Education in Crawley, West Sussex is co-ordinated by West Sussex County Council. Since 2004, provision for compulsory education has been made wholly through primary and secondary schools, following the closure of the town's Middle schools earlier that year. Each neighbourhood in the town has at least one Primary school, while Secondary schools are distributed around the town on larger campuses.
Name | Image | Neighbourhood/ Coordinates | Age Range | Approximate Roll | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Bewbush Academy | Bewbush 51°6′9.62″N0°13′19.67″W / 51.1026722°N 0.2221306°W | 4–11 | 450 | The school is housed in the former buildings of Bewbush County Middle School. The predecessor schools were Bewbush County First School and Bewbush County Middle School opening in Bewbush in 1978 and 1982 respectively. [1] These schools merged to become Bewbush Community Primary School in 2004, becoming an academy in April 2012. [2] | |
Broadfield Primary Academy | Broadfield 51°5′54.25″N0°11′51.57″W / 51.0984028°N 0.1976583°W | 3–11 | 575 | Broadfield East First School was opened on the site in 1978 to serve the extending neighbourhood of Broadfield, with the Middle School opening in adjacent buildings in 1986. [1] The schools were altered to cover the infant and junior ranges in 2004. [3] Following academisation in 2012, [4] the two schools combined under the current name in September 2016. [5] | |
The Brook Infant School | Maidenbower 51°6′12.75″N0°9′18.31″W / 51.1035417°N 0.1550861°W | 4–7 | 190 | Opened in 1999 as a First school feeding into Maidenbower Middle. The school became an Infant school in 2004. [3] | |
Desmond Anderson Primary Academy | Tilgate 51°5′55.8″N0°11′16.15″W / 51.098833°N 0.1878194°W | 4–11 | 320 | Opened as an Infant school in 1958, with a Junior department opening the following year. It became First and Middle schools in 1971, [1] with the two merging in 1992. The school became a Primary again in 2004, [3] opening in new buildings in 2005. The school converted to academy status in February 2017 and became part of the University of Brighton Academies Trust. [6] | |
Forge Wood Primary School | Forge Wood 51°8′17.81″N0°9′6.37″W / 51.1382806°N 0.1517694°W | 4–11 | 90 | Opened in 2016 as an academy, [7] with a single Reception class, with the intention to grow to a 420-place primary school by 2022. | |
Gossops Green Primary School | Gossops Green 51°6′36.2″N0°12′52.63″W / 51.110056°N 0.2146194°W | 4–11 | 500 | Opened in 2004 [3] following the closure of the predecessor schools Gossops Green County Infant (opened 1968) and Gossops Green County Junior (opened 1969). [1] | |
Hilltop Primary School | Southgate 51°6′20.83″N0°11′44.19″W / 51.1057861°N 0.1956083°W | 4–11 | 290 | Formed following the closure of Southgate West First and Southgate West Middle schools in 2004, [3] having previously opened in 1969 and 1970 respectively. [1] The school became an academy in September 2012. [8] | |
Langley Green Primary School | Langley Green 51°7′37.73″N0°11′52.92″W / 51.1271472°N 0.1980333°W | 4–11 | 300 | Formed in 2004 from the closure of the separate First and Middle Schools, [3] previously opened as Infant and Junior Schools in 1954, with the Infant school moving to a separate campus in 1979 when it merged with the Jordans Infant school already on that site. [1] | |
Maidenbower Infant School | Maidenbower 51°6′29.73″N0°9′7.57″W / 51.1082583°N 0.1521028°W | 4–7 | 270 | Maidenbower First School opened in 1992 to serve the new neighbourhood of Maidenbower. Pupils attended until the age of 8, but no middle school was opened until 1999. In the schools' reorganisation of 2004 the First school became an Infant school with nursery. [3] | |
Maidenbower Junior School | Maidenbower 51°6′28.59″N0°9′3.17″W / 51.1079417°N 0.1508806°W | 7–11 | 580 | A 5-form-entry Junior school in 2004, [3] having previously opened as Maidenbower Middle School in 1999. | |
The Mill Primary Academy | Ifield 51°7′0.69″N0°12′50.93″W / 51.1168583°N 0.2141472°W | 4–11 | 330 | Opened in 2004 following the closures of predecessor schools Ifield First School and Ifield Middle School. [3] The two schools had moved to a campus at Ifield Drive from former buildings in Rusper Road where they had opened in 1956, with the Middle School moving when changing from a Junior school in 1985, [1] and the First school following in 2001. It became an academy in September 2013 (TKAT). | |
