Humphrey Perkins School

Humphrey Perkins School
Motto Honeste Audax ("Honourably Bold")
Established 1717
Type Academy
Headmistress Miss Jill Walton
Founder Humphrey Perkins
Location Cotes Road
Barrow Upon Soar, Loughborough
Leicestershire
LE12 8JU
England
52°45′19″N 1°09′08″W / 52.7554°N 1.1521°W / 52.7554; -1.1521Coordinates: 52°45′19″N 1°09′08″W / 52.7554°N 1.1521°W / 52.7554; -1.1521
DfE URN 137799 Tables
Ofsted Reports
Students 902
Gender Mixed
Ages 11–16
Houses 4, Hardwick House, Chatsworth House, Kedleston House and Belvoir House
Colours Green, Purple, Red and Orange
Website Humphrey Perkins School

The Humphrey Perkins School is a secondary school with academy status which was founded in 1717 in Barrow Upon Soar, Leicestershire in England.

A Free Grammar School founded in 1717 in the will of the Barrow Upon Soar born Humphrey Perkins, rector of Holme Pierrepont, Nottinghamshire, who left money for a grammar school to be built in Barrow Upon Soar. The Humphrey Perkins Grammar School was built on an orchard near the centre of the village and opened in 1735.

In 1902 the School moved to larger premises on Cotes Road with the school's first non-clergyman Headmaster, Mr Fernsby and 33 pupils. Of these pupils 32 were boys with just one girl, Nora May Wall. In 1927 the then Headmaster Mr Keeble introduced a school uniform of black blazer, badge and ties. Examples of this uniform are still kept by the current Headmistress along with a School rugby shirt. The four houses were named after pre-eminent Leicestershire families as Beaumont, Grey, Hastings and Latimer.

In 1947 a secondary modern school was opened on the same site and in 1956 the school became a single bilateral school with approximately 500 pupils. Mr Dunn became Headmaster in 1960 and discussions began whether Humphrey Perkins or Rawlins at Quorn would be the 'Upper School' in the new two tier Leicestershire education model. In 1966 Humphrey Perkins was converted to a High School for 11- to 14-year-olds with some 1000 pupils.[1]

In September 2010 Mr Peter Nutkins joined the school as Headmaster and the school underwent a period of rapid reorganisation and development. On January 1, 2012 Humphrey Perkins became an Academy School and converted to an 11-16 that same year, taking older pupils from September 2013.

The school was inspected in 2011-12 and issued with a notice to improve after being judged inadequate.[2] Only 14 months later the school was judged as 'good' by the return OFSTED inspection as the improvements that had taken place brought about change.

Pupils within the School were given iPads to encourage creativity. The School held training events for other schools on the use of the devices in the classroom. Mr Nutkins has taken a strong stance on including creative subjects in the curriculum and is a member of the Heads for Arts national lobby group.[3]

In September 2017, the iPads were removed from the school. All pupils no longer have iPads. Staff still use them.

Miss Jill Walton is now Headmistress.

References

  1. "Humphrey Perkins School". Leicestershirevillages.com. Retrieved 21 July 2010.
  2. "Ofsted Report, 2013" (PDF). Ofsted. Retrieved 9 November 2015.
  3. "Heads For The Arts".

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.