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Midland Red

Thread starter
826 of 1439  Wed 24th Aug 2016 8:40pm  

It may have been intended as a "suit" but I'm not sure the jacket and trousers had the same parents Roll eyes
Schools and Education - King Henry VIII Grammar School
PhiliPamInCoventry
Holbrooks
827 of 1439  Wed 24th Aug 2016 8:53pm  

On 24th Aug 2016 5:27pm, Bumblyari said: Moaner used to bring a small suitcase into his French lessons then pull objects out of it one by one and ask us what they were. We had to reply in French of course. Every time he did it there seemed to be an old sock in the suitcase for some reason. But as a result, even after all these years, if a Frenchman were to ask me what I am wearing on my foot I would be able to reply, "il est une chaussette monsieur".
"He is a sock of Mr"
Schools and Education - King Henry VIII Grammar School
Bumblyari
Hants
828 of 1439  Wed 24th Aug 2016 9:07pm  

I didn't say the Frenchman would be able to understand me. (Probably also explains why I ended up with a French wife).
nostalgia (-ja) n. dreaming of it being like it was when you dreamt of it being like it is now

Schools and Education - King Henry VIII Grammar School
Number 1 Bus
Kent
829 of 1439  Wed 24th Aug 2016 11:19pm  

I had Laird for German from lower five languages to a-level. In our group he had the nickname Schneidy as a reference to his strong line in sarcasm, but perhaps that never caught on. What I do remember was that in the a-level year he said that if the whole set passed, he would buy us all a meal, adding that he felt he was on a pretty safe bet. In fact we did all pass, but he left the school that summer and moved to the Oxford area. He was, however, true to his word, and a bunch of us travelled down to his new house, where he and his wife provided us with food and wine. In fact he was very sociable and very different to the teacher we knew in the classroom.
Schools and Education - King Henry VIII Grammar School
Beesman
Cornwall
830 of 1439  Thu 25th Aug 2016 8:08pm  

I also remember the 'promotion' and 'relegation' system operated by the school at the end of each summer term. Two occasions particularly stick in my mind. The first concerned a lad in my class (alpha) who was 'relegated' to 'B' for the following year. His father, who was a very influential figure in Coventry, stormed up to the school, called the school secretary (Miss French) a 'jumped up office clerk', demanded an audience with Herbert Walker and duly succeeded in maintaining his son's presence in the alpha stream for the following year. The other occasion was almost the complete opposite of the above! This lad was the class swot who had no interest in sport, be it cricket, rugby, tennis or gambling. He was devoted to his studies. He duly rose to the heights of 2nd in the form exams, so a promotion place looked a certainty. The day arrived when the decisions were announced, the pupil concerned turned up to school in his best clothes and his hair slicked down in a manner that Hitler would have been proud of. In walks Herbie and announces two promoted boys and alas, they did not include Mister Runner Up. So first two and bottom two did not always guarantee your position for the next 'season!' Me? I was a bit like Coventry City Football Club......... Always threatened with relegation, but always somehow avoiding it, usually by the skin of my teeth! Summing things up though, I obviously attended the 'school on the hill,' didn't go to university (Herbie told me I wasn't fit to represent the school there), so I was a black spot on the the great list of successful pupils at the school. However, domiciled down here in Cornwall, I love where I live and I love running my own little business. Surely that's what life's all about.......... being happy! Big grin Cheers
Schools and Education - King Henry VIII Grammar School
Midland Red

Thread starter
831 of 1439  Thu 25th Aug 2016 8:29pm  

Indeed it is, Beesman, and I too have achieved that, in spite of 'the school on the hill'. Smile And well done Thumbs up with your successful business
Schools and Education - King Henry VIII Grammar School
Slim
Another Coventry kid
832 of 1439  Fri 26th Aug 2016 10:10am  

I started in 2B. In one history test (one of the subjects in which I had no interest at that time) I scored a measly 8 out of 20. When we handed the marks in, Foghorn bawled "Eh? You'll end up in the D form next year, you will!" The following year, I was promoted to 3?. Poetic justice. (I recall the amusement we had impersonating Foghorn's favourite catchphrase: "I dunno. Might as well go outside and talk to a row of trees!". Lol
Schools and Education - King Henry VIII Grammar School
bohica
coventry
833 of 1439  Fri 26th Aug 2016 11:51am  

On 26th Aug 2016 10:10am, Slim said: In one history test (one of the subjects in which I had no interest at that time) I scored a measly 8 out of 20. When we handed the marks in, Foghorn bawled "Eh? You'll end up in the D form next year, you will!"
I had many a run in with Foghorn. I had a similar experience to you over my History O level. He said I had no chance and I needn't come crawling to him to ask to re-take it. (No chance of that, as it had already been suggested to me that the school wouldn't be welcoming me back.) Strangely enough, I obtained a very good grade in History. - Not that I ever used it.
Schools and Education - King Henry VIII Grammar School
Slim
Another Coventry kid
834 of 1439  Fri 26th Aug 2016 1:01pm  

