The Canterbury Academy Explained

The Canterbury Academy
Coordinates:51.2786°N 1.0632°W
Established:7 October 2010
Type:Academy
Specialist:Sports
Address:Knight Avenue
City:Canterbury
County:Kent
Country:England
Postcode:CT2 8QA
Local Authority:Kent
Ofsted:yes
Urn:136302
Enrolment:1833
Capacity:1300 [1]
Gender:Coeducational
Lower Age:11
Upper Age:19

The Canterbury Academy[2] is a co-educational 11-19 academy school in Canterbury, Kent, England. It is a specialist Sports College and 15% of its 1081[3] pupils are selected on musical aptitude. The school was founded as a non-selective secondary modern foundation school before gaining academy status in 2010.

Location

The school is on the London Road estate in the west of the city. The high school and primary school are collectively known as The Canterbury Campus.[4]

The Canterbury Adult Education Centre is now on the same site.[5]

Academic selection

Kent is the largest county in England to operate academic selection at the age of eleven. Children in Kent sit the Kent test (eleven plus) to determine whether they are suitable for an academic education, or for a modern education. In a country that abandoned selection in 1967, this is an anachronism. No new grammar schools may be built, though existing grammar schools may expand or open annexes. In Canterbury there are few mixed grammar school places though an undoubted need.[6] [7]

The Canterbury Academy is legally deemed to be a non-selective school but has a close working partnership with the grammar school, Simon Langton Boys. Together they run a mixed grammar school band within the Canterbury Academy Comprehensive School.[8]

Academics

Middle school (years 7- 9)

The school is obliged to teach to the National Curriculum (England) as are all state funded schools. They follow a 3-year Key Stage 3, which prescribes a broad based course of study, weighted to Maths, English and Science with a humanity and a modern foreign language.[9] These are the subjects chosen as the English Baccalaureate. The school quotes Section 89(1)(d) of the Education and Inspections Act 2006 which gives schools the legal right to ensure that pupils complete any tasks 'reasonably assigned to them', to set two types of obligatory homework. EH (examination homework) task will be marked and given a GCSE type grade, while Love of Learning homework allow the students to develop other areas of interest.[8] Throughout Key Stage 3 students are, to use the schools terminology offered 'Pillar Lessons', a series of stand alone lessons in separate disciplines- such as Hair, Forensic Science, Photography, Musical theatre. These taster lessons lead into exam options offered at Key Stage 4.[10]

Senior School (years 10-11)

Students are encouraged but not forced to study the English Baccalaureate.[8] All students work towards at least 8 GCSEs, or equivalents. They follow a core curriculum of English Language, English Literature, maths, statistics, science, history or geography with core PE and learning skills. In addition, options include RE, languages, computing, dance, drama, music, art, design technology, resistant materials food, sport, business and enterprise, social sciences, childcare, health and socialcare, hair and beauty, photography, and construction. This is achieved by having extended lessons after the Middle School day has finished.[10]

Sixth Form (years 12-13)

The Four Pillars

The school sees itself as built on Four Pillars of Excellence, that reflect the specialisms it has built up in the past.[11] They are

While involved in one of these programs, sixth former are given student leadership rôles in middle school and the primary school.[11]

Ofsted judgement

Ofsted rated this as a good school. Saying :"That board members, leaders and staff passionately oversee a unique, large, vibrant and increasingly popular school, with a quite exceptional curriculum delivered in outstanding facilities. They never sway from doing what they believe is right for a pupil, regardless of any reduction to their headline measures"[12]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: The Canterbury Academy - GOV.UK . get-information-schools.service.gov.uk . 26 April 2020 . en.
  2. http://www.ofsted.gov.uk/provider/files/1904013/urn/136302.pdf Academy conversion information letter
  3. Web site: The Canterbury High School . DCSF. 2008-05-28.
  4. Web site: Welcome To The Canterbury Campus . The Canterbury Campus. 2008-05-28 .
  5. Web site: Kent Adult Education - Canterbury . Kent County Council . 2009-08-28.
  6. Web site: Secondary admissions booklet all areas . kent.gov.uk . 26 April 2020.
  7. Web site: Shepard . Gabriel . Kent Test pass surge leaves grammar place shortfall . kentlive . 26 April 2020 . 10 October 2017.
  8. Web site: High_school_parent_handbook.pdf . canterbury.kent.sch.uk/ . 26 April 2020.
  9. Web site: National curriculum in England: framework for key stages 1 to 4 . GOV.UK . 26 April 2020 . en.
  10. Web site: Curriculum-Intent . www.canterbury.kent.sch.uk/ . 26 April 2020.
  11. Web site: Sixth Form Course List . Canterbury Academy Trust . 27 April 2020.
  12. Web site: Ofsted Report 2017 . ofsted.gov.uk . 27 April 2020. This article contains quotations from this source, which is available under the Open Government Licence v3.0. © Crown copyright