Elmgreen School

The Elmgreen School is a coeducational secondary school and sixth form located in the West Norwood area of the London Borough of Lambeth, England. It was the first Parent Promoted secondary school to be created in the UK under the School Standards and Framework Act 1998.

Elmgreen School
Address
Elmcourt Road

, ,
SE27 9BZ

Coordinates51.4388°N 0.1028°W / 51.4388; -0.1028
Information
TypeVoluntary controlled school
MottoWe look after ourselves, We look after each other, We look after our school, We look after our community.
Established2007
FounderParent Promoters Foundation
Local authorityLambeth
Department for Education URN129649 Tables
OfstedReports
HeadteacherDominic Bergin [1]
GenderMixed
Age11 to 18
Enrolment1200
HousesSzabo, Besant, James, Wilberforce
Colour(s)Green
Websitehttp://www.the-elmgreen-school.org.uk

History

The school was created to address a major shortfall in the number of secondary school places in the London Borough of Lambeth. Following a public consultation in October 2003, a group of 40 parents formed The Parent Promoters Foundation (PPF). Working in partnership with Lambeth Local Authority, the PPF successfully campaigned to raise the necessary £25 million funding via the Building Schools for the Future programme.

The PPF worked with DfES ministers, educationalist's and the local authority to write the formal proposals and design the ethos for the school. Formal approval by the Schools Organisation Committee was given in July 2005 to establish a mixed non-denominational school for 1100 students to open in September 2007.

A governing body with a parental majority was formed in October 2005, and they appointed Asma Mansuri as the first headteacher of The Elmgreen School in February 2006.

The first year intake of 180 students spent two years in an Ellis Williams Architects-redesigned Victorian primary school in Gipsy Road, West Norwood which was originally built for the 1875 establishment of a London School Board school[2] known as Gipsy Road School. The buildings on Gipsy Road were originally designed to hold a large number of pupils (up to 1000).[2] However, this was pushed to the limits when in 1958 Norwood School for Girls was established as a secondary school for girls aged between 11 and 16 by the London County Council[3] and housed on the same site. Norwood School for Girls began moving to a new site in 1971,[4] and the site was eventually completely taken over by a school for younger pupils once again, which would for many years be known as Norwood Park Primary School. This school was closed in 2002 due to falling numbers and the site was then used as the temporary home for Crown Lane Primary School whilst that school's buildings were rebuilt. When Crown Lane Primary School moved back to Crown Lane the buildings became vacant, ready for the redevelopment to prepare them for The Elmgreen School's occupancy. With the relocation of The Elmgreen School to its permanent site in 2009, Gipsy Road became part of the Kingswood School Foundation.

In July 2010 former Elmgreen Deputy Head John Wilkinson was appointed as Headteacher. The library and learning resource centre was renamed 'The Mansuri Library' after his predecessor. John Wilkinson left the school in April 2014, and Dominic Bergin was appointed as Headteacher.

Buildings

Working with local community, primary school children and The Sorrell Foundation, the PPF carried out extensive consultation on the architectural brief for the new school, and following a closed competition the architects Scott Brownrigg and David Adjaye Associates were selected to design the school. Construction began in February 2008 by Carillion and was completed in September 2009. The location is on Elmcourt Road in West Norwood on a site formerly occupied by the Elm Court School, a school for Special Educational Needs.

Elm Court School moved to the redeveloped Strand Centre (the buildings of the former Strand School) on Elm Park in Tulse Hill. Thus, Elmgreen School is located on Elmcourt Road whilst Elm Court School is located on Elm Park.[5]

gollark: Sometimes they are really bad at "calculating an approximation of truth".
gollark: I mean, they're possibly things which would have worked better at propagating humans' genes or whatever in the "ancestral environment" where we evolved than... the alternative.
gollark: Or, er, "optimize for these goals".
gollark: Well, you can convert that to a single goal of "do these goals in priority order".
gollark: "Rational" implies we have some sort of clear goal and are trying to optimize for that.

References

  1. http://www.the-elmgreen-school.org.uk
  2. 1895 Kelly's London County Suburbs Directory (Southern Suburbs)
  3. London County Council, (1962), Secondary Schools in Bermondsey, Lambeth and Southwark, Division 8, page 13
  4. Jean Lawrence, Margaret Tucker, Mary Scott, George Varnava, (1988), Norwood Was a Difficult School: A Case Study of Education Change, page 114, Nelson Thornes (Publishers) Ltd
  5. Lambeth Planning Applications Committee, Case 06/02778/RG3 The Strand Centre, (2006), (Lambeth Planning)
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