Friday, May 9, 2025
Teesdale Mercury
  • News
  • Features
  • Test Drive
  • Business
  • Sport
  • Art & Leisure
  • Buy your paper
  • Buy our photos
  • Digital edition
  • Contact
No Result
View All Result
  • News
  • Features
  • Test Drive
  • Business
  • Sport
  • Art & Leisure
  • Buy your paper
  • Buy our photos
  • Digital edition
  • Contact
No Result
View All Result
Teesdale Mercury
No Result
View All Result
ADVERTISEMENT

A levels: Cambridge-bound Nicholas leads Barnard Castle School celebrations

by Teesdale Mercury
August 23, 2018
in News
A levels: Cambridge-bound Nicholas leads Barnard Castle School celebrations

Nicholas Mackay will spend a gap year working for Proctor and Gamble

A RUGBY captain overcame a double leg break to achieve top results and a classmate achieved his Cambridge dream as Barnard Castle School students celebrated a top class set of results.

For First XV rugby captain Jamie Adamson it was the best of finishes after the worst starts to his final year at sixth form.

Just three matches into the season, the Falcons Associate Academy flanker fell awkwardly in a tackle and broke his fibular in two places.

ADVERTISEMENT

After walking off the field with his injury, the 18-year-old, of Hunwick, watched the rest of the game before walking into hospital, where it was revealed he had a double fracture.

“I was six weeks in plaster, three weeks in a brace and it took four months in total to recover – not the best start to the season,” said Jamie.

“But my results of an A* and two As, which get me into Durham to read economics, are the perfect finish to the year. I hope to play rugby for the university and will keep my hand in as an associate of the Falcons.”

ADVERTISEMENT

Joining him at Durham will be Ross Gardiner, who achieved three A*s and a D1.

Ross, 18, hopes to work in finance one day after developing a passion for maths at Barnard Castle Preparatory School.

“I’ve always loved maths and completely exhausted the papers I Googled,” he said. “My teachers were absolutely brilliant at finding fresh and different challenges for me which really helped me in my exams.”

Fellow student Nicholas Mackay earned an A* in maths and A in German in lower sixth. He went into his final exams still needing the highest grades to take up his place at Cambridge.

Another A* in maths, an A* in chemistry, a D1 in physics and an A* in his EPQ were more than enough to cement his place at Cambridge’s Pembroke College to read chemical engineering – once he completes a voluntary gap year working in the development centre at the multi-national consumer goods company Proctor and Gamble, in Newcastle.

“It was a tall order getting the grades but it gave me a clear target to aim for,” said the 18-year-old, of Barnard Castle. “I’m really looking forward to my gap year and then going to Cambridge, which has always been my dream.”

Students were full of praise yesterday for the Extended Project Qualification (EPQ) which helped them impress admissions officials at their chosen universities.

Among them was Alice Hunter, who looked at animal holistic therapy and the impact on dementia. Her studies revealed that animals can calm patients and release higher levels of the hormone oxytocin – but only if the subject liked animals when they were young.

The 18-year-old, of Newsham, will read psychology at Oxford Brookes University. “The EPQ was great to do as you could choose anything you were interested in and study independently,” she said.

Budding writer and passionate Agatha Christie fan Rachel Elphick, 18, of Gainford, used her EPQ as the chance to write a murder mystery.

Set in the French town of Aix-Les-Bains, the story traces the investigations of a holidaying detective who stumbles across murder.

“I set it in the 1920s and loved the research,” she said. “I produced mood boards for the costumes and sets and the research made the writing even more enjoyable.”

Rachel, who writes film scripts for the Stockton-based DJW School of Acting, will now read English and French at Nottingham University.

Headmaster Tony Jackson said: “We are thrilled to see that the number of students achieving A* has increased to the highest level since 2013 showing that they have been inspired in their learning this year.”

ADVERTISEMENT
Previous Post

Meet Barney’s newest bobby on the beat – rugby fan Mark

Next Post

Art group prepares for annual exhibition at Cotherstone Village Hall

ADVERTISEMENT
No Result
View All Result

Stay connected

Facebook Twitter
ADVERTISEMENT

Most popular

SMART: Well thought out and well designed, the Skoda Fabia Monte Carlo is fun to drive and easy to live with

Plenty of pep in Skoda’s sporty offering

May 5, 2025
PAIN FREE: Emily Towler treating pet Labrador Maple to a session of laser therapy to ease pain of osteoarthritis

Emily’s mission to help pets in pain

May 9, 2025
APPEAL: Cieran and Claire Chidzey are determined to make memories for their son Ryan who suffers from Duchenne muscular dystrophy. Their most recent memory making event included a trip to London for the avid football fan to see Arsenal play Chelsea

Family must raise thousands for special wheelchair to keep poorly Ryan mobile

May 3, 2025
Majestic views: Looking eastbound from Stainmore cafe car park, top, the A66 has features of note including God’s Bridge, left, and the summit marker of the old Stainmore railway line

In the footsteps of the Romans

May 4, 2025
Barnard Castle and Bridge, from upstream, painted c1825 (Tate). Turner sketched the chapel in the centre of the bridge in 1797 and retained it in the finished watercolour over 20 years later, even though it had disappeared by his second visit in 1816

Turner in Teesdale, a birthday tribute

May 6, 2025
SHARING ANTHEMS: The choir at St Mary’s Parish Church, Barnard Castle

Singing from the same song sheet

May 7, 2025
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT

15C Harmire Enterprise Park
Barnard Castle
Co Durham
DL12 8BN

Email: [email protected]

Registered in England as Barrnon Media Limited. No: 12475190

VAT registration number: 343486488

Explore

  • Art & Leisure
  • Business
  • Country Life
  • Features
  • News
  • Sport
  • Test Drive
  • Digital edition

Useful links

  • Contact Us
  • Advertise
  • Buy your paper
  • Photosales
  • Digital edition
  • About us

Follow us on

© Barrnon Media Limited 2025

Terms & Conditions / Privacy Policy / Cookie Policy

This website and its associated newspaper are members of the Independent Press Standards Organisation
No Result
View All Result
  • News
  • Features
  • Test Drive
  • Business
  • Sport
  • Art & Leisure
  • Buy your paper
  • Buy our photos
  • Digital edition
  • Contact

© 2024