Royal Greenwich Trust School

Royal Greenwich Trust School is a free school created out of a former University Technical College which opened in the Charlton Riverside area of the Royal Borough of Greenwich in London, England in September 2013. The campus is located along the A206 near the banks of the River Thames, close to the Thames Barrier. It is adjacent to Windrush Primary School and Maryon Park.

Royal Greenwich Trust School
Address
765 Woolwich Road

,
London
,
SE7 8LJ

England
Coordinates51.4916°N 0.0413°E / 51.4916; 0.0413
Information
TypeFree school
Established2016
Department for Education URN143927 Tables
OfstedReports
PrincipalCaroline Longhurst
GenderMixed
Age11 to 19[1]
Websitehttp://www.rgtrustschool.net/

History

The college was converted from a UTC to a free school in 2016, after the UTC closed owing to low admission numbers.[2] The local authority were required to pick up the costs of converting to an 11-18 secondary school.[2]

Former University Technical College

The University of Greenwich was the university sponsor of the Royal Greenwich UTC. Other sponsors included Transport for London, Wates Group and Greenwich London Borough Council.[3] The curriculum of the UTC was structured around a series of business projects developed by the sponsors.

The UTC had an initial intake of students aged 14 and 16 (academic years 10 and 12) in 2013, and planned to expand to accommodate students aged 14 to 19 over the following two years.[4]

It specialised in engineering and construction with underpinning themes of transport and new "green" technologies.[5] Pupils aged 14 to 16 studied a compulsory core of GCSEs, as well additional GCSEs and BTECs that focused on engineering, construction and related fields.[6] Sixth form students were to have options to study A Levels, BTECs and City and Guilds qualifications which were mainly focused on scientific and technical subjects.[7]

gollark: The code/paper you find isn't going to be conveniently usable by just downloading it and copypasting it into your AI's code or something. You'll probably have to actually understand how it works, yet another unfathomable general intelligence task, figure out how it interfaces with the rest of the code or if it can even be used together at all, and possibly rewrite it entirely to fit with what you need.
gollark: "Pluck it out" is also easy to say, but it's actually even harder.
gollark: "Find useful stuff" also sounds pleasantly easy, but it's *not*. Even a human reading a repository or paper may struggle to find "useful" bits; reasoning about the relevance of a new set of information or methods for a project is a difficult general intelligence task.
gollark: I mean, "list of AI" is probably easy enough, you could just... search github using some keywords, and maybe research papers.
gollark: Just because you can describe a task in a sentence or so doesn't mean you can give a description clear and detailed enough to think about programming it.

References

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