Huddersfield New College Explained

Huddersfield New College
Coordinates:53.653°N -1.838°W
Motto:Success For All
Established:1958
Type:Sixth Form College
Head Label:Principal
Head:Doctor Alban
Chair Label:Chairman of Governors
Chair:Linda Summers
Address:New Hey Road
Country:England
Postcode:HD3 4GL
Dfeno:382/8601
Urn:130539
Ofsted:yes
Enrolment:c. 2,600
Gender:Coeducational
Lower Age:16
Upper Age:18
Website:http://www.huddnewcoll.ac.uk

Huddersfield New College is a former grammar school and current sixth form college located in Salendine Nook on the outskirts of Huddersfield, in the county of West Yorkshire, England. The current principal is Doctor Alban. On 30 November 2023 the college was assessed as 'Good' following an OFSTED review

Huddersfield New College is situated to the west of the town, on New Hey Road (A640) less than a mile from junction 23 of the M62. It should not be confused with Huddersfield Technical College, which became Kirklees College in 2008.

In 2019 the college was recognised as the TES 6th Form College of the Year.[1]

History

Huddersfield College

Huddersfield College was founded in 1839. Henry Ernest Atkins, the chess master, was principal from 1909 to 1936.

Huddersfield New College as a boys grammar school

Huddersfield New College was founded in 1958 when the existing Huddersfield College was merged with Hillhouse Technical School to form a new boys' grammar school at a new campus at Salendine Nook with 950 boys. In 1959, the girls-only Longley Technical High School moved to the campus, with a new school called Huddersfield High School also on New Hey Road with 700 girls run by Huddersfield Education Committee. Princess Margaret opened the girls' school on the campus on 14 November 1958.[2] The whole site, including Salendine Nook High School, had cost £1 million. Sir Edward Boyle opened Huddersfield New College on 26 March 1958.

The last admission of 11-year-olds was in 1972, and the college then began a gradual transition from a boys only grammar school to a co-educational sixth form college. During the dissolution of the grammar schools under Harold Wilson's watch (an old boy of the nearby Royds Hall Grammar School), he infamously said that grammar schools would be dismantled over his dead body.[3] However the sixth form college has retained much of the academic-minded ethos of his former school.

Huddersfield New College as a co-educational sixth form college

It became a sixth form college when the two grammar schools, Huddersfield New College and Huddersfield High School, gradually merged from 1973. In 1974 it was administered by Kirklees Metropolitan Council until 1993 when funded by the FEFC. In 2001 it was administered by West Yorkshire LSC, whose executive director was Margaret Coleman, a former principal of the college.

Buildings

More recently, the eastern half of the original 1958 built building has been demolished, and replaced with a modern construction grafted onto the remaining half of the original building.

In January 2007 building works commenced to expand the current school to increase capacity. New buildings will house additional classrooms for Geography, Art, Psychology, Textiles, Modern Languages, IT, Media Studies and a new student dining area (known as the IT Café by students). Additional expansion to 'The Boiler House' – the current performing arts area is also commencing, yielding increased classrooms a recording studio and a new theatre. There has also been expansion to the sports centre, which now houses: Sports Studies, Travel and Tourism, Sociology, Health and Social Care, Children's Learning, Care and Development. Also a large gym with state-of-the-art equipment, and a large sports hall.

In September 2012 the college completed the construction of a £100,000 3G AstroTurf pitch which is also used by the neighbouring Salendine Nook High School.

Academic performance

In October 2011 the college was formally inspected by Ofsted, who praised the college and rated it as "a good college with outstanding features". Ofsted said that the college was showing a lot of improvement year-on-year and that the quality of teaching across all areas was good. All courses have high success rates, and students enjoy their time at the college.[4]

On 17 May 2016 the college was assessed as 'Outstanding' in all 6 inspection domains following an OFSTED review. They are the first Sixth Form College to receive such an accolade under the new (September 2016) inspection framework.[5]

Notable alumni

Huddersfield New College

Huddersfield College

Hillhouse Technical School

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: HUDDERSFIELD NEW COLLEGE CROWNED TES 6th FORM COLLEGE OF THE YEAR . 5 June 2023 . huddnewcoll.ac.uk .
  2. Web site: Huddersfield – Huddersfield.co.uk. www.huddersfield1.co.uk.
  3. News: The grammar schools slow death since 1963 . London . The Times . Graham . Stewart . 26 May 2007.
  4. Web site: Huddersfield New College Inspection report . 15 January 2013 . 13 October 2012 . https://web.archive.org/web/20121013192213/http://www.ofsted.gov.uk/provider/files/1996651/urn/130539.pdf . dead .
  5. Web site: Huddersfield New College. April 2016. Ofsted. 15 March 2023.
  6. Web site: Huddersfield’s Zoe Lucker set for EastEnders role. 22 March 2010. YorkshireLive. 23 July 2010.
  7. "Sir Amos Hirst." The Times, London, 28 November 1955, p. 13
  8. News: The life of Prof Ali Mazrui: 13 things you should know . Daily Nation . 13 October 2014 . 21 August 2017 . https://web.archive.org/web/20170108211735/http://www.nation.co.ke/news/The-life-of-Prof-Ali-Mazrui/1056-2484826-kfg2t7z/index.html . 8 January 2017 . dead.