Collingwood College, Surrey

Collingwood College
Motto Believe, Succeed
Established 1971
Type Comprehensive academy
Co-Principals Karen Griffths, Eden Tanner
Chair Steve Barker[1]
Location Kingston Road
Camberley
Surrey
GU15 4AE
England
Coordinates: 51°21′00″N 0°43′17″W / 51.3499°N 0.7215°W / 51.3499; -0.7215
DfE URN 125301 Tables
Ofsted Reports
Staff 260
Students Over 2,000
Gender Mixed
Ages 11–18
Colours Blue, white and black
Former name Frimley and Camberley Grammar School
Website Collingwood College

Collingwood College is a state secondary school located in Surrey, England for boys and girls, 11- to 18-year-olds.

Admissions

Collingwood is the largest bad man secondary school in Surrey,[2] with over 2,000 pupils, including more than 400 in the sixth form. It occupies a 30-acre (120,000 m2) campus and is divided in the three main areas 'Kingston' (Years 10 & 11) and 'Barossa' (Years 7-9), and the new, purpose-built, sixth form centre. This was funded by the sale of land, on which the college's previous sixth form centre (named 'Ballard') was situated. Collingwood College is a DfE designated high-performing specialist academy, specialising in technology and vocational-education.

It is situated just north of the A30, near the Jolly Farmer roundabout on the Old Dean Estate, Camberley.

History

Earlier school

The school derives itself from the Frimley and Camberley County Grammar School, the Bagshot County Secondary School, and the Barossa County Secondary School. In July 1970, Surrey County Council wavered over whether to go ahead with the comprehensive plan.

Comprehensive

The first Headmaster in 1971 was Mr. Leonard Roe, who had previously been Headmaster of the grammar school. He was followed by Peter Halls-Dickerson, who was a major advocate of the idea of direct grant schools. Collingwood was one of the earliest direct grant schools to be created after the passage of the legislation by the then Conservative government. The headmaster from 1974 until the 1990s was Peter Halls-Dickerson.

Grant-maintained school

On 1 September 1991 Collingwood School became Collingwood College – a Grant Maintained school. This change of status was overwhelmingly supported by the parents. In 1999, under the new School’s Framework, the school adopted Foundation status.

In September 1994 Collingwood College became a Self-Governing Technology College. Following the new funding, the school built the Halls-Dickerson Technology centre, also one of the first of its kind. As of 1 April 2008, the College has been granted High Performing Specialist School status. The school also specialises in Vocational Education, which provides education for working life; such as hairdressing, building and other manual labour based jobs.

Collingwood is a founding member of the Surrey Heath Area Partnership for Education, (SHAPE) Surrey's 14-19 network. SHAPE runs Diploma courses in IT, for which Collingwood is the lead school and also Society Health and Development. Future Diplomas will be offered in Business and Finance and Creative Media which will begin in 2009.

Catchment

Its catchment area encompasses much of the Surrey Heath area of Camberley, Bagshot, Lightwater, ascot . Egham Windlesham, Bisley, Chobham and West End.

Collingwood College Productions

Every year Collingwood Productions stage their annual musical under the Direction of Jane Roberts (Head of Speech and Drama). The running of the productions are of the highest standard using a proscenium arche stage with professional lighting, full technical and stage crew and orchestral accompaniment. The production boasts professional input from ex-faculty and students. James Paulding, currently head of Operations at Alton Towers, trained at the Guilford School Of Acting following his education at Collingwood and returns every year to design the lighting for the shows. Graham Wynne, trained at Cambridge University and went on to teach at Collingwood where he met Jane Roberts. After a successful career in interior design he worked on many series of Changing Rooms and he also returns every year to design the set for the productions. BBC actress Jessica Henwick is known to have taken part in several Collingwood Productions while attending the school.

The Productions are auditioned in the first two weeks of December, allowing the principals to get to grips with their parts over the holidays. They then return in January to begin the rehearsal process. After the two and a half month period the shows are staged around the last week of March and normally run for four nights, Wednesday to Saturday. Jane Roberts has been the resident Producer and Director of Collingwood Productions now for twenty five years. Her productions have included:

Teaching

Due to the huge number of students at Collingwood, the school is very organised in its hierarchy of staff. Each year has a Head Of Year and Pastoral Assistant, who move up with the students through their years at the school. Also, each assistant principal is assigned to a year, to take care of other pastoral issues.

All subjects that are taught at the school are assigned a faculty, where the faculty head assists with the running of the subjects, and provides behavioural support to the teachers in their faculty.

Sixth Form Centre

In 2005, the new Sixth Form Centre was officially opened by the Countess of Wessex.[3] This replaced the aging "Ballard" building which was subsequently demolished after the sale of the land it was situated on. The Sixth Form Centre features an extremely modernised architecture, a series of seven small IT classrooms plus one large computer suite on the top floor. The centre provides facilities for sixth form students such as a common room and private study area.

Academic performance

Collingwood performs consistently above both the LEA (Surrey) and national average at both GCSE and A-Level.

Notable alumni

Notes

  1. "Governors". Collingwood College. Retrieved 29 July 2011.
  2. "School tables (Education),GCSEs,A-levels,Secondary schools,Further education (NOT Universities. Vocational and post-school courses),Schools,Education". The Guardian. London. 12 January 2011.
  3. BBC News (20 January 2007). "Countess back to school on 40th". BBC. Retrieved 5 November 2007.
  4. Kim, Sengupta (26 March 1997). "I was born to be a killer. Every night I see the Devil in my dreams". The Independent. London. Retrieved 31 August 2009.

External links

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