Milton Mount Primary School | Pound Hill 51°7′32.4″N0°9′24.37″W / 51.125667°N 0.1567694°W | 4–11 | 440 | Opened in 1972 as a combined First and Middle school. [1] It became primary in 2004. [3] | |
Northgate Primary School | Northgate 51°7′19.31″N0°11′0″W / 51.1220306°N 0.18333°W | 4–11 | 420 | A temporary primary school was opened in Northgate in 1952 to accommodate young children in the New town. Formal Infant and Junior Schools were opened in 1954 on Barnfield Road, becoming First and Middle schools respectively in 1971. [1] The schools closed in 2004 with a new Northgate Primary School opening in the joined buildings. [3] | |
The Oaks Primary School | Tilgate 51°6′12″N0°10′32.35″W / 51.10333°N 0.1756528°W | 4–11 | 390 | Formed in 1997 from the merger of two previous schools with varied histories. The first school to be opened in Tilgate had been the Bishop Bell Infant School in 1958 with the Junior school opening in 1959. First and Middle Schools were opened in Furnace Green under the name of Robert May schools. Each school lost one section in 1979, [1] with the remaining sections closing in 1997 to be replaced by The Oaks Primary School. The school became an academy in September 2012. [9] | |
Our Lady Queen of Heaven Roman Catholic (Voluntary Aided) Primary School | Langley Green 51°7′35.31″N0°12′12.93″W / 51.1264750°N 0.2035917°W | 4–11 | 360 | Opened in 1957. In 1970 the school became a First school feeding into the local catholic Middle schools. [1] Full primary status was restored when the middle schools were closed in 1997. | |
Pound Hill Infant School | Pound Hill 51°7′10.37″N0°9′13.98″W / 51.1195472°N 0.1538833°W | 4–7 | 700 | Opened in 1955 as part of Pound Hill Junior and Infants School, relocating in 1957. The infant department became a First school in 1971, reverting to Infant school in 2004. [1] [3] | |
Pound Hill Junior School | Pound Hill 51°7′8.96″N0°9′18.5″W / 51.1191556°N 0.155139°W | 7–11 | 350 | Also part of Pound Hill Junior and Infants School. The junior department became a Middle school in 1971, reverting to Junior school in 2004. [1] [3] | |
St Andrew's Church of England (Voluntary Aided)Primary School | Furnace Green 51°6′29.58″N0°10′6.16″W / 51.1082167°N 0.1683778°W | 4–11 | 200 | Opened in 1969 adjacent to the St Andrew's Church in Furnace Green. It was extended to become a First and Middle school in the early 1970s. [1] This change was reverted in 2004. [3] | |
St Francis of Assisi Roman Catholic (Voluntary Aided Primary School | Southgate 51°6′31.11″N0°10′58.92″W / 51.1086417°N 0.1830333°W | 4–11 | 420 | Opened in 1950. It was re-housed in its current buildings in 1956 before coming a First school in 1971 feeding into the Holy Cross and Notre Dame middle schools. [1] Full primary status was returned in 1997. | |
St Margaret's Church of England (Voluntary Aided) Primary School | Ifield 51°7′17.13″N0°12′25.44″W / 51.1214250°N 0.2070667°W | 4–11 | 410 | Opened as a Junior and Infants school in 1955 to replace former schools in the then villages of Crawley and Ifield. [1] | |
Seymour Primary School | Broadfield 51°5′57.74″N0°12′22.97″W / 51.0993722°N 0.2063806°W | 4–11 | 460 | Originally opened in 1971 as Broadfield North County First and Middle School. [1] In 1998 the school adopted the new name of Seymour First & Middle School, before being adapted to a primary school in 2004 [3] and then converting to academy status in September 2012. [10] | |
Southgate Primary School | Southgate 51°6′19.08″N0°11′24.65″W / 51.1053000°N 0.1901806°W | 4–11 | 470 | Opened as a Junior and Infants school in 1956, becoming First and Middle in the early 1970s. [1] The two schools were merged in 2004 to form the current primary school. [3] | |
Three Bridges Infant School | Three Bridges 51°7′4.86″N0°10′11.49″W / 51.1180167°N 0.1698583°W | 4–7 | 190 | Opened as part of a primary school before the building of the New Town in the 1950s. In the 1960s the Infant department was separated, becoming a First school in 1971. [1] The school became an Infant school in 2004, following considerable opposition to a proposed merger with the adjoining middle school to form a primary school. [3] | |
