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The following is a partial list of articles for state schools in the unitary council areas of Aberdeen City, Dundee City, City of Edinburgh and Glasgow City in Scotland, United Kingdom. You may also find Category:Schools in Scotland of use to find a particular school.
The school has two buildings, the Main Building and the Terrace Building. It also uses the nearby Wellington Church for mass assemblies at October, Christmas, Easter and Summer. The X-shaped listed Main Building, acquired in the 1930s, is the larger of the two buildings, and is where most pupils begin their studies.
The High School of Glasgow: 75.7 80.4 7 Albyn School: 73.9 58.9 8 The Glasgow Academy: 73.6 66.2 9 Stewart's Melville College: ... as recorded in The Telegraph in 2015.
Bank holidays in Scotland are determined under the Banking and Financial Dealings Act 1971 and the St Andrew's Day Bank Holiday (Scotland) Act 2007. Unlike the rest of the United Kingdom , most bank holidays are not recognised as statutory public holidays in Scotland, as most public holidays are determined by local authorities across Scotland.
Hutchesons' Grammar School is a private, co-educational day school for pupils aged 3–18 in Glasgow, Scotland. It was founded as Hutchesons' Boys' Grammar School by George Hutcheson and Thomas Hutcheson in 1641, making it the 19th oldest school in Scotland. [1] Prospective pupils must sit an entrance test and interview to gain admission.
Holidays feature a steep rise in accommodation cost, due to increased demand. The English tourism industry monitors websites that provide up-to-date school holiday information, and adjusts prices accordingly. Prices often drop by hundreds of pounds one week into the new school term. Most schools have a strict policy against school absences.
Knightswood Secondary School is a secondary school located in Knightswood in the west-end of Glasgow, Scotland. The school has a roll of approximately 1200 pupils. Knightswood is co-educational, non-selective and non-denominational, and provides education for pupils of varying backgrounds.
The school buildings were completed in 1921, [2] although the school was founded a year earlier, in 1920. [3] Headmasters include Andrew Walker (1891–1974), who led Jordanhill College School from 1936 to 1956, having earlier served from 1921 to 1932 as a mathematics and science master and - initially - the only teacher in the new secondary ...