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Steyning Grammar School is a coeducational comprehensive day and boarding, senior school and sixth form, located in Steyning, West Sussex, England. The school has two lower school sites catering for Years 7 and 8. The original site was located in Church Street, Steyning, which moved to The Towers in Upper Beading in August 2022.
Colchester Royal Grammar School: Essex: Boys Cranbrook School: Kent: Mixed Dallam School ... Steyning Grammar School: West Sussex: Mixed Thomas Adams School ...
The town is home to Steyning Grammar School, now a comprehensive school of 2,500 pupils founded in the Stuart period, see above, with a sixth form comprising over 400 pupils. The school has a catchment area that extends as far as Dial Post and sometimes Worthing. It also has a primary school (400 pupils) and a pre-school.
Brantridge School, Staplefield Chalkhill Education Centre, Haywards Heath Cornfield School, Littlehampton Fordwater School, Chichester Herons Dale School, Shoreham-by-Sea ...
The Towers Convent School was a private Roman Catholic boarding and day school for girls aged 4–16 and boys up to age 11 in Upper Beeding near Steyning, West Sussex, England. The building is a French-style chateau in the semi-rural outskirts of Steyning, about 5 miles (8.0 km) north of Shoreham-by-Sea. The Tower Convent School Building
Sixth form itself isn't compulsory in England and Wales (although from 2013 onwards, people of sixth form age must remain in some form of education or training in England only; the school leaving age remains 16 in Wales); however, university entrance normally requires at least three A level qualifications and perhaps one AS level.
The Academy has a sixth form, which has been branded as W6. [14] It offers a range of subjects with a focus on performing arts, [15] mathematics, sciences and sports including a basketball academy. [16] The sixth form was graded "good" in the latest Ofsted inspection, with the increasing number of students moving on to university cited as a ...
From 1923 the Rev. W. M. Peacock started to model the school on public school lines, introducing (among other things) four houses (see below), The Horsham Grammar School Magazine (later to become The Collyerian), and a school song. By 1926 it was a single-stream school of 220 boys with a sixth form of "less than a dozen", and ten teaching staff ...