Warden, Council, visitors, colleagues and Bradfieldians, what a great year it has been. We returned in September buoyed by strong exam results, notably in IB and A Level, and by a summer holiday which included watching two recent leavers playing cricket for England. The grounds, as always, looked splendid and building work on the Stanley extension and St Andrew’s had progressed well. Enthusiasm and excitement were palpable.

In my opening addresses of the year, I spoke about the College values and specifically positivity. Noting that we live in an age when anxiety and gloom readily take hold, I cited the example of Elton John belting out “I’m Still Standing” at Glastonbury a year ago tomorrow as the embodiment of positivity and resilience.

Those attributes and the College values of integrity, respect, inclusivity, and kindness have been evident throughout the ensuing terms.

This fact reflects great credit both on the pupils and on the College community as a whole. Children tend by nature to be optimists but negotiating work, play and relationships can be a complex challenge. Teaching, coaching and mentoring teenagers bring their own challenges. Our pupils are fortunate to be supported by staff who are unstinting in their efforts to promote the pupils’ best interests. In turn, we know that we are privileged to work with some wonderful young people and to enjoy the support of a parent body who have understandably high expectations of the College and of their children but who recognise that progress will not always be smooth or predictable.

Negotiating the digital world is an increasingly complicated aspect of the adolescent journey. Rapid advances in AI promise exciting opportunities and pose uncertain threats to us all. Pupils are fast mastering new skills in this area. Alongside them, our teachers are demonstrating their own considerable learning powers.

Long gone are the days when in a password audit, it was found that a teacher was using the password: “SnowWhiteDocDopeyGrumpyBashfulSleepyHappySneezyCardiff” When asked why such a lengthy password, he explained that he understood that it had to be at least 8 characters long and include one capital.

Confronted by the potential of AI to augment and transform the educational space, we are adopting a progressive approach whilst simultaneously emphasising the importance of critical thinking, ethics and values. These will become more important as the pace of change quickens and we see technology do things that were unthinkable a very short time ago.

Over the coming months we will be scoping the College’s next five-year Strategy. As we do so, we will be reevaluating the skills we need to teach, knowing the coming years will be a period of unpredictable technological and professional evolution. For now, the underlying principles of an education for life which helps pupils develop individual attributes in a community underpinned by strong values seems well adapted to a time when mindsets may prove the key differentiator between humans and machines.

Living with technology can be a challenge socially and pastorally, as well as academically and professionally. There has been much recent publicity around the impact of smartphones and social media upon mental health. Young people often struggle to live happily in a world where they are considered natives. The College has introduced progressively tighter policies in this area and has remained ahead of national guidelines. Moving forwards, we will continue to seek the right balance between enabling our pupils to enjoy the joys of technology and encouraging them to engage in the analogue activity which is so good for their physical and mental wellbeing. We must try to do likewise ourselves.

In the meantime, this story may ring true. Two red kites were circling fields beside the Pang when they noticed a figure that looked like a Bradfield pupil in the distance. “See that over there? What is that?” said the first kite. The second took a long look, “That’s a scarecrow. Looks authentic, doesn’t it.” ‘How can you tell it’s a scarecrow and not a student?”, replied the first. “Look at its hand. No phone”.

Whether it be smartphones or generative AI, teaching young people to use tools responsibly is part of our role as educators. Again, balance is key here – not because extensive technology use is necessarily bad in itself, but because of the things we are not doing when we rely on it. There is an opportunity cost in terms of social and emotional development when technology replaces face to face interaction. And there is an opportunity cost in terms of cognitive development if we rely on generative AI to do the work for us. There’s also a surprising environmental cost when you consider the carbon footprint of a Google search or ChatGPT query.

It is for all these reasons that we are proud to celebrate the multiple achievements of our pupils in their work, their play and their service. Over the last year we have seen pupils gain scholarships, places or offers in outstanding institutions worldwide. Alongside successful applications for medicine and veterinary science, two pupils have gained scholarships at the Guildhall and the Royal Academy of Music, and two more places at prestigious music schools. One pupil holds simultaneous offers from Cambridge and Harvard, another a football scholarship to Charleston College, and many more hold offers up and down this country from Exeter to Edinburgh and LSE to Liverpool, and on both sides of the Atlantic from Madrid to McGill and Babson to Bocconi.

Outreach, charity, and partnership work have continued to flourish this year with new initiatives such as a Science Roadshow to primary schools and Film Studies work with local secondary schools taking their place alongside established projects such as volunteering with ABC to Read, Rushall Farm, the Carwarden House Olympics and Powerhouse Games. We are once more deeply indebted to the donors and organisers of the Harvest Festival and Christmas Shoe Box appeals and to everyone who has raised and given money to many charities. That nearly £125,000 has been raised in the last year by the Bradfield Restless Triathlon and by our multiple initiatives for the Oscar Foundation is particularly fitting as these organisations promote the welfare and prospects of underprivileged children all over the world.

In sport this year, 5 pupils have represented their country in shooting, 3 in football, and 2 in hockey, whilst one was crowned French junior real tennis champion. In netball, cricket and riding pupils have performed in the top tier of their sport, and across multiple sports pupils have played for district, county and regional teams. Collective distinctions and successes have included the 1stXI boys hockey team playing in a national hockey final, and the under 16 girls team making the national indoor finals, victory for our golfers in the Micklem Plate and for the 1stXI girls football team in the ISFA seven-a-sides alongside their runners up place in the ISFA trophy.

