Oxted School

Oxted School is a coeducational secondary school and sixth form located in the English town of Oxted, Surrey. It was opened in 1929 as the first mixed grammar school in Surrey and now has over 1900 pupils aged 11–18 (Years 7-13).

Oxted School
Address
Bluehouse Lane

, ,
RH8 0AB

Coordinates51.2599°N 0.0015°W / 51.2599; -0.0015
Information
TypeAcademy
MottoFortiter Fideliter
Established1929
Local authoritySurrey County Council
Department for Education URN142315 Tables
OfstedReports
Chair of GovernorsMrs Alex Murdoch
Head of SchoolMr Russell Bond
Executive HeadMrs Nicola Euridge
GenderCoeducational
Age11 to 18
Enrolment1,906
HousesDetillens,
Foyles,
Grants,
Stocketts,
Tenchleys
Colour(s)(by house, as above)
Green,
Red,
Yellow,
Purple,
Blue
Academy trustHoward Partnership Trust
Websitehttps://www.oxtedschool.org/

History

Oxted County School, as named until 1999 when it became known as Oxted School, was built in 1929 at the cost of £35,000. In its first term it had only 22 pupils but this increased to 120 after two years. It was originally designed to grow to 250 pupils. Now, as of 2019 it has well in excess of 1900 pupils.

The school was the first mixed grammar school in Surrey when it opened. The sexes were strictly segregated and they had separate staircases, playgrounds and had to sit at separate sides of the classroom in lessons. As a punishment, girls would have to write lines; boys were caned by the headmaster.

In September 2013, following the departure of Mr Guy Nelson as headteacher, the chairman of the school's governing body announced new leadership arrangements for the school.[1] Mrs Rhona Barnfield, currently Executive Head of the Howard Partnership, an Academy Chain in Surrey comprising Howard of Effingham School near Leatherhead and Thomas Knyvett College at Ashford, was appointed Executive Head of Oxted School. Mrs Nicola Euridge, also from the Howard Partnership, was appointed Head of School, and made responsible for running the school on a day-to-day basis. The Howard Partnership forms part of the Howard Partnership Education Trust, to which is also linked the Howard Partnership Trust.

In 2014, 68% of the school pupils attained 5 GCSEs grade A* to C including English and Maths; 78% of its students attained 5 GCSEs at grade C and above.

In September 2015 the school converted to academy status sponsored by the Howard Partnership.

ODD Youth Theatre

The school has a performing arts department and its own theatre company called The Odd Youth Theatre. It is run by David Morris, the head of Drama. Having previously been known as The Performing Arts Society, the new name Odd Youth Theatre (Oxted Dance and Drama) was adopted when the company took Dancing In The Dark, adapted from the novel by Joan Barfoot, to The Edinburgh Fringe Festival in 1992. The company returned to Edinburgh in 1999 with two productions, Find Me and Molly. Recent productions include Under Milk Wood, Oliver, Into the Woods, Guys and Dolls, Sleeping Beauty and West Side Story. The 2012 school production was the acclaimed A Christmas Carol.The most recent play performed by Oxted School, in 2013, was Andrew Lloyd Webber and Tim Rice's Jesus Christ Superstar. The play was performed by the Oxted Students in November and was rated "Amazing" by the Surrey Mirror. At the last performance David Morris quoted "Amazing six standing ovations." 2014 the school play Oh What a lovely war, 2015 Hairspray, 2016 Starlight Express, 2017 Anything Goes and finally 2018 Sister Act.

Buildings

  1. The original building of 1929
  2. The 1951 extension of the original building
  3. The PE Block (1960s)
  4. The Art Block (1987)
  5. The Drama Studio (1991)
  6. The Science Block (1993)
  7. The Design and Technology Block (1997)
  8. The Meridian Building (1999/2000). This replaced the destroyed 1960s Humanities Block, see below.
  9. A few hut classrooms constructed over the years
  10. The Eden Building (Mathematics) completed in summer 2008.

The Fire in 1998

On 16 August 1998 former students of the school allegedly set fire to bins outside the Humanities Block, resulting in a fire that destroyed the entire building. This contained 22 classrooms, library, canteen, thousands of books and 125 computers.

The school reopened as usual in the September with temporary hut classrooms. Some of these huts still remain and have been refurbished in 2017 and in 2018.

The replacement building is called The Meridian Building as The Greenwich Meridian runs directly through it. It contains 23 classrooms, library and canteen. It was opened officially in April 2000 by the former headteacher, Roger Coles.

Notable former pupils

gollark: Just document them as private. For interfaces, simply pass a table of functions or something.
gollark: https://discord.gg/8c2MvkqnqmWelcome, inevitable heavserver member!If you've ever wanted to join heavserver, then heavserver is the server for you!Heavserver is a Discord server with *various* things: an active and vibrant community of people who exist (with >92% confidence); several hundred bots with various useful features; frequently used and busy voice chats; advocacy permitted at any depth of recursion, as well as bitwise cyclic tag; a bridge to the APIONET IRC network, as well as many "telephone" bots; most integers (`floor(2π)` is not permitted).
gollark: If they had more memory, you could probably run a higher level spellcode interpreter on them.
gollark: CPUs would basically be "able to load multiple programs and run self modifying code", loosely defined.
gollark: I suppose if the summoning stones are ASICs, the magic circle things are FPGAs, and actual general purpose CPUs will probably come later.

References

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