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This is a sub-article of Durham School. Durham School, tracing its history back to Langley in 1414 and earlier, has had a number of Headmasters (but, to date, no Headmistresses). 1414 to 1541 This incomplete list comes from The Durham School Register, 1991. The list is derived from The Account Rolls of the Receiver General which show that two chaplains, the forerunners of the Headmasters, were ...
The Headmasters' and Headmistresses' Conference (HMC), formerly known as the Headmasters' Conference and now branded HMC (The Heads' Conference), is an association of the head teachers of 351 private fee-charging schools (both boarding schools and day schools), some traditionally described as public schools. 302 members are based in the United Kingdom, Crown dependencies and the Republic of ...
The history of Durham School can be divided into four sections. Firstly there is the time from its founding by Langley in 1414, then in 1541 Henry VIII refounded it, the period from 1844 when the school moved from its site on Palace Green to its current location across the river Wear, and finally from 2021 when the school became part of the Durham Cathedral Schools Foundation.
Schools whose headteachers are members of the Headmasters' and Headmistresses' Conference, the main representative body for independent secondary schools in the United Kingdom. Most of them are in the United Kingdom, but there are also a number of international member schools, most of which are in Commonwealth countries and the Republic of ...
Public discussion lasted 30 minutes. Private talks took five hours.
Melissa Feimster Lido, center, a teacher at Riverside High School, was one of the many who gathered for a rally at Durham Public Schools Staff Development Center in Durham, N.C., Wednesday, Jan ...
The Durham Association of Educators has issued the following demands: Restore steps and have no pay cuts for February. Publicly explain why January checks did not look like people expected.
The Association of Head Mistresses (AHM) was founded in 1874. The Headmasters' Association (HMA) was founded in 1890. The Secondary Heads Association was formed in 1977 by the amalgamation of these two organisations. In 1983, deputy heads were allowed to join, with other senior teaching staff following in the early 1990s and business managers ...