Brynteg School

Brynteg School
Ysgol Brynteg
Address
Map
Ewenny Road

,
CF31 3ER

Coordinates51°29′53″N 3°34′39″W / 51.49793°N 3.5776°W / 51.49793; -3.5776
Information
TypeCo-educational secondary comprehensive
MottoA fo ben bid bont
Established1896 (Bridgend Intermediate)
1971 (Brynteg Comprehensive)
Local authorityBridgend County Borough
Age11 to 18
Websitehttp://www.bryntegschool.co.uk

Brynteg School (Welsh: Ysgol Brynteg) is one of the largest secondary schools in Wales. It is located on Ewenny Road in Bridgend, Wales. The school is one of seven comprehensive schools in the County Borough of Bridgend and mainly receives pupils from the Brackla, Litchard and Town Centre (Morfa) areas.

History

Brynteg, whilst not becoming a comprehensive school until 1971, can trace its roots and history back to 1896.[n 1]

Bridgend Intermediate School (1896-1935)

The Bridgend Intermediate School in Morfa Street (now Penybont Primary School) was opened on 21 September 1896. The boys' section of the school was opened by South Glamorganshire MP Arthur John Williams, while the girls' section was opened by Lady Rachel Wyndham-Quinn, daughter of Lord Dynraven, who had donated land for the school. The school's fees were £1 5s per term in addition to stationery costs of 1s 6d per term plus text books which pupils were charged a 25% discount.

By 1904 the school had exceeded its planned capacity of 120. In 1907 there were 276 pupils (116 boys and 92 girls). Over the coming years various extensions and alterations were made to the school and individual classrooms to help accommodate growing pupil numbers. Pupil numbers reached 500 by 1931.[n 2]

Single sex education (1935-1971)

As pupil numbers continued to grow a new 15 acre site was identified off Ewenny Road and a new school (renamed Bridgend Grammar School for Boys in 1945) was built and opened in 1935 at the cost of £25,000 (almost £1.8 million in 2020). The school was built on the site of Brynteg House. The official opening ceremony of the new school took place on 26 September 1935 and was attended by Oliver Stanley, president of the Board of Education. Girls meanwhile continued to be taught at the original site where their numbers increased from 260 in 1935 to 360 in 1946 under their headmistress E N Evans. The school eventually became The Girls Grammar School[n 3]

Heolgam County Secondary School (1948-1971)

A mile away from the new boys' school, Heolgam County Secondary School opened in July 1948 with 250 pupils and 12 staff. When the school opened The Glamorgan Gazette described it as having

“Six classrooms, a science room, a lecture room, two large gymnasiums, wood and metal work rooms, an art and craft room, two domestic science rooms, dining halls, offices and a large Assembly Hall with a good sized stage.”

Heolgam expanded rapidly and an additional five classrooms were built in 1954. The school continued until its closure on 31 August 1971.[n 4]

Head teachers of Heolgam County Secondary School

  • Gwyn I Thomas, Jan 1948 – Feb 1954
  • A M Graville, Feb 1954 – Easter 1966
  • C H Nicholls, Sept 1966 – July 1970
  • G Mead, July 1970 – August 1971

Brynteg Comprehensive School (1971)

The merger of Bridgend Boys' Grammar School and Heolgam Secondary School took place on 1 September 1971 and Brynteg Comprehensive School was formed, with Heolgam serving as the lower school (forms I to III/years 7–9) and the old Boys' Grammar school serving as the upper school (forms IV to VI/years 10–13). Pupils travelled between the two sites using local roads and footpaths until the construction of an internal footpath in the early 1990s.[n 5]

Admissions

Brynteg is one of the largest schools in South Wales with 1,584 students at its last inspection in December 2016.

The student body is divided into five year groups and two sixth form years.

Date Pupil Numbers Staff
1971 [1] 1,266 63
1975 [1] 1,324 75
1985 [1] 1,730 97
1998 [2] 1,812 105 + 6(P/T) = FTE of 108.9 [3]
September 2003 [4] 2,068 115 + 12(P/T) = FTE of 120.7
September 2009 [5] 1,960 105 + 24(P/T) = FTE of 118.3
December 2016 [6] 1,584
2023 [7] 1,627 Pupil Teacher Ratio = 17.1

Facilities

The school is located on Ewenny Road (B4265) close to the roundabout with the A48, opposite the Heronsbridge School which shares some architectural qualities with the Upper School. Brynteg has two rugby pitches, a cricket field, a gravel hockey pitch, tennis courts and a large indoor sports hall. In recent years,[when?] the school saw the construction of a new 13-room maths block, a ten-room science block (opened in 2000) and a 12-room foreign language block (opened 2002), all built between Lower and Upper School.

Between 2003 and 2009 a further eight classrooms were built: a four-room art block a four-room English block.[8]

Recent Estyn reports have criticised the school for a reliance on temporary classrooms (portacabins)[9] with 17 in 2009, down from 23 in 2003.

In September 2019 the school reorganised with the former lower school site becoming the languages, literacy and communication centre, while the former upper school site became the humanities centre. Mathematics and sciences remain taught in their own buildings.[10]

The former modern languages block was converted into the pupil well-being and reception centre[11] which houses the main school reception, the headteacher, the pupil support team, the school nurse, careers advisor and the school counsellor.

Headteachers

  • John Rankin, 1896–1929
  • W E Thomas, 1929–1953
  • Haden Jones, 1953–1960
  • Frank J Anthony, 1960–1969
  • Trevor H Thomas, 1969–1979
  • Bill Rowlands, 1978-1991 [n 6]
  • Chris Davies, 1991-2010 [12]
  • David Jenkins, 2010-2017 [13]
  • Ryan Davies, 2017–present [14]

Sport

The school is known for rugby union, and several former pupils have played for Wales and for the British and Irish Lions.[15]

Academic performance

In regards to examination performance records, the school is also favourable academically with 75% of GCSE students achieving 5 A*–C grades in their examinations.

