词条 | St James Academy, Dudley |
释义 |
| name = St James Academy | logo = St_James_Academy,_Dudley_Logo.png | image = Castle_High_School_-_geograph.org.uk_-_316053.jpg | caption = Some of the school buildings, as seen from St James's Road | established = {{Start date and age|2017}} | type = Academy | trust = Dudley Academies Trust | headteacher = Ms Michelle King | address = St James's Road | city = Dudley | county = West Midlands | postcode = DY1 3JE | country = England | coordinates = {{coord|52.512|-2.090|type:edu_region:GB_dim:100|format=dec|display=inline,title}} | pushpin_map = United_Kingdom West_Midlands | pushpin_map_alt = St James Academy is located in Dudley, West Midlands | local_authority = Dudley | urn = 144657 | ofsted = Yes | enrolment = | gender = Mixed | lower_age = 11 | upper_age = 16 | website = {{URL|www.stjamesacademy.org.uk}} }} St James Academy is a secondary school located in Dudley, West Midlands, England. It caters for pupils aged from 11 to 16 years. It is also a specialist Arts College. The academy was formed in 2017 from Castle High School as part of the Dudley Academies Trust, in association with Dudley College.[1] The new name was officially adopted in September 2018.[2] HistoryThe St James Academy is situated on St James's Road, near Dudley town centre, mostly within the buildings of the former Dudley Grammar School (which date back to 1897; the school was originally established in 1562). The grammar school was merged with Dudley Girls High School in 1975 to become the The Dudley School, a mixed-sex comprehensive, which in turn merged with The Blue Coat School to become Castle High in 1989. The Castle High name was chosen in a poll by pupils, who also chose the design of the new school's logo. After a year, the school opened to 11 year-olds following the local authority's decision to reduce the primary school leaving age; at the same time, its sixth form centre was closed and the leaving age for pupils fell to 16. The former sixth form facilities were used as classrooms to accommodate the new younger pupils. September 1990 also saw the school take in approximately 50% of pupils from Mons Hill School, which closed due to falling pupil numbers. Several teachers from this school were also recruited. For the first year of its existence as Castle High School, the school incorporated the former Blue Coat School buildings on Kates Hill, where the final two academic year groups of that school's pupils remained. The Sir Gilbert Claughton School, however, remained a separate school as its final year of pupils completed their education, while younger pupils were transferred to Castle High and the Holly Hall School. A new three-storey classroom block was opened in the 1991 summer term, the first in several phases of expansion which were completed in 1995. The expansion also saw the demolition of the school swimming pool, which had been on the Dudley School site. Mobile classrooms were on the site until the permanent buildings were opened. The expanded school was officially opened on 20 October 1995 by George Carey, Archbishop of Canterbury. The former Girls High School buildings were demolished at the beginning of the following year. Plans were unveiled in June 2008 for the school to receive academy status, sponsored by the Oasis Community Learning Trust,[https://web.archive.org/web/20090106142034/http://www.oasiscommunitylearning.org/OasisAcademiesinDudley.html] though these plans failed to materialize and were scrapped in March 2009. In February 2017 academization plans were revived, with Castle High School set to join a new multi-academy trust sponsored by Dudley College, alongside Holly Hall School, Hillcrest School, and High Arcal School.[3] The academy was launched later that year, with the school changing its name in September 2018.[2] History time line
FatalityThe school suffered a tragedy in February 2001 when 12-year-old pupil Scott Holloway died after being knocked down by a van near his home on the Priory Estate.[https://archive.is/20070610123450/http://archive.dudleynews.co.uk/2001/2/22/54458.html] Staff and pupils at Castle High set up a fund in Scott's memory and a total of almost £1,100 was raised for the fund, some of which was raised by bidding for a signed Aston Villa football. {{dead link|date=July 2017 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }} A local van driver later received a fine and a driving ban for careless driving in connection to Scott's death. {{dead link|date=July 2017 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}. References1. ^{{cite web |title=Welcome to Dudley Academies Trust |url=https://dudleyacademiestrust.org.uk/ |website=Dudley Academies Trust |accessdate=6 November 2018}} 2. ^1 {{cite news |title=Four Dudley schools set for a name change in September |url=https://www.dudleynews.co.uk/news/16365887.four-dudley-schools-set-for-a-name-change-in-september/ |accessdate=6 November 2018 |agency=Newsquest |publisher=Dudley News |date=19 July 2018}} 3. ^{{cite news |title=New £60m academy trust to be launched across Dudley |url=https://www.expressandstar.com/news/education/2017/02/06/new-60m-academy-trust-to-be-launched-across-dudley/|accessdate=6 November 2018 |agency=Midland News Association |publisher=Express & Star |date=6 February 2017}} See also
5 : Schools in Dudley|Educational institutions established in 1989|Secondary schools in the Metropolitan Borough of Dudley|Voluntary aided schools in England|1989 establishments in England |
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