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Stanmore College is a small college for further education in the London Borough of Harrow. It was established in 1987 as one of the borough's three tertiary colleges , originally called Elm Park College.
Park High School is a coeducational 11–18 Academy in Stanmore, London, England. It is located next to Centenary Park. [1] The school converted to academy status in 2011, having previously been a community school under the direct control of Harrow London Borough Council. The school continues to coordinate with Harrow London Borough Council for ...
Whangaparāoa College is a co-educational state secondary school on the Hibiscus Coast of New Zealand. The school has a roll of 1,779 [2] students from Years 7 to 13 (as of November 2024), including international students. Has recently updated its uniform to a smarter attire. Whangaparaoa College has course fees and charges for each class attended.
Great Stanmore Parish Council stipulated that Gordon's new station building should be of the highest quality, and so Stanmore station (later renamed Stanmore Village) was designed to resemble a small English church, complete with a spire and gargoyles. Trains were run by the London and North Western Railway (LNWR).
The college opened at the beginning of 2005, incorporating Hibiscus Coast Intermediate School. [14] It was initially called Stanmore Bay Secondary School. [15] Stanmore Bay School is a contributing primary (years 1-6) school with a decile rating of 8 [16] and a roll of 572 [13] (November 2024). The school celebrated its 25th Jubilee in 2004. [17]
Newington College is a multi-campus independent Uniting Church single-sex and co-educational early learning, primary and secondary day and boarding school for boys, located in Stanmore, an inner-western suburb of Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.
Bromley College of Further and Higher Education, trading as London South East Colleges (LSEC), is a large college of further education and higher education operating in south-east London, England. [1] It is a partner college of six of the twelve schools of the University of Greenwich.
The institution functioned as a boys' school, Newington College, and theological college. Expanding student numbers meant that more extensive premises closer to the city were required. A bequest by John Jones, of land at Stanmore, saw both institutions move to the newly fashionable inner-city suburbs. Seventy schoolboys and four theological ...