Brynteg is also a venue for the Welsh Baccaulaureate, a new qualification offered to Welsh students studying at GCSE, A2 and AS Level.

Traditions

The school motto is in Welsh A fo ben bid bont which translates as "To be a leader, be a bridge". Traditionally, year 8 write and hold the school's harvest assembly in October.

The school holds a Remembrance Day service on or as close to 11 November every year during which the names of 87 former pupils who died in conflicts are read out.[16]

Feeder schools

  • Brackla Primary School
  • Litchard Primary School
  • Oldcastle Primary School
  • Penybont Primary School
  • Tremains Primary School
  • Maes Yr Haul Primary School

Notable former pupils

Politics

Rugby union

Rugby league

Journalism

Olympic champions

Other

Former teachers

Notes

  1. ^ Taken from Brynteg: From a Fair Hill, Published 1986,
  2. ^ Taken from Brynteg: From a Fair Hill, Published 1986,
  3. ^ Taken from Brynteg: From a Fair Hill, Published 1986,
  4. ^ Taken from Brynteg: From a Fair Hill, Published 1986,
  5. ^ Taken from Brynteg: From a Fair Hill, Published 1986,
  6. ^ Names and dates up until 1978 are taken from Brynteg: From a Fair Hill, Published 1986,
  7. ^ As Heol Gam Secondary Modern School
  8. ^ As Bridgend Grammar School for Girls.
  9. ^ a b c d As Bridgend Grammar School for Boys.

References

  1. ^ a b c Pupil and staff numbers taken from Brynteg: From a Fair Hill, Published 1986,
  2. ^ Pupil numbers taken from 2003 inspection referencing the growth in pupil numbers,
  3. ^ Report on the inspection under section 10 of the school inspection act 1996: Brynteg Comprehensive School, 2–6 February 1998
  4. ^ "Profile:A report on the quality of education in Brynteg Comprehensive School" (PDF). Estyn. 23 November 2009. Retrieved 27 April 2020.
  5. ^ "Profile:A report on the quality of education in Brynteg Comprehensive School" (PDF). Estyn. 23 November 2009. Retrieved 27 April 2020.
  6. ^ "Profile:A report on the quality of education in Brynteg Comprehensive School" (PDF). Estyn. December 2016. Retrieved 27 April 2020.
  7. ^ "Annual Report, February 2024". Brynteg School.
  8. ^ "Profile:A report on the quality of education in Brynteg Comprehensive School" (PDF). Estyn. December 2016. Retrieved 27 April 2020.
  9. ^ 2003, 2009 and 2016 reports
  10. ^ "Head's Blog 21st June 2019 – Brynteg Headteacher".
  11. ^ "Head's Blog 4th October 2019 – Brynteg Headteacher".
  12. ^ "A report on the quality of education in Brynteg Comprehensive School" (PDF). Estyn. 23 November 2009. Retrieved 27 April 2020.
  13. ^ "A report on the quality of education in Brynteg Comprehensive School" (PDF). Estyn. December 2016. Retrieved 27 April 2020.
  14. ^ "Half Term letter to parents" (PDF). Brynteg School. 27 October 2017. Retrieved 19 May 2020.
  15. ^ "Profile: Behind the scenes at the school of Welsh rugby greats". ITV Wales. 17 September 2015. Retrieved 27 April 2020.
  16. ^ "Profile: Brynteg School News". Brynteg School. 17 November 2017. Retrieved 27 April 2020.
  17. ^ "Profile: Lord Davies of Coity obituary". The Guardian. 13 March 2019. Retrieved 27 April 2020.
  18. ^ "Profile: Carwyn Jones". BBC Wales. 27 April 2020. Retrieved 1 December 2009.
  19. ^ Cornock, David (14 November 2011). "The next Tory Welsh Secretary?". BBC News. Retrieved 26 April 2020.
  20. ^ Bolter, Abby (17 May 2017). "General Election 2017: Who are the candidates standing in Ogmore?". walesonline. Retrieved 26 April 2020.
  21. ^ "Player – LLANELLI RFC". Retrieved 26 April 2020. Education Brynteg Comprehensive School, Bridgend
  22. ^ "New signings at the double!". Warrington Worldwide. 15 January 2009. Retrieved 26 April 2020. They are the latest set of players from the valleys to play for Warrington, joining a list that includes Jonathan Davies, Allan Bateman and Kevin Ellis amongst others.
  23. ^ "Young Olds on trial for Super new club". walesonline. 27 July 2011. Retrieved 26 April 2020.
  24. ^ a b "Rugby league: Warrington sign up Bridgend twins Ben and Rhys Evans". walesonline. 16 January 2009. Retrieved 26 April 2020.
  25. ^ "Paul Burston". Creative Writing Prompt Contests. Retrieved 26 April 2020.
  26. ^ "11/08/08: Former Brynteg Pupil Wins Olympic Gold". 24 July 2011. Archived from the original on 24 July 2011. Retrieved 26 April 2020.
  27. ^ "O'Farrell, Margaret Helen, (Maggie), (Born 27 May 1972), author". Who's Who. 2012. doi:10.1093/ww/9780199540884.013.U255580. ISBN 978-0-19-954088-4.
  28. ^ Cooke, Nicole (31 July 2014). The Breakaway. Simon and Schuster. ISBN 9781471130366. Retrieved 26 April 2020.