Motto |
Hau Hadau'r Dyfodol (Welsh: Sowing the seeds of the future) |
---|---|
Established | 1894 |
Type | Comprehensive |
Headteacher | Daniel Sion Roberts |
Location |
Bethel Road Caernarfon Gwynedd LL55 1HW Wales |
Local authority | Gwynedd |
Students | 836 |
Gender | Coeducational |
Ages | 11–18 |
Houses |
|
Colours |
Navy and Red |
Publication | Seren Syr Hugh |
Website | ysgolsyrhughowen |
Navy and Red
Ysgol Syr Hugh Owen is a bilingual comprehensive secondary school for pupils aged 11–18, situated in Caernarfon, Gwynedd, Wales. The school was established in 1894, the first to be built under the Welsh Intermediate Education Act of 1889, which was heavily influenced by the educator Sir Hugh Owen, after whom the school was named.
The school had 836 pupils on roll in 2016. Its current headteacher is Paul Mathews Jones. It serves the town of Caernarfon and the nearby villages, which include; Bontnewydd, Caeathro, Y Felinheli, Llandwrog, Rhosgadfan, Rhostryfan .
Welsh is the school's main language of communication and administration. All subjects, except Welsh and English, are taught to all pupils using both languages. According to the latest Estyn report, 90% of pupils speak Welsh with their families and 92% are fluent in the language. The school claims that 98% of pupils were fluent in Welsh in 2016.
There is also a sixth form, which enables students to stay at the school for a further two years instead of having to transfer to college.
As an advocate of education reform, Hugh Owen recognised the need for improvements in the schools of Wales. Being both a member of the British and Foreign School Society and the Cambrian Educational Society, Owen enthusiastically supported the idea of non-denominational day schools. During the 1840s he wrote two letters to the people of Wales, acknowledging the need to establish such schools. His efforts were partially successful, as it consequently lead to the creation of a number of schools in the country, but many schools suffered from a lack of qualified teachers. In order to train teachers, Owen saw the need to be a benefactor of more universities, those being Bangor Normal College, Swansea University, and University College of Wales in 1875.