Maddox Jones Inspires and Educates Pupils with Music and Mental Health PSHE Lesson
RGS Worcester welcomed talented singer-songwriter, and musician, Maddox Jones to lead a PSHE lesson on Mental Health and Drug Education for Years Nine and Ten pupils.
RGS Worcester welcomed talented singer-songwriter, and musician, Maddox Jones to lead a PSHE lesson on Mental Health and Drug Education for Years Nine and Ten pupils.
We are pleased to share the recent success of one of our alumni, Natalie Balmain (1997-2002), who emerged victorious on the hit Channel 4 show, ‘Make Me Prime Minister’.
On Monday we welcomed parents and pupils to the RGS Creative Arts Festival to join us in celebrating the creative talent at RGS Worcester.
On Tuesday all four of the RGS Schools joined together in the sanctuary of Worcester Cathedral for the annual Commemoration Service.
An outstanding and enjoyable year for RGS Drama has ended in fitting style with the Lower and Middle School production of ‘The Wind in the Willows’.
On Saturday 10 June, RGS Worcester hosted the finalists for the Young Fashion Designer UK Competition.
We are delighted to share some exciting news about Year Nine pupil Theo Houston.
We are delighted to share some exciting news about Year Nine pupil Maxwell Moses.
We are delighted to share the news that Poppy Breese (Year Seven) will represent both RGS and England at the prestigious Dance World Cup in Braga, Portugal at the end of this month alongside her fellow dancers from Harlequin Stage School.
Last Friday, RGS Worcester arranged to take part in ‘Their Finest Hour’ as part of a national project to collect and preserve memories and artefacts from the Second World War.
We are delighted to share that all 27 entries have achieved Distinction in the LAMDA (London Academy of Music and Dramatic Art) Examinations, making this achievement our strongest result ever!
The cast and crew of this year’s Summer Production of ‘The Wind in the Willows’ are working towards the final stages of the production and excitement is building!
Our final Teatime Concert of the year took place on Tuesday this week, given by a large number of keen and talented Year Seven pupils.
The Brontë sisters’ writings, although famous now, were not always and it took for them to write under their pseudonyms of Currer, Acton and Ellis Bell to be able to have their work published.
On Monday, 70 Year Ten GCSE Geography pupils headed to Carding Mill Valley in Shropshire, for the first of two fieldwork days.