We have also enjoyed the wonderful opportunity to see our girls 1stXI cricket team contest the final of the schools national 100 competition at Lord’s only yesterday and to return to MK Dons stadium to watch the boys 1stXI football win the ISFA cup as well as the HUDL League and secure a second double in three years.

As ever, it was not just the way all these players and teams conducted themselves on and off the pitch but how they supported one another and how the College supported them that made us proud.

In performing and creative arts there have also been multiple individual and collective highlights. The creativity and innovation of our artists and designers are on show today setting new standards in two of the most vibrant and varied exhibitions I can recall and in the outstanding work of our film students. Those films, along with numerous other recordings, copies of prizewinning poetry, TiB talks are available on our website.

Our actors have also pushed boundaries this year. The Senior production of 4.48 Psychosis highlighted our commitment as a ‘talking school’ to tackle issues around mental health. A striking ensemble piece, it included standout solo performances, as did the scholars’ play, Rope and the powerful production of A Few Good Men. The last week’s performances of The Little Shop of Horrors prompted much well-deserved applause and some welcome laughter at the end of an eclectic and cathartic year of drama.

Our musicians have treated us to a similarly wide-ranging repertoire from Classical, Choral and Carols in Chapel and the Music Hall, to Jazz, Pop, Musical theatre and more at the Berkshire Young Singer of the Year finals, the Bedford pub, Yattendon Village Hall and in this very space. There is a particularly rich seam of musical talent in the Upper Sixth. We very much hope that exam success will crown their musical, dramatic and sporting triumphs. Most importantly, however, they have given a strong lead to the wider College, living our values in their lessons and activities, in houses and in school. As ever, the JCR have set the tone and have themselves been superbly led by our Heads of School and their Deputies. The all-round ability of Bella, James, Zara and Enoch is legendary, but it is above all their positive engagement with everything the College has to offer that sets a magnificent example.

I can think of no better way of paying tribute to all our leavers than by using the words one of these four wrote for an event earlier this year: “To the parents in this place: You’ve raised them well. They’ll do alright in this lifetime, because they’re hard workers, but above all they are fantastic people. You ought to be incredibly proud not only of their accolades, but of the strong young adults they’ve become.”

 

One of the highlights of the year has been witnessing the manner in which pupils have beaten a path to the new Study Centre. Over recent weeks, St Andrew’s has demonstrated its potential to have a profound effect on generations of Bradfieldians.

 

Please do visit the Study Centre, and perhaps take the opportunity while you are there to discover a virtual reality Bradfield through Campus-XR, the groundbreaking learning platform we have developed in-house and are now marketing through an independent company.

We always knew that St Andrew’s would offer a superb environment for study, but we did not anticipate the enthusiasm with which it would be adopted by pupils. That may of course have something to do with its café.

I was in there early this term when I saw a pupil walk from the refreshment area to the reception desk and loudly ask the member of staff for a muffin to go with his mocha. The staff member politely reminded him that he was in a library. The pupil apologised and whispered, “Can I please have a muffin to go with my mocha?”

As I wrote to you earlier this term, St Andrew’s is truly ‘an inspirational space that promotes inquiry as well as industry’. Its completion has been a superb team effort, relying on many people. Its addition to our campus has only been possible through the great generosity of the many Old Bradfieldian and parent supporters whose donations met half the cost of this project. Thank you all. Just as you and your children have benefited from the philanthropy of your predecessors in helping to build this great school, so generations to come will benefit from your legacy.

Making those numbers add up and seeking to offer the best possible value for money at a time when we are acutely aware of costs has been a task which Penny Franklin, our retiring Finance Director has tackled with great energy and determination. To her and to all the operational staff who finish working for the College this year, notably to Geoff Rumble after 22 years as a gardener and Peter Cuss after 14 years as science technician, we are deeply grateful.

Geoff and Peter are two of the many unsung heroes who work tirelessly to do the things that make this such a striking environment and a smooth-running school. When asked about their school experience, the beauty of the borders and the preparation of their practicals may not be the first things that spring to the pupils’ minds, but these are just two examples of the small details which make a Bradfield education so special. Moreover, Peter and Geoff are great examples of the many modest and outstanding professionals amongst our operational staff.

The longest teacher moving on this year is Caroline Wright who has been a transformative figure for hundreds of pupils with their study skills and so much more over the last 17 years. Other long-serving leavers include Maddy Best, who has been pursuing postgraduate study full time since Christmas after 9 years encouraging our pupils to share her passion for learning, Colin Irvine, who is moving to the maintained sector where his economics expertise will again come to the fore after 9 years leading that subject and championing the IB, and Charlotte van der Westhuizen who heads to Benenden as Deputy Head Pastoral after 12 years teaching maths and 10 leading Stevens House superbly. They have also been involved in lots of cocurricular activity and have nurtured, challenged and inspired within and beyond the classroom in ways that have endeared them to their charges and their colleagues alike. We wish these four and all the staff moving on this year the very best of luck. Thank you for all you have done and do stay in touch.

The College remains committed to offering our pupils the best possible education from outstanding people such as these. We know that for children to be educated and looked after by great people within this stunning campus entails sacrifices for their parents. We are all too conscious that this may become even harder in future and will, as the Warden has said, be working alongside the Council to maintain that quality whilst challenging its cost.

In conclusion, I would like to pay tribute once more to the young people in whose future we are all so invested. They are extraordinarily lucky, but they wear their privilege lightly. They are characterised by integrity not by entitlement. They remain grounded, kind, respectful, inclusive and overwhelmingly positive, both about their own education and their future. It remains a joy to live and work alongside them.