Therfield School | |
---|---|
Address | |
Dilston Road , , KT22 7NZ England | |
Coordinates | 51°18′22″N0°20′06″W / 51.306°N 0.335°W |
Information | |
Type | Academy |
Motto | The Best For All — Excellence, Leadership and Opportunity |
Established | 1913 |
Local authority | Surrey County Council |
Trust | South East Surrey Schools Education Trust |
Department for Education URN | 143902 Tables |
Ofsted | Reports |
Chairman of Governors | Rob Hart |
Headmaster | James Malley |
Gender | Coeducational |
Age | 11to 18 |
Enrolment | 902 as of November 2020 [update] |
Houses | Juniper, Leith, Polesden, Norbury |
Colour(s) | Green (Therfield dark and mid shades) Red (tie stripes) |
Current admissions policy | Comprehensive |
Chairman of Therfield Trust Fund | C. Garel |
Website | www |
Therfield School is a coeducational secondary school and sixth form located in Leatherhead, Surrey, England. Therfield School sixth form teaches courses of further education for students between the ages of 16 and 18 and has an arrangement of reciprocated entry criteria with three others in the county: The Ashcombe School, Warlingham School and Oxted School.
The school - then known as County Upper Mixed Senior School was founded in 1913 on a site in Kingston Road, under the headship of Mr Burgess. [1] In 1926, the Senior School took over the neighbouring site of the former County Infants' School in addition to its own as a result of expanding pupil numbers. [1]
The school was converted into a secondary school (providing education up until the age of 15, rather than 14 as the previous senior school had) under the name Leatherhead County Secondary School in 1945 as a result of the 1944 Butler Education Act. [1]
In 1953, the school began to move to its new site at Dilston Road, although pupils were taught at both sites and at the United Dairies Depot until 1976, [1] when the school was renamed Therfield School after Brian de Therfield, who was granted the land the school currently stands on as part of the Manor of Pachesam by King John in 1205. [1]
A non-fee paying school, Therfield School's funding was received predominantly via pro rata Surrey County Council annual allocation. Funding since 1981 has been enhanced by donations such as through its Charities Commission-registered Therfield School Trust Fund and successful registration or selection for pupil premiums and grants restricted to central and local government-funded schools. [2] [3] [4]
Type of funding | Therfield School (2013–14) | Surrey median | National median |
---|---|---|---|
Government grant funding per pupil | £6,034 (98%) | £5,192 | £5,720 |
Self-generated income per pupil | £132 (2%) | £193 | £141 |
In January 2017 the school converted to academy status, meaning that state-funding of the school comes directly from the Department for Education rather than the council.
Free school meals eligibility: 7% (band: low). [5]
Therfield was a Specialist Sports College September 2005 — February 2008, achieving in its view its aim "to use sport as a tool to raise the whole school attainment through the focus on pupil and staff leadership skills, for Therfield to become a centre of excellence for sport" and thereafter broadening its focus.
In the house system, each of the four houses which compete in sport and other activities may constitute a single tutor group form in a given year or may be split into two. The resultant tutor forms provide a pastoral, advice point across all activities. [6]
The proportion of pupils known to be eligible for the pupil premium funding (additional government funding for children in the care of the local authority, pupils known to be eligible for free school meals and those from service families) is below average. The proportion of disabled pupils and those with special educational needs who are supported at school action is above the national average. The proportion supported at school action plus or with a statement of special educational needs is below the national average.
The school makes arrangements for a small number of pupils in Year 10 and 11 to access alternative provision or work-related courses through ‘The Link’, a school-funded facility accommodated off site. [4]
The main facilities which are in time slots available for out-of-hours hire are:
Therfield Sixth Form takes as preferential applications from internal students. It has pre-arranged provision for 15 external pupils to commence Year 12 per year who meet entry requirements referred to in the Sixth Form Prospectus for the individual subjects or courses. Reciprocated special preference is given to an eclectic range of sixth forms in terms of individual programmes of study and vocational courses: at: the Ashcombe School, Dorking; Warlingham School, Warlingham; and Oxted School, Oxted. [8]
The Ofsted inspection of spring 2013 gave the school an overall Grade 2, Good, on the four-point scale (Outstanding/Good/Satisfactory/Inadequate). Omitting praised examples, the headline assessment of teaching was:
"Teaching has improved since the last inspection. Teaching is good in the majority of lessons and some is outstanding. Leaders and managers have challenged inadequate teaching, and skilled staff work with others to share the good practice which is in the school.
