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Oxford High School is administered by the Council of the Girls’ Day School Trust and our School Governing Board is appointed by the Council. All members of the OHS Governing Body take an active interest in the daily life of the school.

To contact our Chair of Governors please email the Clerk to the Governing Body – head@oxf.gdst.net.

To read more about each of our governors, please click on the names below.

 

Miss Katherine Haynes – Chairman

Miss Katherine Haynes – Chairman

Katherine Haynes BA Hons MEd NPQH is an alumna of Oxford High School, 1980-1987. She has been Head of The John Lyon School in Harrow, Middlesex, an HMC independent day school with 600 boys, from 11 to 18 years, since 2009. The John Lyon School, with Harrow School, is part of the John Lyon’s Foundation alongside John Lyon’s Charity. From 2014 to 2017, she chaired the national Forum of Independent Day Schools. Previously, Katherine taught at Warwick School as Head of Mathematics and at Edgbaston High School for Girls in Edgbaston, Birmingham. She is a Reporting Inspector with the Independent Schools’ Inspectorate, is a Governor at a coeducational all-through school and has previous experience as a Governor of a preparatory school. Previously a Board member, Katherine became Chairman of Governors from the 1st January 2020.

Dr Caro Godlee – Vice Chairman

Dr Caro Godlee – Vice Chairman

Caro Godlee was educated at Bedales School, and qualified in medicine from Trininty College, Cambridge. She worked for twenty-eight years as a GP at Summertown Health Centre, Oxford (latterly as Senior Partner). The practice covered four local boarding schools, and Caro was the Oxford High School doctor for fifteen years until her retirement from general practice in 2015. She is the co-author of two medical textbooks and is particularly interested in adolescent and women’s medicine. She now works as a coach and mentor and is a Council member of Wycombe Abbey School. One of her daughters attended Oxford High School and went on to study History at Cambridge.

Miss Kate Mitchell – Prep School (including EYFS)

Miss Kate Mitchell – Prep School (including EYFS)

Kate Mitchell was Head of Wimbledon High Junior School GDST from 2003 until 2019. With a BSc Hons from Warwick and an MA from York, she has spent thirty-five years in education, teaching in Stamford School, Ashville College and Alleyn’s Junior School. She has experience in boys, girls and co-education, boarding and day schools, and was an independent schools’ inspector. Having attended Wells Cathedral School, she has a particular interest in music. Working for the GDST since 2003, she is passionate about girls’ education and enabling young ladies to go out into the world to make a difference.

Professor Andrew Carr

Professor Andrew Carr

Professor Andrew Carr DSc FRCS FMedSci is a clinical scientist and the Nufffield Professor of Orthopaedic Surgery at the University of Oxford, where he directs the Botnar Research Centre, one of the world’s leading musculoskeletal disease research Institutes. He has focused his research on the development and evaluation of surgical implants and technologies, including joint replacements, minimally invasive surgery and tissue engineering scaffolds. He has held senior leadership positions in the University, NHS and charity sectors in the UK and has had advisory role at a number of Universities and Research Councils internationally. His three daughters are all alumnae of Oxford High School.

Dr HaiMing Liu

Dr HaiMing Liu

Dr Haiming Liu is an Associate Professor at the school of Electronics and Computer Science (ECS) at University of Southampton (Soton), where she undertakes research, project supervision and teaching of both undergraduate and postgraduate levels. Prior to joining Soton, Haiming worked in several other UK universities to develop her academic career since her PhD completion in 2010.

Haiming believes that technologies enable the impossible and she is keen on developing technologies to benefit people across the world. Haiming is also keen on encouraging girls/women to participate in Information Technologies (IT) subjects. Haiming is active in her research community services and the local community services, for example, she is a membership secretary of the Information Retrieval Special Group (IRSG) of the British Computer Society (BCS) (now called The Chartered Institute for IT), a management board member of a local business network called Biztech, and a member of the parent association of Oxford High School.  Haiming has two daughters who are currently studying at the Oxford High School.

Dr Alexandra Lumbers

Dr Alexandra Lumbers

Dr Alexandra Lumbers studied history at Southampton for her BA and MA before undertaking a doctorate at the University of Oxford. On completing her doctorate she taught history, before moving to St Peter’s College, Oxford, to take up the post of Deputy Registrar. She was then appointed as Research Facilitator in the Humanities Division and subsequently as Senior Development Officer for Humanities. She joined Jesus College in May 2009 to take up the full-time position of Academic Director, which incorporates the roles of Senior Tutor, Tutor for Admissions, and Tutor for Graduates. She is a member of the Governing Body and is responsible for all academic strategy and policy; student Outreach, Admissions, all on-course students including welfare; and the recruitment to all academic posts.

Professor Helen Small

Professor Helen Small

Helen Small (FBA) is Merton Professor of English Language and Literature at the University of Oxford and a fellow of Merton College, Oxford. Helen writes about the connections between literature, intellectual history, and philosophy (especially moral and critical philosophy), primarily since 1830. Her book The Value of the Humanities (2013) is a critical account of the claims standardly employed to defend the public value of the humanities. Her previous book, The Long Life (2007), explored the view that to understand old age we have to consider more fundamentally what it means to be a person, to have a life, to have or to lead a ‘good’ life and to be part of a just society. The Function of Cynicism at the Present Time (2020) is her most recent publication –  exploring why even non-cynical people often resort to cynicism in public debate. Helen also writes regular essays on Victorian fiction, poetry, and public moralism and she is the editor of several nineteenth-century works including Vanity Fair, Wuthering Heights and The Lifted Veil. She teaches Victorian and later literature and critical theory at Oxford.

Ms Clare Stephens

Ms Clare Stephens

Ms Clare Stephens has taught in countries as diverse as Nigeria, Malaysia and China (HK) and studied in the UK, Canada and France.  She holds Master of Arts degrees in Applied Linguistics and Social Anthropology both of which have informed her academic career as Senior Lecturer and Programme Director for Foundation Programmes at the University of Reading and Oxford Brookes University.  Clare was seconded to the University of Reading’s nascent Malaysia campus in 2013 to establish the Foundation Programme there. She grew the programme from 11 to 150+ students over the course of her secondment.

Clare is currently the Subject Expert for the International Foundation Programme being run at Chengdu Institute of Technology in partnership with Oxford Brookes University.  Clare’s interests include the teaching of critical thinking, team working, student academic welfare and inclusivity & diversity.

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