Thomas Bennett Community College Explained

Thomas Bennett Community College
Coordinates:51.0992°N -0.1894°W
Motto:Aspire
Established:1958
Head:Emer Lesova
Chair Label:Chair of Governors
Specialist:Sports
Address:Ashdown Drive
Country:England
Postcode:RH10 5AD
Local Authority:West Sussex County Council
Ofsted:yes
Urn:138620
Enrolment:1200
Gender:Coeducation
Lower Age:11
Upper Age:19
Website:http://www.thomasbennett-tkat.org/

Thomas Bennett Community College (TBCC) is a secondary school with academy status for pupils aged 11 to 19. It caters to approximately 1200 pupils in Years 7 to 14, including 160 in its sixth form.

Thomas Bennett Community College offers GCSEs and BTECs for pupils aged 11 to 16. Students in the sixth form have the option to study from a range of A-levels, further BTECs, CTECs and NVQ Diplomas.[1] [2]

History

The school was planned as part of the development of Crawley as a new town in the late 1940s. Originally it had been intended to open a grammar school and two secondary modern schools on the Tilgate campus, although by the time the school was built, this plan changed to provide a bilateral secondary school for boys and girls for a trial period of two years. This entitled the school to run separate grammar and secondary modern departments as part of one school.[3] [4]

The school was named after Sir Thomas Bennett, the chairman of Crawley Development Corporation.[4] This body had overseen the development of the New Town. Bennett officially opened the school in 1959 (the first pupils having joined the school in 1958).[4] Although originally intended as a bilateral school, the staff of the school organised classes along comprehensive lines, with students working in sets depending on their ability in subjects, rather than broad streams. This idea proved so popular that the school became formally comprehensive by the end of the trial in 1960.[4] By 1965, the school became one of the first in England to succeed in being truly comprehensive, with encouraging exam results, including disadvantaged children helped to fulfil their potential.[5]

In 1974, local schools were reorganised in the area, and Thomas Bennett School became an Upper school for students aged 12 to 18, with former first year students remaining for an additional year in primary middle schools. This situation was then reversed in 2004, when reorganisation again returned the school to a full 11–18 secondary. Thomas Bennett became a community school in 1979.[3] The student roll was 1,323 in 1984.[3] The school converted to academy status in September 2012.[6]

Campus

The masterplan for Crawley New Town set aside the campus for the split-site school in the south-west corner of the neighbourhood of Tilgate between the A23 and Tilgate Forest. The campus contained both the Thomas Bennett school and the local primary school – Desmond Anderson School. In 1965, Thomas bennet was the largest comprehensive school in Great Britain.[3]

The original school comprised first two and then three main buildings at opposite ends of the campus. The adjoining Ashdown and Southgate buildings provided facilities, with a further building – known as the Canterbury building – approximately 1/4-mile to the south-east. Uses of the buildings varied. In the 1960s and 1970s, the Canterbury building was used for 'lower school' pupils in the first two years of school, with 'upper school' pupils in fourth and fifth forms moving to the Southgate building, and sixth formers based in the Ashdown building. By the 1990s, pupils in the main part of the school were split equally between Canterbury and Southgate buildings, depending on their house.

Both Thomas Bennett and Desmond Anderson schools were re-built, opening in entirely new buildings in 2005. The campus is now shared with the town's main leisure facilities: K2 Leisure Centre. The current building, designed by Nicholas Hare Architects, houses all pupils from all year groups in a building built under a Private Finance Initiative scheme which replaced several schools in the town in the period 2004–2005. A Commission for Architecture and the Built Environment audit reported that the building was well-designed.[7]

Students

The school is entirely comprehensive, providing education for approximately 1200 pupils aged between 11 and 19 of all abilities.[8] [9] The school was formerly much larger with around 2000 pupils, but has reduced in recent years.

The school is organised into four houses, named after the original house masters/mistresses when the school opened in the 1950s, each of which was allocated a colour:

Most pupils attending the school live within the catchment area, and transfer from one of the local primary schools:

Head-teachers

Notable former pupils and bands

External links

References

5. https://amp.theguardian.com/world/2013/dec/06/patrick-daunt

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Courses on Offer - Thomas Bennett Community College. 2022-01-27. www.thomasbennett-tkat.org.
  2. Web site: Subjects - Thomas Bennett Community College. 2022-01-27. www.thomasbennett-tkat.org.
  3. Book: Hudson . T.P. . A History of the County of Sussex: Volume 6 Part 3: Bramber Rape (North-Eastern Part) including Crawley New Town . 1987 . 4 January 2007 . Institute of Historical Research by Oxford University Press . Oxford . 0-19-722768-6 . 93–95 . Crawley New Town: Education . http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.asp?compid=18425 .
  4. Book: Report and Recommendations on Reorganisation of Secondary Education. 1966. West Sussex County Council.
  5. News: From the archive: It’s 1965 and Beatlemania and comprehensive schooling are making headlines . theguardian.com. March 25, 2018.
  6. Web site: Thomas Bennett Community College URN: 126075 Community school - This establishment closed on 31 August 2012 . schools.service.gov.uk . 29 November 2019.
  7. News: Jonathan . Milne . High-class but poor quality . . TSL Education Ltd . 14 July 2006 . 4 January 2007 . dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20070927212635/http://www.tes.co.uk/search/story/?story_id=2261871 . 27 September 2007 . dmy-all .
  8. Web site: TBCC Pupil Premium Strategy Statement. 27 January 2022.
  9. Web site: Chelsea Football Academy. 27 January 2022.
  10. Web site: Daring and passion of comprehensive pioneer Tes Magazine . 2024-03-12 . www.tes.com . en.
  11. News: Mittler . Peter . 2013-12-06 . Patrick Daunt obituary . 2024-03-12 . The Guardian . en-GB . 0261-3077.
  12. Web site: 2014 School report Thomas Bennett Community College . ofsted.gov.uk . 8 October 2014.
  13. Web site: 2016 School report Thomas Bennett Community College . ofsted.gov.uk . 1 December 2016.
  14. Web site: Senior Leadership Team. www.thomasbennett-tkat.org . 2023-10-07.
  15. Web site: Senior Leadership Team. www.thomasbennett-tkat.org . 2023-10-07.
  16. England v Germany Schools' International football programme, 16 May 1970, p10.
  17. Web site: NASL bio. NASL Jerseys. 11 November 2013.
  18. Web site: Alan Bell obituary . Tom Plimmer . The Guardian . 29 May 2016.
  19. Web site: The man who pays his way . independent.co.uk. March 4, 2002.
  20. Web site: Simon Calder wins Celebrity Mastermind and donates fee to Farm Africa. 14 February 2020.
  21. Web site: Wilce . Hilary . An interview with Education Minister Dawn Primarolo . Early Years Magazine . hilarywilce.com . December 1, 2009 . https://web.archive.org/web/20170209134407/http://www.hilarywilce.com/feature_articles_view.php?cid=385 . February 9, 2017 . dead .
  22. Chris Gerrard (2021)The Cure FAQ: All That’s Left to Know About the Most Heartbreakingly Excellent Rock Band the World Has Ever Known. Backbeat, ISBN 9781493053988, p. 155
  23. Web site: Brett Marvin and The Thunderbolts (aka Terry Dactyl and The Dinosaurs). crawleymuseums.org . 13 November 2020.