Wilmslow High School | |
Coordinates: | 53.3221°N -2.2293°W |
Established: | 1960 |
Head: | Ruth Powley |
Chair Label: | Chair |
Chair: | J Caulkett[1] |
Address: | Holly Road |
Country: | England |
Postcode: | SK9 1LZ |
Ofsted: | yes |
Urn: | 111443 |
Enrolment: | 2,079 (2021/22)[2] |
Teaching Staff: | 130 |
Gender: | Mixed |
Lower Age: | 11 |
Upper Age: | 18 |
Houses: | Bollin Harefield Norcliffe Thorngrove |
Colours: | Maroon and black |
Free Label 1: | Former name |
Free 1: | Wilmslow County Grammar School |
Wilmslow High School is a mixed-sex 11–18 comprehensive secondary school in Wilmslow, Cheshire, England.[3] The school began in 1960 as a grammar school and gradually became a comprehensive school, becoming Wilmslow High School in 1991.
Wilmslow High School began life as the co-educational Wilmslow County Grammar School in September 1960 with 900 pupils. The new county grammar school was opened by Sir James Mountford, the Vice-Chancellor of the University of Liverpool, on 24 March 1961. A girls' grammar school was built on 14acres of the former Colshaw Hall Farm, and situated on Dean Row Road. It opened in 1964 and housed 750 girls. The school on Holly Road became an all-boys' school.
Wilmslow Boys' Grammar School (Holly Road) became Harefield County High School when it became a sixth form-entry comprehensive in 1978, gradually becoming more comprehensive. Wilmslow Girls' Grammar School (Dean Row Road) became Dean Row County High School. In the mid-1980s it became Wilmslow County High School, then Wilmslow High School in 1991.[4] The school was designated a Specialist Sports College in September 2003 and subsequently re-designated in 2008[5] before the specialist schools programme ended in 2010. [6] Officially, the school is no longer a Specialist Sports College, despite still being advertised as such.
Other former schools in Wilmslow included Wilmslow County Secondary School for Girls on Wycliffe Avenue. When the Wycliffe Avenue Secondary Modern School closed, the girls moved to Thorngrove County High School, formally Hough Secondary Modern School for Boys. This school was originally opened in 1965 on Thorngrove Road – the land now occupied by the A34 bypass. Later, all schools closed, leaving Wilmslow with one high school on the site of the original boys' grammar school.
The school operates the Duke of Edinburgh's Award Scheme, and a bi-annual "World Challenge" expedition is available to older students, which for the last three years has been run through Camps International. Competitive sport is a feature of the school's extracurricular programme "Sports Xtra". In 2016, School Sport Magazine ranked the school 6th best sporting state school in the country.[7]
The school is currently designated "good" by Ofsted, who reviewed the school in 2013; this is a drop from their previous position of "outstanding" in 2011.[8] [9] As of 2016, 75% of students achieve a C or better in both English and maths (compared to a national average of 59.3%), and the average A level grade attained by students is a C (equal to the national average). Although the school is below national average according to the government's "Progress 8" metric, they have an "Attainment 8" score above national average.[10]
The school is split into two halves and four houses. Bollin and Harefield form half of the school while the Norcliffe and Thorngrove make up the other half, consequently students of the two halves are scheduled within classes together. Students wear ties according to their house colours.[11] The name of the houses come from locations within the Wilmslow area.