The Trusty Servant Nov 2018 No. 126 | Page 8

N o .126 T he T rusty S ervant On leaving Win Coll Oliver Normand (F, 13-18; Sen Co Prae) gave a talk to prospective parents at an Open Day in June: When I leave Winchester in a few weeks’ time, I will take with me many fond memories and, although the weeks in question will be largely consumed by some less-than-trivial exams, I thought that some premature recollections would help me illustrate why Winchester has been such a special place for me. Some of these are sporting, some academic and others have been an extension of the College activities during holidays. It might sound unfashionable to say so, but I think my strongest memories have been forged in the classroom. This is not surprising since the stand-out aspect of Winchester’s individuality lies in its academic reputation and traditions. On the one hand, I was given free rein last year to synthesise a superconductor, something that has never been completed before in a secondary school, while on the other I shall never forget a particular Div lesson, when a fellow classmate, by marginally altering Caesar’s final line to ‘Est tu, Brute?’ made it sound as if Caesar was simply having trouble recognizing his friend. While we take public exams seriously and the overwhelming majority of grades are A*, I have never felt that exams have constrained a broader academic learning. Pre-Us, which we take instead of A Levels, give us the freedom of a broad syllabus and allow us to love our subjects in their own right, rather than simply as a means to an exam grade. I mentioned Div just now, a uniquely Wykehamical concept, and it deserves some explanation. Think of it like The Week magazine, whose strap-line is ‘All you need to know, about everything that matters.’ Change that to ‘All you need to know about anything you want’ and you pretty much have it. There are 51 divs in the school and although any one Wykehamist can experience a mere 10% of the available div dons in his five years here, there is a huge range of enthusiasm, knowledge and experience that a pupil will come across outside his chosen academic subjects. I have stumbled my way through Beowulf in its original Old English, dabbled in Aristotelian philosophy, and held countless debates on politics, history, and art. To be fair and in contrast, I have been allowed to 8 give vent to the physicist in me and try to explain quantum mechanics to Mr de Bono and the non-scientists in his div. I don’t think that Div alone makes Winchester unique, but it is the structure on which everything else here hangs and the fact that particle physicists can rub shoulders with Russian students while discussing Renaissance art shows how versatile a discipline it can be. Clearly there is much more to life at Winchester than just the classroom.