Three Bridges Junior School | Three Bridges 51°7′1.32″N0°10′25.94″W / 51.1170333°N 0.1738722°W | 7–11 | 230 | Also part of the primary school before the 1950s. Following the 1960s separation the school became a Middle school in 1971, [1] and then a Junior school again in 2004. [3] | |
Waterfield Primary School | Bewbush 51°6′28.68″N0°13′30.71″W / 51.1079667°N 0.2251972°W | 4–11 | 210 | Opened in January 1985 as a First school catering for pupils aged between 5 and 8. [1] A nursery school was opened in the early 1990s, and the school became a through primary school in September 2004. [11] | |
West Green Primary School | West Green 51°7′7.09″N0°11′49.75″W / 51.1186361°N 0.1971528°W | 4–11 | 208 | Was the first school to be opened in the New town in 1951. The Junior department was closed in 1985 when the school became a First school. Full primary status was restored in 2004, following the scrapping of proposals to close the school. [3] |
Name | Image | Neighbourhood/ Coordinates | Age Range | Approximate Roll | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Hazelwick School | Three Bridges 51°7′30.51″N0°9′54.11″W / 51.1251417°N 0.1650306°W | 11–18 | 1890 | Opened as a Secondary modern school in 1953, becoming comprehensive in the early 1960s. [1] It is currently the largest school in West Sussex. | |
Holy Trinity Church of England (Voluntary Aided) School | Gossops Green 51°6′20″N0°12′35.02″W / 51.10556°N 0.2097278°W | 11–18 | 1300 | Opened in Gossops Green in 1967, with an official opening by The Queen in 1969. [1] It operated initially with two stages of entry: in Year 7 for primary schools around Crawley and Year 8 for pupils transferring from Crawley Middle schools. This was changed in 2004 to entry at age 11 for all pupils. [3] | |
Ifield Community College | Ifield 51°7′3.55″N0°12′36.25″W / 51.1176528°N 0.2100694°W | 11–18 | 950 | The Ifield campus originally was home to Sarah Robinson Secondary Modern School and Ifield County Grammar School, opening in 1955 and 1956 respectively. The two schools merged to become a comprehensive in 1966. [1] | |
Oriel High School | Maidenbower 51°6′21.22″N0°9′30.78″W / 51.1058944°N 0.1585500°W | 11–18 | 1100 | Opened in 2004 as part of a Private Finance Initiative arrangement linked to the change in age of transfer in Crawley Schools. Initially the school accommodated pupils aged 11 to 13, gradually extending with the expectation of becoming an 11-18 school with Sixth form by 2009. | |
St Wilfrid's Roman Catholic (Voluntary Aided) School | Southgate 51°6′37.41″N0°12′14.86″W / 51.1103917°N 0.2041278°W | 11–18 | 880 | Opened in 1952. In 1970 it became an Upper school accepting pupils from local catholic middle schools at age 13. [1] From 1997 it reverted to the full secondary age range. | |
Thomas Bennett Community College | Tilgate 51°5′56.82″N0°11′25.11″W / 51.0991167°N 0.1903083°W | 11–18 | 1320 | Opened as a Comprehensive school in 1958 on a split campus in Tilgate. It was moved into new buildings in 2005. [3] |
Name | Image | Neighbourhood/ Coordinates | Age Range | Approximate Roll | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
The Gatwick School | Manor Royal 51°8′19.11″N0°9′47.68″W / 51.1386417°N 0.1632444°W | 4–16 | 340 | Opened in 2014 as a Free School |
Name | Image | Neighbourhood/ Coordinates | Age Range | Approximate Roll | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Manor Green Primary School | Ifield 51°7′12.55″N0°12′31.74″W / 51.1201528°N 0.2088167°W | 2–11 | 110 | Formed in 2004 following the closure of schools at Catherington and Deerswood | |
Manor Green College | Ifield 51°7′12.55″N0°12′31.74″W / 51.1201528°N 0.2088167°W | 11–19 | 160 | Shares a campus on Crawley Avenue with Ifield mainstream schools. |
Each of the local Secondary schools has a Sixth form attached. Further education is also provided at Central Sussex College formerly opened as Crawley Technical College in 1958. [1]
Note: where schools have been replaced by a school with a comparable name, these are not recorded, e.g. Bewbush Middle School is now Bewbush Primary School.
