Ysgol Dyffryn Conwy

Ysgol Dyffryn Conwy is a bilingual co-educational comprehensive school in the town of Llanrwst in Conwy County Borough, North Wales. The school serves the community of Llanrwst and the many surrounding villages including the rural districts of Betws-y-Coed, Dolgarrog and Cerrigydrudion. There are around 658 pupils on roll, including 137 in the sixth form, which is lower than the figures at the time of the last inspection in 2014. Most of them are bilingual. The school has recently been moved onto one expanded site which had originally housed years 7-9 only. The site of the upper school (the oldest building and site of the original grammar school) has been developed into an NHS centre.

Ysgol Dyffryn Conwy
Address
Nebo Road

, ,
LL26 0AP

Coordinates53°08′21″N 3°47′33″W
Information
MottoGyda'n gilydd allwn gyrraedd ein potensial
Together we will achieve our potential
Local authorityConwy
Department for Education URN401686 Tables
HeadteacherElan Davies (2014–2020)
Trefor Jones (2020–present)
Age11 to 18
Enrolment521 (Year 7-11)
137 (Year 12-13)
Colour(s)Maroon
Black

The headteacher of the school from 20142020 was Elan Davies, the first female headteacher of the school in 400 years.[1] The deputy head is Mr John Lloyd Roberts.

The school was founded as Llanrwst Grammar School in 1610 by Sir John Wynn, which was situated in the building of the 'upper school'. In 1960 it was renamed Ysgol Dyffryn Conwy (Conwy Valley School) to reflect the fact that the school served the wider Conwy Valley. In February 2005 the pupils were all moved to the Sodexo-owned site on Nebo Road.

Examinations

The school offers education for KS3, KS4 and Post-16 students. It offers GCSE, Entry Level examinations for KS4 and AS-level and A-level for Post-16 education. It is a Welsh Joint Education Committee accredited centre for presenting records of national achievement, using the WJEC as an examination board. This school was the first in Conwy to give Year 10 pupils a chance to get a qualification in Physical Education, without taking up the GCSE.

Notable former pupils

gollark: In any case, if you have a planned system and some new need comes up... what do you do, spend weeks updating the models and rerunning them? That is not really quick enough.
gollark: If you want to factor in each individual location's needs in some giant model, you'll run into issues like:- people lying- it would be horrifically complex
gollark: Information flow: imagine some farmer, due to some detail of their climate/environment, needs extra wood or something. But the central planning models just say "each farmer needs 100 units of wood for farming 10 units of pig"; what are they meant to do?
gollark: The incentives problems: central planners aren't really as affected by how well they do their jobs as, say, someone managing a firm, and you probably lack a way to motivate people "on the ground" as it were.
gollark: What, so you just want us to be stuck at one standard of living forever? No. Technology advances and space mining will... probably eventually happen.

References

  1. "First female headteacher in 400 years appointed to Ysgol Dyffryn Conwy". Daily Post. 2 October 2014. Retrieved 5 October 2014.


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