This article contains content that is written like an advertisement .(April 2019) |
St Paul's Way Trust School | |
---|---|
Address | |
125 St Paul's Way , E3 4FT England | |
Information | |
Type | Academy |
Established | 1873 |
Local authority | Tower Hamlets |
Trust | University Schools Trust |
Department for Education URN | 143379 Tables |
Ofsted | Reports |
Headteacher | Philip Akerman |
Gender | Coeducational |
Age | 4to 18 |
Enrolment | 1739 |
Publication | Newsletter [1] |
Website | http://www.spwt.net/ |
St Paul's Way Trust School is a comprehensive co-educational all-through school and sixth form located in the Bow Common area of the London Borough of Tower Hamlets, England.
The School became a Foundation Trust School in March 2010. The Foundation Trust comprised Queen Mary, University of London, King's College London, University of East London, University of Warwick, Catlin Group Limited, London Borough of Tower Hamlets, and Tower Hamlets NHS. [2]
In March 2013 Ofsted described the school as outstanding in every category. [3] It commended the school for its "relentless pursuit of scholarship and excellence". [3] This follows a sustained and rapid improvement in GCSE results that ranked the school amongst the 'most improved schools in England' for 3 consecutive years. [4]
The School moved into a new building in January 2011. [5] It is a Faraday Science Specialist School, [6] which also specializes in Visual and Performing Arts. Its academic Sixth Form opened in September 2011. [7]
The school began admitting primary-age children in September 2014.
St Paul's Way Trust School converted to academy status in September 2016 and is now sponsored by the University Schools Trust.
St Paul's Way Trust School, a flagship new built school, is part of the Building Schools for the Future (BSF) program. The building's innovative design received a number of awards and nominations: [8]
Facilities, open to the community, include a public library, a theatre, and a large public sports provision.
The area surrounding the school has recently undergone a major improvement thanks to the work done by the St Paul's Way Transformation Project, of which the school is a member. [9]
The St Paul's Way Trust Research Centre has two new research laboratories, a classroom teaching space, and other flexible multi-use spaces, suitable for the development of high-level research work by VI Form students. The space is suitable for conducting undergraduate-style tasks and projects. [10]
The school operates a sixth-form provision in consortium with Bow School, Langdon Park School, and Mulberry Stepney Green Maths, Computing, and Science College. The sixth form consortium is known as Sixth Form East. [11]
The school opened as St Paul's Road School in 1873, the building being on the junction of Bow Common Lane and the then St Paul's Road; Bow Common Lane in 1900 became the border of the Poplar and Stepney Borough Councils. By the 1950s it was a "central school" using five separate locations. [12]
In the 1960s the school was merged with Millwall Central School and Southern Grove School. Millwall Central School in Glengall Grove is now the Cubitt Town Primary School and the Southern Grove School is now the borough's Professional Development Centre. The merger with the Millwall Central School meant that there were no secondary schools left on the Isle of Dogs, at a time when the Island population was increasing as a result of the building of the Samuda and St Johns Estates in Cubitt Town and the Barkantine Estate in Millwall. St Paul's Way, therefore, became the main choice of school for Islanders until the new George Green School opened in Cubitt Town in September 1975. This led to the school becoming heavily over-subscribed. [12]
A new school building at the original site commenced construction in 1966 and the new modern school opened, including a swimming pool and auditorium in September 1968. Arthur J. Davenport became the new Headmaster in September 1970, having previously been Deputy at the nearby Stepney Green Boys School. The school was divided into six houses:
The school was featured on Panorama at 8pm on Monday 21 March 1977. [13]
The next Headmaster Mike Bannister, [12] who arrived in January 1981, ended the house system with the new intake in September 1981, and introduced a dress code and a tutorial system based on year levels.[ citation needed ] The East London Advertiser remarked in 1980 on the number of pupils for whom English was a second language, around one in ten. [12] The first Bangladeshi pupils were inducted in 1982. A major HMI report in 1984/5 rated the school's social relationship with its community as "Excellent".[ citation needed ]
Looking back on her training there, the school was described by Bushra Nasir (later the Head of Plashet School) as 'incredibly tough'. [14]