Name | Status | Open Date [1] | Closure Date | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Bishop Bell First School | Infant / First | 1958 | 1979 | Infant until 1974. Closed in 1979 with pupils transferring to the nearby Robert May First school. |
Bishop Bell Middle School | Junior / Middle | 1958 | 1997 [12] | Junior until 1974. Received pupils from closed Robert May Middle school from 1979–1997. Closed as part of merger to form The Oaks Primary in 1997. [12] |
Broadfield East Infant School | Infant / First | 1978 | 2016 | Separate infant (formerly first) school merged with neighbouring junior to form Broadfield Primary Academy. |
Broadfield East Junior School | Junior / Middle | 1986 | 2016 | Separate junior (formerly middle) school merged with neighbouring infant to form Broadfield Primary Academy. |
Catherington Special School | Special School | 1971 | 2004 | Formerly a school for children aged 2–19 with severe learning difficulties. Merged with Deerswood in 2004, to form Manor Green special schools for wide spectrum disabilities. |
Deerswood Special School | Special School | 1958 | 2004 | Formerly a school for children aged 2–19 with moderate learning difficulties. Merged with Catherington in 2004, to form Manor Green special schools for wide spectrum disabilities. |
Holy Cross Roman Catholic School | Intermediate | 1970 | 1996 [13] | Moved to new buildings in Ifield in the early 1980s [14] but closed in 1996 when the diocese reverted to two-tier education. [13] |
Ifield First School | Infant / First | 1956 | 2004 [3] | Opened in Rusper Road, relocating to share the Middle school campus in 2001, before closing in 2004 as part of age of transfer changes. Replaced by The Mill Primary school. |
Ifield Middle School | Junior / Middle | 1956 | 2004 [3] | Opened in Rusper Road, relocating to the former Henry Pelham campus of Ifield School in 1985 on becoming a middle school. Closed as part of age of transfer changes. Replaced by The Mill Primary school. |
Jordans Junior & Infant School | Primary school | 1958 | 1979 | Merged with Langley Green Infant school, remaining on its site at Martyr's Avenue. |
Notre Dame Roman Catholic School | Intermediate | 1968 | 1996 [15] | Opened as a girls' secondary school, but by 1970 became a middle-deemed-secondary school for pupils aged 9 to 13. The school closed as part of the diocese's decision to reorganise schools locally. |
Robert May First School | Infant / First | 1964 | 1997 [12] | Opened as Robert May County Junior and Infants School. Became First in 1974. Closed in 1997 in merger to form The Oaks Primary School. |
Robert May Middle School | Junior / Middle | 1964 | 1979 | Opened as Robert May County Junior and Infants School. Became Middle in 1974, closing in 1979, pupils transferring to Bishop Bell Middle School. |
Sarah Robinson Secondary Modern School | Secondary | 1956 | 1966 | Closed upon merger with Ifield Grammar school to form comprehensive. |
Discovery New School | Primary | 2011 | 2014 | Founded in 2010 and opened in September 2011 in a fully refurbished Broadfield House, a Grade II-listed villa in Broadfield Park. It was a Free school run in line with Montessori educational principles. [16] [17] It was the first free school in England to close in 2014. |
Crawley is a town and borough in West Sussex, England. It is 28 miles (45 km) south of London, 18 miles (29 km) north of Brighton and Hove, and 32 miles (51 km) north-east of the county town of Chichester. Crawley covers an area of 17.36 square miles (44.96 km2) and had a population of 106,597 at the time of the 2011 Census.
Broadfield is one of 14 neighbourhoods within the town of Crawley in West Sussex, England. Broadfield is located in the south west of the town. It is bordered by Bewbush to the north, Southgate to the north east and Tilgate to the east.
Fastway is a bus rapid transit network in Surrey and West Sussex, United Kingdom, linking Crawley with Gatwick Airport and Horley, the first to be constructed outside a major city. It uses specially adapted buses that can either be steered by the driver or operate as "self steering" guided buses along a specially constructed track. Fastway is operated by Metrobus, using Scania OmniCity, Wright StreetLite, Volvo B7RLE / Wright Eclipse 2 and Wright GB Kite Hydroliner buses.
