signifi cant amount of fi nancial important step in building up our funds for bursaries. information, it contains an interview with Freeman This drive to increase our bursarial funds is partly Dyson, one of our most eminent academics of the about the number of bursaries we are able to award; last 50 years, and with Jon Wright, one of our most it is also about the level at which we are able to start successful entrepreneurs, a spread of skills that reminds providing assistance. We want to attract boys whose us that it is dangerous to pigeonhole Wykehamists. families come from backgrounds such as medicine, This Report also provides me with the opportunity teaching and the civil service, where our fees are to thank the many people, those who work within diffi cult to meet out of earned income for a single the School and those who contribute from outside, child, let alone for parents with more than one child. for their support in making Winchester the vibrant It is far too early to start to talk about a needs-blind community that it is. Winchester College Annual Report 2013 3 We are in a good place Dr Ralph Townsend, Headmaster lot has changed in schools and In 2013 the great majority of children nationally education over the past forty years. remain at school for the Sixth Form. There are now Back in 1975, when I began my more girls than boys at top universities. Government A access policies have reduced the number of independent teaching career, only about 20% of children school leavers at Oxbridge. A-level and AS reforms nationally stayed at school for the Sixth Form, since 2000 have given special weight to the learning only 5% of school leavers went to university – and examination preferences of girls. Closed awards at and they were predominantly boys. Oxbridge Oxbridge have long since been abolished. The number was dominated by independent and grammar of co-educational boarding schools has increased, school graduates. There were closed awards leaving only fi ve boys’ full-boarding schools. The rise of league tables has narrowed the public judgement of to Oxbridge (Winchester-New College, schools but has increased the importance of ‘academic’ Westminster-Christ Church, Eton-King’s). delivery among schools which previously celebrated A-levels were a two-year course without other aspects of education, such as sport and character- coursework, perhaps favouring boys. building. All Wykehamists go on to higher education; about twelve go to US universities each year. While The late seventies and the eighties brought change. statistics compiled since 1996 indicate that there has The numbers of Wykehamists winning places at been little change in the quality of elections into Oxford and Cambridge dropped from around 70%, College, the academic quality in the Commoner which was generally reckoned to be disproportionately Houses has improved, resulting in a narrowing of high, to around half that.
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