Where teaching is good or better, teachers have high expectations of pupils and encourage them to work collaboratively in pairs or small groups. They plan activities that engage and give pupils the confidence to think for themselves. As a result, relationships are supportive and this promotes pupils’ learning very effectively.
Teachers have good subject knowledge and explain clearly to pupils what they are expected to learn. They use a variety of teaching methods to engage and motivate pupils."
Country | School Name | Partner since |
---|---|---|
Germany | Willi Graf Gymnasium, München, Bavaria (Bayern) |
Education in England is overseen by the Department for Education. Local government authorities are responsible for implementing policy for public education and state-funded schools at a local level. State-funded schools may be selective grammar schools or non-selective comprehensive schools. All state schools are subject to assessment and inspection by the government department Ofsted. England also has private schools and home education; legally, parents may choose to educate their children by any suitable means.
Regent High School (RHS), formerly South Camden Community School and Sir William Collins Secondary School, is a coeducational secondary school and sixth form located in Somers Town, in the London Borough of Camden, England.
Landau Forte College Derby is an academy in Derby, England. As a secondary school and sixth form, it serves students aged 11–19 from the City of Derby and surrounding areas.
Christ's College is a grade 11 to 16 secondary school administered by the Church of England that serves the Bellfields neighbourhood of Guildford, Surrey, and England.
Acland Burghley School is a mixed comprehensive secondary school in the Tufnell Park area of the London Borough of Camden, in London, England. The school received specialist status as an Arts College in 2000 and is a part of the LaSWAP Sixth Form Consortium.
King Edward VII Academy is a large, mixed comprehensive secondary school in Gaywood Road (A148), King's Lynn, Norfolk, England with around 1,300 pupils, including about 300 in sixth form education. Prior to the school year beginning in September 1979, KES was an all-boys state grammar school.
The Commonweal School is a secondary school in the south-west of Swindon, Wiltshire, England.
Thorpe St. Andrew School is an 11 to 18 mixed secondary school in Thorpe St. Andrew on the outskirts of the city of Norwich in the English county of Norfolk.
St Peter's Catholic School, colloquially known as St Peter's, is a co-educational secondary school and sixth form located in Guildford, Surrey, England. It is a Roman Catholic school affiliated to the Diocese of Arundel and Brighton.
Fearnhill School is a mixed secondary school and sixth form located in Letchworth, Hertfordshire, England.
King Edward VI Academy is a coeducational bi-lateral secondary school and sixth form with academy status, located in Spilsby, Lincolnshire, England, for children between the ages of eleven and eighteen.
Shoeburyness High School is a coeducational secondary academy school in Southend-on-Sea, Essex. The school is larger than the average sized secondary academy, with almost 1800 students on roll. 275 of the enrolled students are in the sixth form.
Woolmer Hill School, formerly Woolmer Hill Technology College, is the main secondary school in the area of Haslemere, Surrey.
Greyfriars Catholic School is a mixed Roman Catholic secondary school with academy status, located in Cowley, Oxfordshire, England. At the end of the 2021–22 academic year, the school was renamed from St Gregory the Great Catholic School.
Thomas Knyvett College is a medium sized mixed school with Academy Converter status educating students aged 11–16 in Ashford, Surrey, England. The college is part of the Howard Schools Trust which includes the Howard of Effingham School in Effingham in the county, the schools within which are supported by an Executive Headteacher, the prototype arrangement of its kind in the United Kingdom.
The NCEA Duke's Secondary School is an 11–19 academy in Ashington, Northumberland, England. It is part of the Northumberland Church of England Trust occupying the Josephine Butler Campus of its predecessor, The Northumberland Church of England Academy, which was an all-through school spread out across six campuses in southeastern Northumberland.
Sprowston Community Academy is a coeducational secondary school located in Sprowston, Norwich, Norfolk, England.
Bideford College is a mixed secondary school and sixth form located in Bideford in the English county of Devon. The principal is Claire Ankers.
Oasis Academy Lister Park is a mixed secondary school and sixth form located in Bradford, West Yorkshire, England. The school is named after Lister Park which is located near the school campus.
UTC South Durham is a University Technical College located in Newton Aycliffe, County Durham. It opened in 2016 and caters for 14–19 year olds with an interest in science, technology, engineering, and maths. It is located on the Aycliffe Business Park site, in a purpose-built new building.