Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Bexhill College is the direct successor of the County Schools for Boys and Girls, opened on 5 October 1926. In 1945 following the Education Act , the schools became Grammar Schools . The Boys' and Girls' County Grammar Schools merged on 26 September 1970 and became a sixth form college in 1977. [ 4 ]
Shoreham College was founded in 1852 as "New Protestant Shoreham Grammar School" by some "leading gentlemen of that town" and later renamed "Shoreham Grammar School". It was founded with the intention of educating local boys in classics, and "other branches of a liberal education" with a central focus on the Bible .
Blatchington Mill School - originally Blatchington Mill school and Sixth-form College was formed in 1979 from the amalgamation of Hove Grammar School for Boys, Knoll Boys School, and Nevill County Secondary School. [2]
The School was originally started during the reign of Henry VIII in 1512 as an All boys school.At the time there were only two forms at the time each with 14 boys. The pupils (all boys at that time) had a typically rigorous, Latin-based education fitting them for further study at the University of Oxford or at the University of Cambridge.
To change this template's initial visibility, the |state= parameter may be used: {{Schools in East Sussex | state = collapsed}} will show the template collapsed, i.e. hidden apart from its title bar. {{Schools in East Sussex | state = expanded}} will show the template expanded, i.e. fully visible.
Haywards Heath Grammar School opened on 9 September 1958, [4] being run by East Sussex Education Committee with 800 boys and girls. It became a sixth form college . Haywards Heath College was established in 1980 and offered mainly courses for 16- to 18-year-old students following on from compulsory education .
Ark Alexandra, previously known as Hastings Grammar School, William Parker School, William Parker Sports College, and later as Ark William Parker is a secondary school in Hastings, East Sussex in the United Kingdom. It was the only male single-sex secondary school in East Sussex.
Priory School then became centred on the site of the former Secondary Modern School and new buildings have since been added. The adjacent buildings formerly used by the County Grammar School for Boys and by the Sixth Form have become part of the Lewes Campus of East Sussex College (Further Education).