词条 | St Thomas Aquinas Secondary School, Glasgow |
释义 |
| name = Saint Thomas Aquinas R.C. Secondary School | image= Saint Thomas Aquinas Secondary School Main Enterence.JPG | caption= Main entrance | motto = Summa Aquinas | mottoes = | established = 1958 | closed = | type = State comprehensive | religion = Roman Catholic | gender = Mixed | lower_age = 11 | upper_age = 18 | president = | rector = | headteacher = Andrew McSorley | chair_label = | chair = | founder = Michael Andrew McLaughlin | founders = | chaplain = Joe Lappin | chaplain_pl = | specialist = | street = 112 Mitre Road | city = Glasgow | county = | postcode = G14 9PP | country = Scotland | coordinates = {{coord|55.8809|-4.3352|type:edu_region:GB|display=inline,title}} | campus = | authority = Glasgow City Council | teaching_staff =43 | roll = c. 936 pupils[1] | houses = | accreditation = | colours = | feeder_schools = | publication = | free_label_1 = | free_1 = | free_label_2 = | free_2 = | free_label_3 = | free_3 = | website = School website }} St Thomas Aquinas Secondary School is a Catholic secondary school in Jordanhill, Glasgow. The current head teacher is Andrew McSorley, who took over at the beginning of the 2006-2007 session having left his old head post in Edinburgh's St Thomas of Aquin's High School. The previous head teacher was Thomas Bradshaw who headed the school for 13 years. Re-buildingThe original school was built in the 1950s, and at the end of the 2001/2002 school year the original building was demolished to make way for a new state-of-the-art facility. During the rebuilding works staff and pupils were temporarily based at Woodside School, close to the city's Anderston area. The new facility consists of the Abbey Building and the Mitre Building, and was built as part of Glasgow's PPP school building programme. The new building was completed in 2003[2] and the school was officially opened on 3 December 2004 by the then Education convener of Glasgow City Council, Steven Purcell, a former pupil. The new school is one of the largest Roman Catholic schools in the city and has a capacity of over a thousand pupils. The expressive artsThe school produced a version of Romeo and Juliet which received national media attention as it brought to life issues relating to sectarianism.[3][4] The school has a long history of success in orienteering. 10 of its pupils were chosen to represent Scotland at the World Schools' Orienteering Championships.[5] Notable former pupils{{Category see also|People educated at St Thomas Aquinas Secondary School, Glasgow}}
References1. ^Glasgow Schools - The Scotsman 2. ^Press release on the Glasgow PPP scheme 3. ^[https://www.theguardian.com/football/2007/feb/08/britishidentity.uk Come on you Capulets!] 4. ^The Glasgow Herald - A Very Modern Romeo and Juliet{{dead link|date=May 2018 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }} 5. ^[https://archive.is/20120918224119/http://www.scottish-orienteering.org/index/soa/page/world-schools-team-scotland-selections WSCO 2008 Team] External links
3 : Catholic secondary schools in Glasgow|1958 establishments in Scotland|Jordanhill |
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