West Exe School Explained

50.707°N -3.54°W

West Exe School
Motto:Bringing Learning to Life[1]
Excellence for All, in all that WE do
Established:1889 (predecessor established)
2014 (present name and logo adopted)
Type:Academy[2]
Head:Julie Fossey[3]
Chair:David Kernick[4]
Address:Hatherleigh Road
County:Devon
Country:England
Postcode:EX2 9JU
Ofsted:yes
Urn:145404
Enrolment:1,300
Lower Age:11
Upper Age:16
Houses:Malala(green) Romero(Blue) Daley(Red) Boyan(Yellow)
Colours:Green, Blue, Yellow and Red
Publication:West Express (2012)[5]
Exe Press (2018-present)
Website:http://www.westexe.devon.sch.uk/

West Exe School is a coeducational secondary school located in Exeter, with a catchment area covering St Thomas, Alphington, and some parts of Exwick.

History

Origins and predecessor institutions (1889–2000s)

The origins of the school date back to the Victorian times, when the mergers of a number of smaller schools resulted in the creation in 1889 of two National Schools: one for boys at the end of Cowick Street, and another for infants and girls adjacent to Emmanuel Church on Okehampton Road.[6] In 1900, when St Thomas became part of the city of Exeter, control of these schools moved to the Exeter School Board. The Board moved the boys' school to the bottom of Dunsford Road, and in 1917 the girls' school was destroyed by fire.[7]

In 1921, the Dunsford Road Boys' School was renamed to the John Stocker School, after John Stocker, the recently retired chairman of the Education Board.[8] In 1930 the boys' school was split into John Stocker Senior Boys' School and John Stocker Junior Boys' School, both of which still used the Dunsford Road site. The site on Cowick Street used by the boys' school until 1900 was taken over by a number of girls' and infants' schools that had previously been based in different locations around St Thomas, Redhills and Exwick.[9]

The schools were all merged into a single Boys' Secondary Modern School and Girls' Secondary Modern School in 1967, and in 1972 the two were merged into a single comprehensive school. In 1973 the two halves of the newly united school started using a new site on Cowick Lane, being renamed to Exeter St Thomas High School under the headship of Bill Ridley, who was in post from 1973 until 1997.[9]

Under new headteacher Steve Maddern the school was renamed to West Exe Technology College and a new school logo designed in 1998 to reflect its status as a specialist Technology College under the Government's Specialist Colleges programme. In 2005, a new school building was completed on the playing fields of the St Thomas High School and a new rugby field was built on top of the old building.[9]

Following the end of the Government's Specialist Colleges programme, the school was renamed to West Exe School in 2014, and a new logo was adopted.[10]

A report commenting on the school's subsequent improvement spoke of West Exe as "troubled Exeter school" in these years.[11] In June 2016 it had previously described West Exe school as having a reputation for controversy,[12] and when reporting on the November 2016 riot, described the school as "in the spotlight again".[13]

Academy status

The Ted Wragg Multi-Academy Trust began setting policy at the school in September 2017.[14] The Trust introduced the strict Ready to Learn behaviour policy, later renamed "Reset".[14]

On 28 February 2018, the school became an academy and formally acceded to the Ted Wragg Multi-Academy Trust.[15]

In April 2023, a parents' campaign group, Reset Ted Wragg, was established to oppose the Reset behaviour policy at West Exe and other schools in the Ted Wragg Multi-Academy Trust.[16] [17] The Trust initially agreed to review its policies,[18] but the group dismissed the proposed amendments to the RTL system as inadequate.[19] [20]

In April 2024, West Exe School was named in the top five best secondary schools in Devon for "pupil progression".[21]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: About us - West Exe School . 2 October 2014 . 7 October 2014 . https://web.archive.org/web/20141007003927/http://www.westexe.devon.sch.uk/about/ . dead .
  2. Web site: West Exe School - GOV.UK.
  3. Web site: Contact us.
  4. Web site: Governors - West Exe School. 27 April 2020.
  5. Web site: West Express - our new student newspaper! . 29 July 2018 . 29 July 2018 . https://web.archive.org/web/20180729230403/http://www.westexe.devon.sch.uk/west-express-our-brand-new-student-newspaper/ . dead .
  6. Web site: Exeter Memories - West Exe Technology College.
  7. News: Okehampton Road Girls' School destroyed by fire, 1917 . 28 December 2023 . Devon and Exeter Gazette . 12 February 1917 . 4.
  8. News: Dunsford Road School to be renamed John Stocker School, 4 May 1921. . 28 December 2023 . The Western Times . 4 May 1921 . 4.
  9. https://www.exetermemories.co.uk/em/_schools/westexe.php Exeter Memories – West Exe Technology College
  10. https://www.geograph.org.uk/photo/7791645 "Exeter southern suburbs from the air, 1998"
  11. News: Anita . Merritt . Troubled Exeter school transforms into one of the top-rated in the region . 10 November 2024 . Devon Live . 11 September 2018.
  12. Web site: The story behind the headlines at West Exe School. 17 June 2016.
  13. Web site: 'Mass food fight as children run riot at school'. 11 November 2016.
  14. Stapleton, Kerry (March 2024). 'Pupil resistance to the Ready to Learn behaviour system in British secondary schools, 2016–2023' (BA thesis, University of Oxford)
  15. https://www.tedwraggtrust.co.uk/page/?title=Our+Journey&pid=44 Ted Wragg Trust – Our Journey
  16. News: Anita . Merritt . Frustrated parents demand Ted Wragg Trust make six urgent changes to school policy . Devon Live . 17 October 2024 . 4 April 2023.
  17. News: Merritt . Anita . Angry parents say Ted Wragg Trust is 'failing our kids' . 17 October 2024 . Devon Live . 25 April 2023.
  18. News: Merritt . Anita . Devon's Ted Wragg Trust could change controversial policies . Devon Live . 17 October 2024 . 29 June 2023.
  19. News: Anita . Merritt . Parents say Ted Wragg Trust changes don't go far enough . Devon Live . 17 October 2024 . 19 July 2023.
  20. News: Anita . Merritt . Controversial Devon schools trust says it's getting results but 'is listening' . Devon Live . 14 November 2023.
  21. News: Merritt . Anita . Devon's best and worst secondary schools for pupil progression . 20 August 2024 . Devon Live . 29 April 2024 . en.