Temple Moor High School

Temple Moor High School
Motto "Novae mentis templa colimus"
Established 1956
Type Foundation school
Head Master Mr Matthew West
Location Field End Grove
Selby Road

Leeds
West Yorkshire
LS15 0PT
England
53°47′48″N 1°27′41″W / 53.79654°N 1.46139°W / 53.79654; -1.46139Coordinates: 53°47′48″N 1°27′41″W / 53.79654°N 1.46139°W / 53.79654; -1.46139
Local authority City of Leeds
DfE URN 108064 Tables
Ofsted Reports
Students 1,240
Gender Mixed
Ages 11–16
Publication Tempo (School Magazine/Newsletter)
Website www.tmhs.co.uk

Temple Moor High School is a coeducational secondary school and sixth form located in Leeds, West Yorkshire, England. In recent years, it has received 'Science College' status.[1] In 2017 an Ofsted inspection gave the school a Good rating.

History

The school was founded in 1956 as Temple Moor Grammar School, a status it retained until 1973. At its inception, the school was male-only. This approach was abandoned as times changed, and the school is currently a mixed gender institution (1992). The school was associated with notable local families, most credibly the DeLacy family, who are recognised in the Temple Newsam area.

The school was built on several old mine shafts, possibly related to the coal mines at Temple Newsam. The mines were only recently rediscovered when constructing the new school building.

On 16 May 2007 construction workers punctured a chlorine tank whilst demolishing the school's disused swimming pool, forcing evacuation of the school.[2]

Temple Moor is the first Leeds school ever to reach the Carnegie Champion Schools Final in its 30-year history.

Admissions

The School is oversubscribed,[3] and currently has a roll of around 1,240 pupils.

Temple Moor local feeder primary schools are: Temple Newsam Halton Primary School, Crossgates Primary School, Whitkirk Primary School, Colton Primary School, St. Peters Primary School and Austhorpe Primary School.

Ofsted

In its 2013 Ofsted inspection the school was rated as Grade 2 (Good), and this was also the school's rating in its 2017 Ofsted inspection.[4] In recent years, at least 95% of students have achieved GCSE/GNVQs.

House system

The school's original houses were based on names of local historical families: Manston (red), Scargill (white), Smeaton (yellow) and Irwin (purple). The DeLacy family is associated with Temple Newsam, an estate and country house situated nearby, from which the school derived its name and its Templar Cross emblem.

The House System was reintroduced in 2006-2007 - as part of the school's 50 year anniversary - with the houses named after stars appropriate to the school's Science College specialist status:

HouseColour
Rigel     Purple
Capella     Yellow
Sirius     Silver
Vega     Red

Pupils' ties included house colours.

From September 2017 the house system is being scrapped. There are now no houses, resulting in a slight uniform change.

Former Students

Dr Ian McCormick (Academic Author and Professor, University of Northampton)[5]

Jonathan Michael Caine, Baron Caine of Temple Newsam[6]

Dr Mark Taylor-Batty, Senior Lecturer in Theatre Studies, University of Leeds.[7]

Nigel Botterill, Business Writer and Entrepreneur.[8]

References

  1. "Hollywood Park Combined Nursery Centre". Ofsted. Archived from the original on 4 December 2007. Retrieved 19 December 2006.
  2. "'Deadly' gas leak at high school". BBC News. 16 May 2007. Retrieved 16 May 2007.
  3. "Limited choice for Whitkirk families over alternative school places". Crossgates Today. 7 September 2007. Retrieved 11 September 2007.
  4. "Temple Moor High School Science College" (PDF). Ofsted. 2013. Retrieved 12 November 2013.
  5. https://leeds.academia.edu/DrIanMcCormick
  6. Kane, Alex (11 October 2014). "Profile: Jonathan Caine - Theresa Villiers' right hand man". Belfast Telegraph. Retrieved 24 April 2018.
  7. https://www.leeds.ac.uk/arts/profile/20040/458/mark_taylor-batty
  8. https://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/businessclub/business-club-video/marketing-and-communications-se/8438109/Entrepreneurs-Circle.html
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