Bewbush is one of 14 neighbourhoods in Crawley in West Sussex, England. Bewbush is located in south west Crawley and is bordered by Broadfield to the south, Ifield to the north, Kilnwood Vale to the west and Gossops Green to the north east. The neighbourhood has a population of approximately 9,000.
Ifield is a former village and now one of 14 neighbourhoods within the town of Crawley in West Sussex, England. Ifield is in the west of the town and is bordered by Ifield West, Horsham, Langley Green to the north east, West Green to the east across the ring road and Gossops Green and Bewbush to the south across the Arun Valley railway line.
Hazelwick School is a co-educational comprehensive school with academy status for pupils aged 11 to 18, located in Crawley, West Sussex, England. Its alumni include former footballer and England manager Gareth Southgate and comedian Romesh Ranganathan.
Oriel High School is a maintained community secondary school for pupils aged 11 to 18. It opened in September 2004 as part of a reorganisation of secondary education in Crawley, catering for just 370 pupils in years 7 and 8. It was expected to grow to around 1450 pupils by 2009. It then grew to roughly 1600 students by 2015, and expanded once more to 2100 students in 2021. The school has wheelchair access and an accessible lift to all areas, one of the only schools in the area to be fully accessible. Oriel is rated "Good" by Ofsted as of 2019.
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.
Ifield Community College (ICC) is a maintained comprehensive secondary school in Crawley, England, for pupils aged 11 to 18.
This article gives brief information on schools that cater for pupils up to the age of 11 in the Dacorum district of Hertfordshire, England. Most are county maintained primary schools, sometimes known as "junior mixed infant" (JMI). A small number are voluntary aided church schools or independent (fee-paying). The Local Education Authority is Hertfordshire County Council.
As of 2011 there were 102 listed buildings and structures in the English borough of Crawley, West Sussex. Two others have subsequently gained listed status. The Borough of Crawley is based on the town of the same name, located approximately halfway between London and Brighton. Although Crawley expanded substantially after World War II when it was designated a New Town by an Act of Parliament, many older buildings remain.
Schools in Worthing are provided by West Sussex County Council and by a number of independent providers. Both non-denominational and Church of England maintained schools were previously organised along three tier lines, with students transferring from a first school at age 8 to a middle school, and then starting High School at age 12. This system was introduced in 1973 as part of a move to reorganise schools to provide comprehensive education across West Sussex. In 2015, schools returned to the more common pattern of transfer at the end of a Key Stage.
Broadfield House is a 19th-century villa-style house in the Broadfield neighbourhood of Crawley, a town and borough in West Sussex, England. Built in 1830 on the extensive land of the Tilgate Estate south of the small market town of Crawley, it was extended later in the 19th century and converted into a country club. After World War II, Crawley was designated a New Town and had to prepare for rapid, strictly planned growth. Broadfield House was chosen as the headquarters of the Crawley Development Corporation, and became the base where all the decisions that shaped Crawley's future were made. The house, which is still set in parkland, was refurbished and converted for use by Discovery School in 2011. It has been listed at Grade II by English Heritage for its architectural and historical importance.
Oakwood School is a community secondary school located in Horley, Surrey, England. It is co-educational and caters for students in the 11–16 age range, as it does not have a sixth form.
Discovery New School was a co-educational Montessori free school for pupils aged 4 to 10 located in Crawley, West Sussex. The school opened in September 2011 as one of the first free schools in the country and also the first Montessori free school. The school was funded directly by central government and had a planned intake of 16 pupils per year. Although the school adopted Montessori methods, the Montessori Schools Association (MSA) later said that they were refused permission to oversee the introduction of its teaching methods and had "warned the DfE of the school's likely failure" in 2010 before the school opened. Philip Bujak, chief executive of the MSA, said: "We were ignored completely." Martin Bradley, chairman of the MSA, said: "The Montessori Schools Association has had limited contact with the school from the start of the scheme. We suggested that they seek accreditation, but they did not."
Rye Studio School was a mixed studio school located in Rye, East Sussex, England. It opened in 2013 and catered for students aged 14–19 years. It was located on the Rye College campus, sponsored by the Rye Academy Trust, and is classified as a free school. It closed in 2018.
Chichester Free School is a mixed-sex free school located in Chichester, West Sussex, England. It opened in 2013 and caters for students aged 4–16 years. The school is located on the newly re-developed Carmelite convent site, which was damaged in a fire in 2009.