Glossopdale School

Glossopdale School is a secondary school in Hadfield, Derbyshire, England.

Glossopdale School
Address
Newshaw Lane

, ,
SK13 2DA

England
Coordinates53.456232°N 1.971190°W / 53.456232; -1.971190
Information
TypeCommunity school
Established1942
Local authorityDerbyshire
SpecialistArts College[1]
Department for Education URN112957 Tables
OfstedReports
PresidentMrs Debbie McGloin
ChairJ. Soboljew [2]
PrincipalDebbie McGloin
GenderMixed
Age11 to 19
Enrolment1012
Websitehttp://www.glossopdale.school

History

The school used to be the Glossop Grammar School from the 1920s, being on Talbot Road since 1959, becoming Glossop Comprehensive School in 1965 when it merged with West End Secondary Modern (on Sunlaws Street and Chadwick Street and opened in 1913 as Glossop Independent Council School), and Castle School Secondary Modern in Hadfield.

In 1989, the former Hadfield Comprehensive School on Newshaw Lane in Hadfield merged with the Glossop School to form the Glossopdale School. The Chadwick Street site is next to the St Philip Howard RC Academy (Glossop's other secondary school) on St Mary's Road.

As Glossopdale Community College, the school was awarded Specialist Performing Arts College status in September 2005, and also International Schools Status in July 2010. It is a member of the Peak 11 Learning Federation.

In 2017 Glossopdale Community College started to build a new purpose built school on the playing fields of the Hadfield site. The new building would cater for all year groups and end the split site system that operated for nearly 3 decades. The school officially opened and started accepting pupils in 2018 and this coincided with a name change for the school to Glossopdale School.

The old school buildings in Hadfield have been demolished to create new playing fields for the new school. The buildings and land associated with the Glossop site (Talbot Road, Cemetery Road and Fauval Road) have been currently mothballed.

Admissions

Until 2018, the school was spread over three sites; Hadfield, Glossop and Talbot House. The youngest students attended Hadfield site on Newshaw Lane, Hadfield. When the students moved into Year 9 they moved to Glossop Site on Talbot Road, Glossop. There was also a Sixth Form College in the historic 19th-century Talbot House, also on Talbot Road. In 2016 construction began on a new building on the Hadfield site, designed to merge all 3 previous sites into one building, which opened in 2018. The school was part of a successful pilot scheme, and subsequently offers C3 – a combined humanities curriculum – to Years 7 and 8. Glossopdale has also taken part in several teachers' television documentaries. Debbie McGloin was appointed as the headteacher in 2018, replacing Steven Playford.[1]

Specialist school status

In 2002 the school successfully applied to become a specialist Arts College.

Music department

Glossopdale Community College has a music department, which reflects the school's status as a Performing Arts College. It has a large selection of bands as well as the choirs. There is an award-winning Big Band, Wind Band, Brass Band, Samba Band, Flutz (a Flute ensemble) and Training Band. During the 1970s and 1980s particularly, Glossop School Brass Band were an internationally renowned band, producing several LPs and touring Europe and the United States.[3]

Glossopdale Community College has a choir. Over the years, the choir has performed at festivals and won awards, and also made appearances on BBC television series All the Small Things in 2008.

The Music Department takes part in a number of concert tours abroad, the most recent of which were in Paris, Salzburg, and Barcelona.

Academic performance

The school was given an overall effectiveness rating of 'Requires Improvement' in their most recent Ofsted inspection, which took place in March 2016.[2]

In 2012, 58% of pupils gained 5 A*–C GCSE grades including English and Maths, a 20% improvement over 4 years. 87% of pupils achieved 5 A*–C grades.[4] In 2016, the Progress 8 score for the school's GCSE results was -0.23; this is below the average Progress 8 for schools in England. The 2016 A-Level results had a progress score of -0.13, which is in line with the national average, and the average grade achieved was C.[5]

Notable former pupils

References

  1. "John Steps Down". Glossop Advertiser. 8 August 2008. Retrieved 30 September 2008.
  2. . Ofsted (March 2016). Retrieved 3 August 2017.
  3. Archived 21 October 2010 at the Wayback Machine, mickila.co.uk, accessed 28 September 2012
  4. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 24 July 2012. Retrieved 28 September 2012.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  5. https://www.compare-school-performance.service.gov.uk/school/112957
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.