Dorothy Stringer High School

Dorothy Stringer School
Type Community school
Location Loder Road
Brighton
East Sussex
BN1 6PZ
England United Kingdom
Coordinates: 50°50′56″N 0°08′36″W / 50.84893°N 0.14341°W / 50.84893; -0.14341
Local authority Brighton and Hove
DfE URN 114580 Tables
Ofsted Reports
Staff 120
Students 1600
Gender Coeducational
Ages 11–16
Colours Black and Yellow
Website Dorothy Stringer School

Dorothy Stringer School is a secondary school located in Brighton, East Sussex, England. It has around 1,600 pupils and 120 members of staff.

Location and history

The school, named after a 19th-century Mayor of Brighton,[1] opened in 1955.[2] Dorothy Stringer is on the same campus as Balfour Primary School, Varndean Secondary School and Varndean College Sixth Form College. The campus is bounded by Surrenden Road, Loder Road, Balfour Road and Friar Crescent.

With the exception of Balfour Primary School, each of the institutions used to exist in a different educational form. Dorothy Stringer was a secondary modern school, whilst Varndean College and Varndean School were the Boys' and Girls' grammar schools respectively.

In 2003, the school was the subject of a Private Finance Initiative (PFI) program involving several other schools (including neighbouring Varndean Secondary School, Blatchington Mill School and Sixth Form College and what was the COMART College of Media and Arts) and the construction firm Jarvis. For Dorothy Stringer this involved the construction of a new sports hall and associated facilities, new music suites, art studios and some new ICT suites.

Awards and initiatives

Dorothy Stringer gained the Eco-Schools Green Flag award in 2000.[3] It was the only secondary school in Brighton to hold this award until 2013.[4] In the late 1990s, the school focused on recycling and improving the look of the school grounds. Since 2000 the 'Dorothy Stringer Environmental Partnership' has focused on increasing the bio-diversity of the grounds [5] and solar power.[6] In 2003, a dilapidated classroom building set amongst the woodland was renovated in the Brian Foster Environment Centre.[7] From this base, Dorothy Stringer has become the lead environmental school in Brighton and Hove, forming international links with St Joseph's School in Le Havre [8] for which funding from the Franco-British Council [9] was won, forming local links with neighbouring schools and, within the school, involving a large number of students in educational environmental activities.

Dorothy Stringer became a specialist sports school in 2002 despite the government abolishing specialisms in schools in 2012, sport remains an important feature of Dorothy Stringer. Pupils receive two hours of sport education a week, in line with government guideline.[10] Becoming a sports school has entailed the demolition of the sports hall and the construction of a new venue twice the size, with an additional dance studio, gym and changing rooms. As part of the school's responsibilities as a sports school, Dorothy Stringer undertakes work to promote sport in local primary schools, which is chielfy done through the JSLA and a new scheme which involves establishing and nurturing dance clubs at Brighton primary schools and organising a mass performance at the Brighton Dome.

Dorothy Stringer is also a part of the Healthy School initiative, a Partnership Promotion School,[11] a Training School, a recipient of money from the Big Lottery Fund [12] for the school newsletter, and benefits from the European Union's III A programme. Dorothy Stringer has long owned an outdoor pursuits centre near Bangor, north-west Wales. This facilities allows the school to organise many trips for its pupils and lease the building for the use of other organisations and individuals.

Academies Act 2010

On June 25, the new Conservative-Liberal coalition released details of 'Outstanding' schools that had, so far, expressed an interest in Academy status, under the Academies Act 2010. Dorothy Stringer School was one of the education establishments on this list, indicating the governors' wish to receive more information and explore all possible options.[13]

Ken Browne incident

In September 2009, it was revealed that a senior member of the school's teaching staff, Ken Browne, had been arrested in July of that year under suspicion of possessing indecent images of children. The school attempted to pre-empt scandal by first releasing information of Browne's arrest to parents via a letter, before later contacting the local paper, The Argus. Ken Browne was immediately removed from the teaching staff at the school and has since moved from the area.[14]

On 20 January 2011 Ken Browne pleaded guilty to his charges[15] and later that year was sentenced to 10 months in prison on 24 February.[16]

References

Bibliography

External links

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