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Shrewsbury Sixth Form College is a post-secondary co-educational sixth-form college located in Shrewsbury, the county town of Shropshire, England. The college currently has an enrolment of approximately 1,650 students, [3] generally ranging between the ages of 16 and 19. The curriculum consists of AS, A levels and a small range of BTECs.
Pages in category "Sixth form colleges in Shropshire" ... Shrewsbury Sixth Form College This page was last edited on 24 June 2017, at 12:57 (UTC). Text ...
The battalion was mobilised at the drill hall in August 1914 before being deployed to the Western Front [4] and then being disbanded in 1920. [ 3 ] After the war, a new 6th (Cheshire and Shropshire) Medium Brigade, Royal Garrison Artillery , was formed at the Armoury from the Cheshire Brigade , Royal Field Artillery , incorporating the former ...
The Shrewsbury Sixth Form College Grade II listed main building, built in 1910, as viewed from Claremont Bank. The Keystone Academy, Shrewsbury; Severndale Specialist Academy, Shrewsbury; Tuition, Medical and Behaviour Support Service, Shrewsbury; Woodlands School, Wem [1]
The college buildings on Castle Square. Ludlow College is a sixth form college situated in the heart of Ludlow , Shropshire , England. It now forms part of the Herefordshire and Ludlow College , though retains its own identity.
The school formed from Market Drayton Grammar School. From 1968 [3] [4] to 1973 the headteacher was Arthur Behenna. He sacked the 42 year old head of drama, Raymond Gregory, from his £2,200 job, for not teaching the expected syllabus, as the drama teacher wanted a more 'modern' syllabus, with 'free expression'; 200 children subsequently went on a banner-waving protest throughout the town, to ...
William Brookes School is a mixed secondary school and sixth form located in Much Wenlock in the English county of Shropshire. [1] The school is named after William Penny Brookes, a surgeon, magistrate, botanist, and educationalist from Much Wenlock especially known for inspiring the modern Olympic Games with the Wenlock Olympian Games.
The Radbrook site was home to Shropshire Technical School for Girls, founded around 1895 and later known as "Shropshire College of Domestic Science and Dairy Work" and then "Radbrook College of Agriculture". [5] [6] It amalgamated with other institutions and became a campus of Shrewsbury College of Arts and Technology.