Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
It was a community school administered by Medway Council, however the school was converted to academy status on 1 April 2012. Walderslade Girls' School continues to coordinate with Medway Council for admissions. [4] From the summer of 2018 Walderslade Girls school joined the Skills for life trust (Greenacre Academic trust). [1]
The school was designed by Richard Sheppard, Robson & Partners, and opened in the late 1950s. [3] Medway, as a former part of Kent retains selection, so Walderslade Boys School opened as a Secondary Modern. It had the status of an 11-18 community school [4] school converted to academy status on 1 April 2012 and was renamed Greenacre Academy. [5]
Wilmington Academy is a mixed secondary school located in Wilmington, Kent in the United Kingdom. It stands next to the site of Wilmington Hall. Wilmington Academy, as of 1 November 2018, had 1225 students including 121 in Sixth Form, with 365 students in the Apollo college, 374 students in Minerva, and 365 students in Jupiter college.
The school said students have been excluded after the incident Shocking footage shows mass brawl at girls’ secondary school in Kent as Black student attacked Skip to main content
Talk: Walderslade Girls' School. ... Page information; Get shortened URL; Download QR code; Print/export Download as PDF; Printable version ...
The school was founded before World War II as the Canterbury Technical School for Girls. It shared the old hospital site on the north side of Longport, along with the equivalent for boys (which became Chaucer School) and the Technical College (which became Canterbury College). It moved across the road to the present site in 1945.
New Line Learning Academy relocated to a new building in 2010, which includes one of the largest indoor sports halls in Kent. [5] The sports hall and school playing fields are used as the home ground of the Maidstone Pumas, an American Football team currently playing in the National Division South Central Conference of the BAFA National Leagues (BAFANL).
As of 2014, 9.6% of Medway's children were reportedly homeschooled, [1] though this is a likely lower than the true figure; the data relies on the number of homeschooled children recorded by local authorities during the 2013-2014 period (it is not compulsory for homeschooled children to be registered). [1]