Vivien Cutler was appointed Headteacher in 1988 and made it a priority to improve security as pupils felt unsafe. On leaving in 1994, she admitted that she had only been partially successful, but had at least improved conditions for female students. [15] Incidents of violence, other anti-social behavior, and gang culture at the school were reported again in 2006 when parents of pupils from the closing Homerton College of Technology in Hackney opposed transfers to St Paul's Way. [16]
Under Martyn Coles, headmaster from 1995 to 2003, the school was an early adopter of specialist schools status, being the second in the country to be awarded a specialism in visual arts in 1998 and forming a local Arts Partnership with Bow Arts Trust a local arts and education charity www.bowarts.org. [17] [18] In 2001 Coles said the school's exam results had improved markedly after this. After adopting an arts specialism, the school achieved the 6th highest results in Art GCSE nationally for 2 years in a row. [19]
In 2006 the school joined the Building Schools for the Future program to completely replace its 40-year-old building. The £41 million (approx.) construction project by Bouygues began in 2009. [12] [20] The works are within a wider "St Paul's Way Transformation Project", chaired by Lord Andrew Mawson. [21] The school took the opportunity to commission a large artwork on the hoarding, [21] [22] commissioned by Bow Arts and incorporating art by the pupils and professional artist Emily Allchurch— was described as a "crucial" touch by Sir Bob Kerslake of the Homes and Communities Agency. [23]
In 2008 the school caused controversy for firing a teacher, Adrian Swain, for wearing trainers and tracksuits in class, as these were not permitted items of clothing for students. [24] [25]
The school was also threatened with closure that year for poor results. In 2007, 2008, and 2009, fewer than 30% of pupils achieved the benchmark of 5 A* to C grades in GCSE including English and Maths, going against the trend of achieving better outcomes in Tower Hamlets as a whole. [25] [26] Ofsted noted recent improvements in March 2009, particularly since the new head's appointment, but served a Notice to Improve. [27] The Council resolved in 2009 to make it a foundation school, handing over management of the school to a new trust. [26] [28]
The school became a National Challenge Trust on 26 February 2010, attracting extra funding of £700,000 from the DCSF and bringing the expertise of Queen Mary, University of London to bear on the school's performance. [29] The Trust, named St Paul's Way Foundation, is chaired by Nigel Relph of Queen Mary and also includes representatives of the Institute of Education, University of East London and King's College London.
Ofsted inspected the school again in July 2010, and concluded that it had made "huge" improvements since the previous inspection, was providing a satisfactory education and was "securely on track to be good or even excellent." It was scored "outstanding" on some matters, including the extent to which pupils feel safe. [30]
The school will have a second specialism in science in a new "Faraday Unit". [20] [31] As of 2012 [update] , the EduBase website lists the school as having a second specialism in Applied Learning. [32]
In January 2014 the school published its intention to also educate primary-age pupils, beginning with a reception class in September 2014. [33]
London Buses is the sole public transport that provides access to the school by routes 309 (Bethnal Green-Canning Town) and 323 (Mile End-Canning Town). [34]
The Isle of Dogs is a large peninsula. It is bounded on three sides by a large meander in the River Thames in East London, England, which includes the Cubitt Town, Millwall and Canary Wharf districts. The area was historically part of the Manor, Hamlet, Parish and, for a time, the wider borough of Poplar. The name had no official status until the 1987 creation of the Isle of Dogs Neighbourhood by Tower Hamlets London Borough Council. It has been known locally as simply "the Island" since the 19th century.
Poplar is a district in East London, England and is in the London Borough of Tower Hamlets. It is an inner-city suburb located five miles (8 km) east of Charing Cross and lays on the western bank of the River Lea and is part of the London Docklands.
Stepney is an area in London, England located in the London Borough of Tower Hamlets. It is in East London and part of the East End. Stepney is no longer officially defined, and is usually used to refer to a relatively small area. However, for much of its history the place name applied to a much larger manor and parish. Stepney Green is a remnant of a larger area of Common Land formerly known as Mile End Green.
