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Hotel description

Position

Deployed in Gempshire County (Anglia) on the outskirts of Winchester City, surrounded by bays, only 20 minutes from Southampton International Airport.

Winchester College School

Winchester College is founded in 1382 by Bishop Vincester William Wikem, under King Richard II ' s orders. The first students started school in 1394. Under the patronage of William Wikem, the great mecent of that era, New College in Oxford was also built. Eton and King's College were established in the 15th century in the form and like of the colleges. Winchester College has the longest ever history of English schools and has the most beautiful building among all educational institutions in the world. Over six hundred years, the College teaches generations of boys who take leadership positions in their societies. Vinchester students continue to live and study in the 14th-century medieval college, while the rest of the constructions are mostly dated 17, 18 and 19 centuries. It was subsequently added: a school with candelabs, trones for the head of college and school shops; a hospital; a military chapel in memory of the graduates of the First World War, all of which are connected to a large pool of bulbs and all of two hundred old platans at the medieval wall. Today, the school has a concert hall, theater, a music school, an art school, a sports centre with 25 meters, and ten dormitories.

This is one of the most outstanding English private boarding schools, both as a result of examinations and as a result of the intellectual and academic success of its students, providing the highest standard of living and learning. The College has been able to attract talented teachers and create an atmosphere in which their learning and erritation are appreciated. The excellent results of the Winchester school graduates are due to the strict competitive selection of candidates and the excellent ratio of teachers and students. In Winchester, there are seven students who are teachers.

Winchester's education prepares boys for life, not just for university. Most of them go to school at the age of 13 and 16. 11% of students are college graduates. Enrolment is given to its own

entrance exam. The number of applicants for their children in Winchester is significantly higher than the number of vacancies, so parents register children in Winchester since the age of 8. Winchester Willie Whitelow, Lord Jeffrey Hawve, Lord Penny, Howard Angus, William Mann. In Winchester, the shiny learnt and was extremely respectful and responsible for the grandson of the former head of the USSR and the Secretary-General of the L.I. Brejeneva Company. Winchester's graduates are very polite and aware of their lives.

Winchester College training

The training programme, which aims to provide quality academic education for smart students, is based on special principles: work outside the examinations is also important, there is no need to reduce the choice of subjects before the first examinations, the examinations must be passed only when the student has been trained, a wide range of programmes is available after the GCSE. In the first three years, students are studying a general programme, including English, mathematics, Latin, French, biological, chemistry, physics and giving these subjects to GCSE. Geography, German, Greek or Spanish are selected as an additional subject. Students are also familiar with art, technology and design, information technology and communication, and music, and then select one of these subjects for further study. In general, at the end of the third year of schooling, boys are given eight or nine exams on GCSE.

During the last two years of study, students choose four subjects for AS-level and then three or four for A-level. English, History, Latin, Hellenic, ancient history, French, German, Spanish, Russian, Chinese, Japanese, Economics, Geography, Psychology, Mathematics, Biology, Himia, Fisicou, Art History, Dizine or Technology can be selected. Schools have magnificent extensive libraries and constantly replenish their funds, also actively investing in information technology and communication.

In GCSE students study French, German, Russian or Spanish, Chinese or Japanese may be added to A-level.

Information and computer technologies are studied as a separate subject for four lessons per week, and also teach the use of the Internet and

text editors. All dormitories have computer networks, and one is wireless.

98% of graduates go to universities and 40% to Oxbridge (Oxford and Cambridge Universities). 34 per cent choose engineering and sciences, 50 per cent of humanitarian and social sciences, 12 per cent mixed and 4 per cent of legal or architectural occupations. During their studies, students regularly travel to France and Germany, and sometimes to Russia and Spain.

Survival

Life at school is probably 13 years old.

Winchester trains 680 boys aged 13-18. 650 students live in dormitories at school. 70 students live together in the old college building, in other dormitories there are 58-60 students, 20 per cent of them in separate rooms and 70 per cent in large rooms for 6 or more. The elders of the dormitories are appointed by educators and approved by the Director. Disciplinary is traditionally strict. There's no school uniform, but it's necessary to wear a school mantia. School offenders in Winchester will have to listen to instructions and then go to bed and cut the lawns because there's nothing special for the English. Anyone who has been spotted in the use or distribution of drugs will be excluded.

Sport and physical education is an important part of the hard life of boys in Winchester College. Many opportunities to participate in any sport. In the first year of schooling, boys do sports at least once a week. The College explains to boys the importance of sports, active and healthy lifestyles, endeavouring to make regular sports a habit for life. Schools can do: ikido, athletics in the field and in the halls, basketball, canoe, cricket, cross, fencing, fishing, bean, golf, hockey, karate, polo, squeeze, grotesque, grotesques, sailing crew, floating, Sports travel abroad.

Typical teachers engaged 66% of school students in music. Music groups, chocolellas, 2 symphony orchestras, camera orchestras, large jazz and rock groups, string quartets. More than 50%

students are in theatre. There are about 12 plays in the college each year and the best are on the scene of the Edinburgh festival or the Minak theatre in Cornwell.

There are more than 30 clubs in the College that bring together archaeology, bell rings, cross-section, brija, chess, bench shooting, theatre, debate, film, electronics, French poetry, photographs, natural history, publishing, rail transport, Spanish, stamps.


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