All Saints' Catholic Voluntary Academy | |||||
Coordinates: | 53.1521°N -1.213°W | ||||
Motto: | We Shall Serve | ||||
Established: | 1974 | ||||
Capacity: | 1107 | ||||
Type: | Academy | ||||
Trust: | Our Lady Of Lourdes Catholic Multi-Academy Trust | ||||
Religious Affiliation: | Roman Catholic | ||||
Address: | Broomhill Lane | ||||
City: | Mansfield | ||||
County: | Nottinghamshire | ||||
Country: | England | ||||
Postcode: | NG19 6BW | ||||
Ofsted: | yes | ||||
Dfeno: | 891/4756 | ||||
Urn: | 140698 | ||||
Gender: | Coeducational | ||||
Lower Age: | 11 | ||||
Upper Age: | 18 | ||||
Houses: | Caritas Fortitudo Vocare Industria | ||||
Colours: | Red, blue, gold, white | ||||
Module: |
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All Saints' Catholic Academy (formerly All Saints RC School) is a Roman Catholic secondary school in Mansfield, Nottinghamshire, England. It is the only Catholic secondary school in the district, with a capacity for over 1,000 students.[1] The school is allied to St. Philip Neri with St. Bede's Catholic Voluntary Academy for younger pupils aged 3–11 years.[2]
Mansfield's first Catholic school was established along with a church for the relatively few worshippers in the town during 1877/1878 at the Manor House, Ratcliffe Gate, both named after St. Philip Neri.[3] With a growing congregation, a larger church was established at Chesterfield Road by 1925, followed in 1927 by a larger, purpose-built school nearby at Westfield Lane.[3] [4] [5]
A new-build school was officially opened in 1960 at Rosemary Street for secondary pupils, whilst St. Philip's continued for primary tuition.[6]
All Saints' opened in 1974, initially as a 13–18 upper school with Mary Gray as headmistress. Peter Whalley took over as Headmaster in 1981. This was a new-build on a greenfield site.
After All Saints school, was opened, St. Philip and St. Bede's continued separately under the three-tier system of lower/middle/upper, then conjoined to cater for under-11-year-olds at the Rosemary Street site. The old St. Philip's site on Westfield Lane was closed and eventually demolished in favour of a new Magistrates' Court, relocated in 1996 after the old Court/Police Station areas were demolished for retail development.[6]
All Saints' had opened in 1974, initially as a 13–18 upper school with Mary Gray as headmistress.It became an 11–18 comprehensive voluntary aided school on a split site in 1984. Ken Daly was the headmaster from December 1996 until he retired in April 2008. In 2006 the school was awarded specialist status as an Arts College and the school converted to academy status in April 2014. Prince Charles was a notable visitor in 1978.
The School is a 'Dyslexia friendly School' which is actively promoted by Nottinghamshire Education.
It has a sixth form of over 100 pupils, and currently has a total pupil population of approximately 1250. The School has approximately 75 Teaching staff, plus TA support and ancillary support staff.
The current building was constructed for a pupil population of around 600 but has been gradually extended with the construction of a new Performing arts block and new Science block and the addition of 19 temporary class rooms. The school's X block's have been renovated a number of times and currently holds classes in PE office, Geography, Mathematics, RE, DT (Sewing) and SEN.
All Saints' Catholic Academy became part of a new collective in 2014, the Aquinas Academy Trust.[7] By 2019, the trust had merged and the schools transferred to the Our Lady Of Lourdes Catholic Multi-Academy Trust.
The trust oversees:[8]
and the following primary schools
Academy Trusts have a Board of Trustees, which in this case is 15 in number, made up of all the schools' headteachers, representatives of the diocese and lay-members with business experience. Each school has a smaller local board of governors: there are 12 members including staff and parent representatives.[8]
A trust embracing catholic schools in the Nottingham area.[9]
The academy teaches courses at Keystage 3, Keystage 4 and Keystage 5. It follows the English National Curriculum for students under 16, with GCSE terminal examinations.[10] The government progress-monitoring system is known as Progress 8.[11]
The school was in the national news in 2009 when a teacher was charged with attempted murder after attacking a student in a science lesson.[14] During a trial at Nottingham Crown Court, the jury heard that, after the teacher had returned following an absence due to stress and depression, pupils had intended to provoke and secretly film the reaction, so the footage could be circulated throughout the school to cause humiliation, and that the teacher was mocked by pupils just before the attack. The teacher was found not guilty of attempted murder but admitted a lesser charge of grievous bodily harm without intent, and was given community service.[15] After the verdict the teacher was sacked for gross misconduct,[16] and a year later received a life-ban from teaching by General Teaching Council.[17]