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Moulsham High School

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Keep up to date with all the latest news happening in school at the moment.

  • HPV Vaccination

    Wed 04 Dec 2019

    Your son/daughter will shortly be bringing home a vaccination consent for, letter and information leaflet for the HPV Vaccination. This two dose vaccine is being offered to all students in Year 8. Confirming consent on the form covers both the first and the second vaccination.

     

    The first vaccine will take place in school on either Tuesday, 7 January or Wednesday, 8 January 2020. Details of when the second vaccine will take place will be sent out later in the school year

     

    Completed forms must be returned direct to Student Services by Wednesday, 11 December 2019.

     

    The confirmed date and time of your childs first vaccine will be issued to them via their form tutor nearer to the date. 

  • Diary of a British skicross champion

    Wed 04 Dec 2019

    Nicholas B (pictured) is a British skicross champion and member of the Essex Ski Racing Club, he is also a Year 12 student at Moulsham High School.

    Nick first started ski racing when he was seven years older, taking up skicross in 2014 at the age of 12. He previously competed in alpine ski racing (slalom and giant slalom) and moved to skicross because he found the racing more exciting; racing against other skiers rather than against the clock.

    Nick is incredibly dedicated to his sport, each week he carries out four, two-hour gym sessions, plus additional cardio / balance and agility sessions - any actual ski training is limited to trips to the Alps.

    Each year Nick attends four overseas training campstwo on the glacier in Saas Fee in Switzerland, one in Pitztal in Austria and another in Sweden – where he will be training next week.

    In the past two years, Nick has competed in 27 races in seven different countries - France, Sweden, Greece, Switzerland, Czech Republic, Austria and Australia. His immediate goals are to represent Great Britain at the Youth Olympics this year and again at the World Junior Championships in France in March, but these events won’t be Nick’s first time competing.

    He was the British u16 skicross champion three years in succession and, in 2018, he became the first British boy to win the Audi Kids Skicross Tour - Europe's leading children's skicross race series - held at five venues across Switzerland. Last season he was senior British skicross champion. Nick’s best results in international adult races to date were second and third places in Greece last February. Quite the achievements!

    It’s the adrenaline rush he gets from taking 20 metre jumps at high speed, the technical nature of the skiing and racing head-to-head with other athletes which make Nick love the sport so much. However what really drives him is doing the best he can with the limited resources he has available to him.  

    As a TASS (Talented Athlete Scholarship Scheme) supported athlete Nick has access to strength and conditioning, lifestyle and personal development support from experts at the University of Essex. He is one of only 600 English athletes selected to be part of the programme from 32 sports in 2019/20.

    Here Nick tells us what a typical day looks like for him when he’s attending a training camp:

    0700:     I wake up early and pack my kit for the day

    0715:     Down to breakfast, time to fuel up ahead of training.

    0800:     It’s almost 8am so I head to catch the cable car which will take me and my fellow training mates up to the glacier. We tend to leave after the alpine skiers, freestyle skiers tend to be a bit more laid back.

    We spend four or five hours training on the course up the glacier. A lot of the time we focus on skiing the more technical start sections, with the coach taking video. Luckily today the ski area isn’t closed due to bad weather or avalanche risk, if it was then we’d know we were in for a hard day of physical training.

    If there is no course, as is often the case on summer training camps, we’d spend the morning training in the jump park.

    1230:     We’ve worked up an appetite after a morning of intense training so it’s time to head back to the hotel for lunch.

    1330:     Time for fitness training, this will typically last a couple of hours, it may be in the gym, at the climbing wall, or a cardio workout on the local hills.

    1600:     Free time, after fitness we have a couple of hours to relax, do school work and wax our skis ready for the next day.

    1800:     Video analysis, time for our coaches to give feedback to the group on the days' skiing.

    1900:     It’s time for dinner now which will be followed by an additional hour or so of free time, or school work, before bed.

    2230:     And sleep! We’ve another busy day ahead of us tomorrow.

  • Buy a musical instrument tax free, through the school, with AIPS

    Tue 03 Dec 2019

    DID YOU KNOW...

     

    One of the main reasons behind youngsters giving up playing a musical instrument is due to the poor quality of the instrument?

     

    This can range from poor tone/sound, tuning, action to name a few...

     

    We understand that learning to play can be expensive. However, through the Assisted Instrument Purchase Scheme (AIPS) you can buy an instrument of your choice and brand through a range of suppliers that take part in the AIPS, through the school.

     

    Tax free! 

    The AIPS enables pupils of local authority and academy schools to purchase musical instruments through their school net of VAT providing the sale to the pupil meets the criteria below.

    · Musical tuition at a local authority school;

    · Musical tuition at an academy;

    · Musical tuition in either a school orchestra or local authority orchestra; and Musical tuition in a local music hub.

    This also includes replacement parts.

    For the purchase to qualify for the AIPS, the following criteria must be met:

    · The instrument or item must be sold to the local authority or school and then supplied onto the pupil or their guardian;

    · The pupil must be receiving state education;

    · The instrument must be used as part of their musical tuition;

    · The instrument must be appropriate to the pupil’s needs 

    Source: https://www.gov.uk/hmrc-internal-manuals/vat-government-and-public-bodies/vatgpb7825

     

    If you would like to know more, please visit the link above or contact Mr Mack via admin@moulshamhigh.org with FAO Mr Mack in the subject header.

Bridge Academy Trust is a charitable company limited by guarantee registered in England and Wales with company number 07663795.

Registered Office: Community Building, Bridge Academy Trust, Brian Close, Chelmsford, Essex, CM2 9DZ.

Tel: 01245 202 937

Email: enquiries@bridgeacademytrust.org

           
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