enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Joseph Leckie Academy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joseph_Leckie_Academy

    In 2009 the school was judged Good. [9] After becoming an academy, the school was again judged Good in 2013. [10] then in 2017 the school was judged as Requires Improvement due to crumbling buildings known as the South and West blocks one of which the South Block has recently been demolished and replaced by the brand new KWB2 block. And finally ...

  3. Pelsall Comprehensive School - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pelsall_Comprehensive_School

    Pelsall Comprehensive School was a secondary school located in Pelsall, an area of the Metropolitan Borough of Walsall in the West Midlands of England.. It opened in September 1963 as Pelsall Secondary Modern (serving pupils aged 11 upwards), becoming a 13–18 comprehensive school in September 1972 under a local reorganisation of education by Aldridge-Brownhills council, which would be ...

  4. Walsall Academy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Walsall_Academy

    In its first year of opening, there were 421 applicants for the 168 (raised to 192 due to demand) places on offer for Year 7 students. The number was subsequently reduced back to 168. In 2009,it was the fifth-highest-ranking secondary school overall (and the second-highest-ranking state comprehensive) in the borough with 61% of GCSE students ...

  5. West Walsall E-ACT Academy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/West_Walsall_E-ACT_Academy

    E-ACT West Walsall Academy (WWA, formerly Alumwell Business and Enterprise College) is an 11–18 mixed secondary school and sixth form with academy status in Walsall, West Midlands, England. It was a community school that was established in 1971 and had Business and Enterprise College status since September 2003.

  6. Blue Coat Church of England Academy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blue_Coat_Church_of...

    A bluecoat school was founded in Walsall towards the end of the 17th century, to provide children of poor families with an education free of charge. The school had (and still has) strong connections to St Matthews Church in Walsall, [2] where private contributors and collections funded the school in the early days.

  7. Park Hall - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Park_Hall

    Pearman-Smith was Walsall's mayor from 1899 to 1902. [1] [2] Park Hall was demolished in the 1950s. [3] Park Hall primary school [clarification needed] was opened on the site of the hall in 1970. It outgrew its original building, so a junior school, which was used as a community centre until 2013, known as Park Hall Community Centre, was built ...

  8. Pelsall - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heath_End,_Walsall

    The transfer age was reduced to 11 in September 1986 under Walsall's reorganisation of education in the former Aldridge-Brownhills area but falling pupil numbers led to its closure in July 1994. [31] The old Pelsall Comprehensive buildings are now home to Rushall JMI School, Education Walsall offices, and a teacher training centre.

  9. Grace Academy, Darlaston - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grace_Academy,_Darlaston

    Grace Academy Darlaston is a non-selective co-educational secondary school located in Walsall, England. It was formerly Darlaston Community Science College which had been placed into special measures by OFSTED in January 2008 and failed to raise standards in the allotted time. As a result, it was converted into an Academy on 1 September 2009 ...