学校历史:
阿克沃斯学校建校于1779年,距今已有近240年的悠久历史,但阿克沃斯中学始终保持与时俱进,充满勃勃生机与活力。学校占地面积250英亩,囊括一整条街区和一个操场,环境优美静谧,为学生学习之余提供了休闲娱乐、陶冶身心的安然之所。
地理位置:
学校位于英格兰北部约克郡,坐落在距离庞蒂福拉科特三英里的阿克沃斯村庄,四周环绕着优美的英式乡村风光,四季分明,景色变化多端,绚丽多彩。学校周围交通便利,距伦敦Kings Cross两小时火车加二十分钟车程,距曼彻斯特国际机场一小时二十分钟车程,距伯明翰机场两小时车程。学校还邻近威克菲尔德火车站,乘火车出行非常便捷。
学校特色:
贵格会的传统:学校每天都会安排时间让学生静默思考,每周早晨会组织全体师生进行短暂的敬拜。周末,寄宿生即使不参加其他敬拜,也要参加学校组织的贵格敬拜。学校的宗教传统赋予了师生平静、友善、自省的思考模式,指引青年人获得庄重的团队感和心灵平静。虽然现在多数学生来自非贵格家庭,但依然延续了静默自省的传统。
先进的教学设施:学校拥有最先进的教学设施、音乐中心,以及专为高中课程准备的各种设备和舒适完善的寄宿生宿舍。学校建有大规模的科学实验室、艺术中心、音乐和戏剧场地以及一流的图书馆。学校体育设施完备,拥有强大的信息技术支持。值得一提的是,阿克沃斯网站是英国首个寄宿学校网站。
灵活的课程设置:学校开设高中预备课程(preAlevel),每班 8 人左右。在高中预备课程阶段,学生将参加以提高英语技巧为主的英文课程,包括听、说、读、写四个部分,此外,学生也可选修商务研究、科学、 电脑信息技术、历史、法语、德语、艺术与设计等科目,最终选择以学生语言水平和入学时间为准。如果学生水平较高,可就读IGCSE课程,相当于一年内完成英国学生两年所学的十门功课并正常参加GCSE考试。阿克沃斯中学一直视教学质量为重中之重,打造出一流的教学水平,积累了丰富的教学经验。
课外活动:形式多样、内容丰富的参观和活动属于课外项目的一部分。学校平时在4点到6点间会组织各种活动,周末会将学生分成约50个小组分别参加不同的活动。学校鼓励学生参加两个以上的俱乐部。在学生中广受欢迎的项目有体育、音乐和戏剧,其他还有国际、箭术、美术、象棋、计算机、纺织、辩论、高尔夫、自然史、摄影、陶艺、马术、制银、珠宝制作。
- Kweku Adoboli (born 1980), investment banker, convicted in the 2011 UBS rogue trader scandal
- Lindsey Fawcett (born 1979), actress known for her role in ITV’s Bad Girls
- Keeley Fawcett (born 1985), actress known for her role as Carrie in the 2004 BBC film Carrie’s War
- Henry Ashby (1846–1908), paediatrician
- Henry Ashworth (1794–1880), cotton master
- John Gilbert Baker (1834–1920), botanist
- Geoffrey Barraclough (1908–1984), historian
- James Bevans (1777-1832) engineer and architect
- Sir Henry Binns (1837–1899), prime minister of Natal, 1897–1899
- Veronica Bird OBE; retired Prisons governor.
- William Arthur Bone (1871–1938), chemist fuel technologist
- Henry Bowman Brady (1835–1891), naturalist and pharmacist
- John Bright (1811–1889), politician
- Basil Bunting (1900–1985), poet
- Eleanor Carpenter (born 1976), psychologist
- Peter Christopherson (1955-2010), musician, video director and designer
- William Marshall Cooper (1833–1921), civil engineer, artist, surveyor and cartographer
- Susanna Corder (1787–1864), educationist and Quaker biographer
- Alfred Darbyshire (1839–1908), architect
- William Darton (1781–1854), publisher
- Philip J Day (born 1959), documentary filmmaker
- Henry Doubleday (1810–1902), starch manufacturer and comfrey cultivator
- William Farrer Ecroyd (1827–1915), worsted manufacturer and politician
- George Edmondson (1798–1863), headmaster of Queenwood Hall
- Thomas Edmondson (1792–1851), inventor of the first railway-ticket printing machine
- Sarah Stickney Ellis (1799–1872), writer and educationist
- James Fearnley (born 1954), musician and member of The Pogues
- Arthur Charles Fox-Davies (1871–1928), heraldist
- Francis Frith (1822–1898), photographer
- Eva Gilpin (1868–1940), founder and headmistress of the Hall School in Weybridge
- Thomas Hancock (1783–1849), physician and epidemiologist
- Dominic Harrison (1998-) Musician. Performing as Yungblud
- Thomas Harvey (1812–1884), chemist and philanthropist
- William Howitt (1792–1879), writer
- Sir Joseph Hutchinson (1902–1988), geneticist and professor of agriculture
- Deborah Layton (born 1953), survivor of the Jonestown Massacre and author of Seductive Poison
- Thomas Lister (1810–1888), poet and naturalist
- William Allen Miller (1817–1870), chemist
- John Howard Nodal (1831–1909), journalist and dialectologist
- Jacob Post (1774–1855), Quaker religious writer
- John Priestman (1805–1866), worsted manufacturer and pacifist
- Jane Procter (1810–1882), headmistress of Polam Hall, Darlington; and temperance campaigner
- Sir James Reckitt (1833–1924), starch, blue and polish manufacturer
- Anna Richardson (1806–1892), philanthropist, abolitionist and pacifist
- Henry Richardson (1806–1885), philanthropist and pacifist
- Elizabeth Robson (1771–1843), Quaker minister
- Sanil Sachar (1992-), Indian author and poet
- John Henry Salter (1862–1942), naturalist and diarist
- Joseph Sams (1784–1860), bookseller and antiquities dealer
- Prof Rudolph Schaffer (1926–2008), eminent developmental psychologist, escaped Nazi Germany in 1939 on the kindertransport. Both of his parents died in concentration camps.
- Jane Smeal (1801-1888), abolitionist
- Sir Arthur Snelling (1914–1996), diplomat
- Joseph Southall (1861–1944), painter and pacifist
- Patric Standford; (1939–2014), musical composer
- Peter Strevens (1922–1989), linguistic scholar
- Henry Tennant (1823–1910), general manager of the North Eastern Railway, 1870–1891
- Kathleen Tillotson (1906–2001), literary scholar
- Thomas Thomasson (1808–1876), cotton master
- Samuel Tuke (1784–1857), philanthropist and asylum reformer
- Benjamin Barron Wiffen (1794–1867), biographer
- Jeremiah Holmes Wiffen (1792–1836), poet and translator
- James Willstrop (born 1983), squash player
- James Wilson (1805–1860), economist, founder of The Economist, politician, and financial member of the Council of India, 1859–1860
- Rosie Winterton (born 1958), former Labour Chief Whip
- Fiona Wood (born 1958), burns-treatment pioneer, Australian of the Year
- Thomas William Worsdell (1838–1916), steam-locomotive engineer
- Wilson Worsdell (1850–1920), railway engineer