Easington Academy Explained

Easington Academy
Type:Academy
Head Label:Headteacher
Head:Nicola Falconer
R Head Label:Deputy Headteacher
R Head:Jane Martin
Chair Label:Assistant Headteacher
Address:Stockton Road
County:County Durham
Country:England
Postcode:SR8 3AY
Ofsted:yes
Urn:138075
Lower Age:11
Upper Age:16
Website:www.easingtonacademy.co.uk

Easington Academy is a secondary school with academy status located in the village of Easington, County Durham, England.

History

The school was first created as Easington Comprehensive School in 1978, as a result of a merger between Easington Secondary Modern School and Murton Secondary Modern School. The school was later renamed Easington Community School, and then Easington Community Science College in January 2007 after becoming a specialist science college.[1] The school has become an academy school, and is now known as Easington Academy.

In 2019, the Academy joined the North East Learning Trust.

House system

The school's house names are based on the family surnames most affected in the 1951 Easington Colliery pit disaster; points are allocated in school assemblies, performances, etc.

They Were Named

As Of June 2021 They Are Called

Buildings

Currently, Easington Academy is made up of five buildings used for teaching:

Option subjects such as Health & Social Care and Travel & Tourism may be taught across multiple different buildings and don't have a fixed area on the site.

Subjects Taught

Year 7, 8 and 9 students are taught the following subjects: English, Maths, Science, French, Geography, History, Religious Education, PSHE (branded as "World Ready"), Music, Drama, ICT and Physical Education.

In year 9, students choose up to four GCSE options to take up until year 11. Students meeting their targets in French, or are close to their targets must take GCSE French - in line with guidelines surrounding the English Baccalaureate. To further satisfy these requirements, all students must take either GCSE Geography, or GCSE History. Students then get two more options, or three if the child is not required to take French.

Notable former pupils

The school's alumni include documentary filmmaker Carl Joyce and such professional footballers as Newcastle goalkeeper Steve Harper,[2] Paul Kitson,[3] Chris Brass, Paul Smith, Richard Ord,[2] Stuart Brightwell, and Adam Johnson.[4]

External links

54.7819°N -1.3549°W

Notes and References

  1. News: Easington secondary school achieves title of Easington Community Science College. The Local Channel. 24 November 2007.
  2. http://www.monkeybizz.net/archive/mb75/mb75.pdf Hartlepool fanzine
  3. Web site: Boyd shooting for the stars. The Northern Echo. 30 November 2007. 15 May 2007.
  4. News: Adam Johnson guilty of child sex charge. BBC News. 2 March 2016.