My classmate scored even worse; got a 6 out of 20, but lied when he handed his mark in, and claimed 14 or something. Then at the end of the lesson, Fog made us hand our test papers in for checking! The following week, he slammed the door shut then shouted " 'oose Snodgrass? Where is 'e? Eh?" He laid into my mate and put him into detention. (Snodgrass of course is a fictitious name is to protect the boy's identity; his real name was one of those foreign European ones that Fog could never pronounce correctly.) Some of the events in Fog's lessons injected amusement, and helped to relieve an otherwise dull session.
Schools and Education - King Henry VIII Grammar School
MisterD-Di
Sutton Coldfield
835 of 1439  Fri 26th Aug 2016 2:01pm  

Many of the older teachers were in the comfort zone and simply stood at the front of the class and churned out the same things, word for word, year after year. I often got the feeling that they couldn't see beyond the end of their desk as there was no real engagement with pupils at all. It was just a means to an end for them, the exam results at the end of the year. The pupils themselves were of no consequence, just a name on the attendance list. Some teachers would have taught you 3 or 4 times a week for 2 years and still have no idea what your name was. Roll eyes
On 26th Aug 2016 1:01pm Slim said: My classmate scored even worse; got a 6 out of 20, but lied when he handed his mark in, and claimed 14 or something. Then at the end of the lesson, Fog made us hand our test papers in for checking! The following week, he slammed the door shut then shouted " 'oose Snodgrass? Where is 'e? Eh?" He laid into my mate and put him into detention. (Snodgrass of course is a fictitious name is to protect the boy's identity; his real name was one of those foreign European ones that Fog could never pronounce correctly.) Some of the events in Fog's lessons injected amusement, and helped to relieve an otherwise dull session.
Did that European name begin with 'P' by any chance? It sounds like it could be someone I know. Wink
Schools and Education - King Henry VIII Grammar School
Slim
Another Coventry kid
836 of 1439  Sat 27th Aug 2016 7:49pm  

On 26th Aug 2016 1:01pm MrD-Di said: Did that European name begin with 'P' by any chance? It sounds like it could be someone I know.
No, it began with D, and was Polish.
Schools and Education - King Henry VIII Grammar School
MisterD-Di
Sutton Coldfield
837 of 1439  Sun 28th Aug 2016 12:13am  

Ok, not who I thought it would be then. But I think I do now. Dz*****, tubby lad in Sherwyns? Cool If so, fair play to him for trying. I used to hate tests, especially the French and Latin vocabulary tests which came after trying to learn some random list of words the night before. So I soon developed a rather crafty method of 'cribsheets' concealed within my rough book, which were disposed of immediately after the tests. Even the lads sat next to me never sussed it, and Maxie Gordon, Froggy Irwin or Willy Rose certainly never did. I always made sure I never got full marks though, far too obvious. Wink
Schools and Education - King Henry VIII Grammar School
Slim
Another Coventry kid
838 of 1439  Mon 29th Aug 2016 3:49pm  

You are correct. (Dzien dobry, btw.) He was the lad who referred to Laird by describing his aching face. I was fine with the language tests for the first 3 years; it was no effort at all, and I rarely lost a mark by forgetting a word or its spelling. However, that all changed when we had KRM for the first time, the fourth year of Latin, and suddenly, we were not studying the language any more - the whole time was spent reading Virgil. The whole subject then became dull and boring to me, for at least two reasons: one, it was literature, i.e. fiction, something I didn't do, and two, all the vocabulary I had learnt for 3 years was now irrelevant - just about every word was new, as if from some classical vocabulary book. Whereas before, I could not only understand a Latin piece, and even think simple sentences in Latin, now I could barely understand a word of the long passages, which KRM expected us to translate into English in tests. So my homework consisted of not studying the piece to commit it to memory, but very lightly pencilling in, between the lines of printed Virgil in my textbook, the English meaning of any unfamiliar words. I was dismayed at having to do this, i.e. cheat, but felt no remorse; in a way, it was I who felt cheated by the syllabus. Nobody, including KRM, cottoned on, and the pencilling was swiftly erased once it had served its purpose. A third reason might be that KRM's style of teaching did not inspire me, as previous teachers like BP and MBF had done. MBF expressed his disappointment that I was not going to do classics, as the staff had assumed I would naturally do. He ordered me to learn the Greek alphabet; I never bothered. He poured scorn on modern languages, telling me that "anyone can learn German off a Linguaphone record at home". I was determined to do something else, and have never regretted making that decision.
Schools and Education - King Henry VIII Grammar School
Slim
Another Coventry kid
839 of 1439  Mon 29th Aug 2016 6:19pm  

It seems the main thing was to get the best possible O level results. It had always been assumed I'd sail through with a 1, based on the previous 3 years under BP the MBF. But I lost all interest when we had to spend the whole 4th year learning Virgil's Aeneid parrot-fashion; so I did no revision, concentrating on other stuff. I got a 3 at O level.
Schools and Education - King Henry VIII Grammar School
Last of the Inkers
Windsor
840 of 1439  Wed 7th Sep 2016 8:29am  

Hi, I have a couple of questions. Can anyone attest to having been sufficiently stimulated by a subject taught at school that they continued to learn more about it after they left? Alternatively, were you put off a subject and then subsequently discovered that, when presented in another style, you actually found it quite enjoyable? Thanks for any contributions.
Schools and Education - King Henry VIII Grammar School

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