Carisbrooke College

Carisbrooke College
Motto Aspire and Achieve
Type Foundation school
Head Teacher Mr Peter Shaw
Chair of Governors Mr Terence Hart
Location Mountbatten Drive
Newport
Isle of Wight
PO30 5QU
EnglandEngland
Coordinates: 50°41′51″N 1°18′54″W / 50.69755°N 1.314928°W / 50.69755; -1.314928
Local authority Isle of Wight
DfE URN 136012 Tables
Ofsted Reports
Staff ~200 (full-time)
Students TBC
Gender Male / Female
Ages 11–19
Colours Blue
Website Carisbrooke College

Carisbrooke College is a foundation trust-supported secondary school in Carisbrooke on the Isle of Wight, formerly Carisbrooke High School. There are 1,360 students on roll, including 250 sixth form students who are based at the Island Innovation VI Form Campus, in the centre of Newport.

History

The forerunner of Carisbrooke College was Newport County Secondary School formed in the 1930s having combined with the pre-existing Newport Technical Institute located in Upper St James St. Newport. The original school houses were named Tennyson, Swinburn, Arnold and Faraday and the school adopted the motto - 'Turris Tutissima Virtus' (Virtue is the Safest Fortress).

On becoming a comprehensive in 1971 the school moved to the present site and its name was changed to Carisbrooke High School. It taught boys and girls from the ages of 13 to 18.

1935 Blazer Badge of Newport IW County Secondary School

As part of the reorganisation of the education system on the Isle of Wight that occurred in 2010/11, Island Innovation Trust (formerly Medina Innovation Trust), was successful in its bid against Academies Enterprise Trust and Innovative Schools to take over the school. In September 2011, the school reopened as Carisbrooke College, with the age range extended to Year 7 to Year 13 (having previously been from Year 9 upwards). It is now one of eight secondary providers on the Isle of Wight, with the school in a hard federation with Medina College.

In July 2015 Isle of Wight Council put forward proposals to close Carisbrooke College from 2016, and merged with Medina College.[1] However the plan was subsequently voted down by councillors.[2] The blazer badge to the left was from a carisbrooke grammar school blazer

Facilities

As Carisbrooke High School the school was made a Sports College. The sports facilities on site include a flood-lit multi-weather pitch, indoor sports hall, gymnasium (the 'East Gym'), extensive playing fields, basketball courts, squash courts, tennis courts, netball courts and two fitness suites. Other facilities at the school include two halls (the 'Main Hall' and the 'West Hall'), a large drama studio, ten science laboratories, extensive facilities for art and design technology, and a cafeteria.

The main school site is situated on the outskirts of Carisbrooke village and occupies an area of 24 acres. The school shares a 6th form campus with Medina College on the former Nodehill Middle School site in the centre of Newport.

Houses

The house system during the school's time as Carisbrooke High School, consisted of three houses named Citius, Altius and Fortius after the Olympic motto, reflecting the school's Sports College status. Carisbrooke is now a specialist Science College, with a focus on science and health, and so the tutor groups are now named after famous scientists. They are: Baird, Descartes, Euclid, Hahn, Kepler, Pauling, Raman, Schrödinger and Yalow.

From 2007, a vertical tutor group system was in place at Carisbrooke High School, with each tutor group made up of five to nine pupils from each year group (Year 9 to Year 11), plus two or more sixth formers from both the Upper and Lower Sixth. Each tutor group was assigned to a house. In September 2011, when the school became Carisbrooke College, it was decided that the tutor groups should be made up of pupils from a single year group, as had been the case before 2007.

Results

The school's recent exam results are listed below:[3]

Year GCSE A*-C A Level points
2010 49 719.3
2011 51 668.1
2012 36 643.4
2013 44 698.9
2014 28 661.9
2015 54[4]

Notable former pupils

Academia

Arts and Media

Business

Politics

Sport

External links

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Tuesday, April 05, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.