The London Borough of Tower Hamlets is a borough of London, England. Situated on the north bank of the River Thames and immediately east of the City of London, the borough spans much of the traditional East End of London and includes much of the regenerated London Docklands area. The 2019 mid-year population for the borough is estimated at 324,745.
Bromley, commonly known as Bromley-by-Bow, is a district in the London Borough of Tower Hamlets in East London, located on the western banks of the River Lea, in the Lower Lea Valley in East London.
Cubitt Town is a district on the eastern side of the Isle of Dogs in London, England. This part of the former Metropolitan Borough of Poplar was redeveloped as part of the Port of London in the 1840s and 1850s by William Cubitt, Lord Mayor of London (1860–1862), after whom it is named. It is on the east of the Isle, facing the Royal Borough of Greenwich across the River Thames. To the west is Millwall, to the east and south is Greenwich, to the northwest Canary Wharf, and to the north — across the Blue Bridge — is Blackwall. The district is situated within the Blackwall & Cubitt Town Ward of Tower Hamlets London Borough Council.
Bow is a district in East London, England and is in the London Borough of Tower Hamlets. It is an inner-city suburb located 4.6 miles (7.4 km) east of Charing Cross.
Old Ford is an area in the London Borough of Tower Hamlets that is named after the natural ford which provided a crossing of the River Lea.
Morpeth School is a comprehensive secondary school and sixth form located in Bethnal Green, London Borough of Tower Hamlets, England. The school serves nearly 1200 pupils.
Poplar and Limehouse is a constituency which was first created in 2010. It has been represented in the House of Commons of the UK Parliament since 2019 by Apsana Begum, who was elected as a Labour Party MP. However, the whip was withdrawn on 23 July 2024, as a result of her voting to scrap the two child benefit cap, and she was suspended from the Parliamentary Labour Party. Begum now sits as an Independent MP until the whip is re-established.
St. George's Catholic School is a Roman Catholic secondary school, with academy status, in Maida Vale, Westminster, London, England. The school also offers sixth form education franchised from St Thomas More Catholic School.
Harris Federation is a multi-academy trust of 52 primary and secondary academies in and around London. They are sponsored by Philip Harris.
Bow School is a comprehensive secondary school and sixth form for boys and girls, located in Bromley-by-Bow in the London Borough of Tower Hamlets, England. It has a roll of about 600 students and increasing. In September 2014 the school moved from the old site off Fairfield Road, Bow to a new site in Bromley-by-Bow a mile to the south-east by Bow Locks, in a new building designed by van Heyningen and Haward Architects. The school started accepting girls in the new school building, along with the move, into Year 7 and the numbers will grow so that by 2019, the school would have all its year groups mixed sex.
Stepney All Saints Church of England Secondary School is a Church of England voluntary aided school and sixth form located in Stepney, London, England. The last Ofsted report in October 2015 rated SJCR School as "Outstanding."
Mulberry Stepney Green Maths, Computing and Science College is a coeducational comprehensive secondary school and sixth form. It is situated in Stepney, in the heart of the historic East End of London and adjacent to the developments in Docklands, it serves the local community, which is mainly Bangladeshi in origin. It has a well-equipped library, including 300 computers and a good range of fiction and reference books/material.
Langdon Park School is a co-educational comprehensive secondary school and sixth form, located in the Poplar area of the London Borough of Tower Hamlets, England.
Bishop Challoner Catholic School is a Roman Catholic comprehensive secondary school and sixth form, located in the Shadwell area of the London Borough of Tower Hamlets, England.
George Green's School is a coeducational secondary school and sixth form, located in Cubitt Town on the Isle of Dogs in the London Borough of Tower Hamlets, England.
Harris Science Academy East London (HSAEL), formerly known as East London Science School (ELSS), is a coeducational secondary free school with specialist school status in science and language in Stratford, Bromley and Bow, in the London boroughs of Newham and Tower Hamlets. It was founded on Three Mills Island in its first temporary and current main site, the Clock Mill, by its first principal, David Perks, in 2013. The school originally planned to move to its permanent site two years after its opening, however this has yet to occur. The new building is being built by Berkeley Homes as part of its Twelvetrees Park development project and is expected to be complete sometime in 2022.