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St Alban's RC Primary School, Cambridge; St Andrew's CE Primary School, Soham; St Anne's CE Primary School, Godmanchester; St Helen's Primary School, Bluntisham; St Johns CE Primary School, Huntingdon; St Laurence RC Primary School, Cambridge; St Luke's CE Primary School, Cambridge; St Mary's CE Primary School, St Neots; St Matthew's Primary ...
Chesterton Community College is a coeducational secondary school with academy status, located in Chesterton, Cambridge, in the county of Cambridgeshire, England.It was established in 1935 as two separate schools for boys and girls, which merged in 1974 to form a mixed comprehensive school and adult centre.
Cambridge Academy for Science and Technology; Cambridge Centre for Christianity Worldwide; Cambridge International School, Cambridge; Cambridge Muslim College; Cambridgeshire High School for Boys; Chesterton Community College; Coleridge Community College
Chesterton is a suburb in the northeast corner of Cambridge, in the Cambridge district, in the county of Cambridgeshire, England, 2 miles (3.2 km) north of Cambridge station, on the north bank of the River Cam.
In 1615, the will of Stephen Perse included a bequest of land for the establishment of what was then described as a Grammar Free School, in Cambridge. It became The Perse School and was originally reserved for boys. It developed along separate lines and operates as a separate organization today, providing coeducational education from ages 3 to ...
The school was built as Manor School around 1959 based on a design by the architects W. Doig and M.R. Francis and, at that time, was a flagship school in Cambridge City. The school was named after Manor Farm which was in the area and was owned by Cambridgeshire County Council, who bought the farm in 1909 from the Benson family of Chesterton hall.
An Ofsted report in 2011 gave Orton Wistow primary school a rating of "Good." [29] An Ofsted report in 2013 for Matley Primary school rated the school as "Requires Improvement." [30] The nearest secondary school is located 1.4 miles away from the village and is called Ormiston Bushfield Academy. The school is for children aged 11–19 years old ...
The school was created by architects Marks Barfield, designers of the London Eye, and is circular in shape enclosing a central courtyard.Drawing inspiration from Mandy Swann's book Creating learning without limits, the school encompasses a "learning street", a central space that runs between the classrooms that themselves open directly onto the space without the need for doors. [5]