The Kings of Wessex School

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The Kings Of Wessex School
Established 1976
Type State school
Foundation school
Technology College
Religious affiliation Church of England
Headteacher Chris Richardson
Location Station Road
Cheddar
Somerset
England
Ofsted number 123896
Students 1185
Ages 13 to 18
Publication The Kings' Messenger
Website http://www.kowessex.co.uk
Coordinates: 51°16′30″N 2°46′43″W / 51.2750, -2.7786

The Kings of Wessex School is a coeducational comprehensive school located in Cheddar, Somerset, England. It has 1,185 students aged 13-18 (including 302 in 6th form), of both genders and all ability levels. It is run as a Church of England foundation school. It was awarded the specialist status of Technology College in 2001, enabling it to develop its IT facilities and improve courses in Science, Mathematics and Design Technology. The school has in its grounds a leisure centre and swimming pool with sports facilities that are used by its students and the pupils of other schools in the surrounding area. Its grounds also contain the ruins of an ancient Saxon palace and chapel.

The school has achieved accreditation from Investors in People, as well as Sportsmark and Artsmark awards.

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[edit] Academic performance

The school produces strong academic results. Its Key Stage 3 scores for 2005 were an aggregate percentage score of 250, compared with 225 for schools in Somerset and 217 for schools in England.[1] At GCSE level 73% of pupils achieved 5 or more A* to C grade passes, compared with 56% in Somerset and the rest of England.[2] In 2006 the measure of GCSE performance was changed to 5 or more A* to C grade passes including Mathematics and English. Using this new stricter measure the school scored 64% compared with 44.4% in Somerset and 45.8% in England.[3]

[edit] Ofsted inspections

A 2007 Ofsted report based on an inspection that took place in April 2007 concluded that the school "provides a good standard of education and has some outstanding features. As one parent rightly commented, ‘It is a school of which to be proud’". Furthermore it stated "There is a shared commitment on the part of leaders, staff and governors to raising achievement. This is an inclusive school with a number of key strengths. The school’s work in partnership with others to promote learners’ well-being is excellent. The students’ enjoyment of school is outstanding. The specialist provision for students with learning difficulties and disabilities is excellent". It did highlight some areas where the school could improve, most notably the lower achievements of boys compared with girls, and the need to promote independent learning within the classroom and outside of school. The report acknowledged that the school had made well targeted improvements since its 2002 inspection, but pointed out that "Development plans are not clear enough about how actions will be evaluated, particularly their effect on pupils’ achievement".[4]

A previous Ofsted report from 2002 found that The Kings of Wessex was a "good school with a very good sixth form" and enabled its students to do well in examinations and tests. It described the school as a "friendly, harmonious community" and praised the way students took responsibility for their own learning. Its criticisms included the complaints that religious education was not adequate for older students, and that not all students could take part in daily collective worship.[5]

[edit] History

[edit] Historic links

The school is located within a conservation area and all building work is supervised in case excavations reveal any significant archaeological finds.

The school's grounds contain the remains of a Saxon palace.[6] A wooden "great hall" was constructed around the reign of King Alfred the Great (died 899AD). It was rebuilt around 930 AD and a chapel and other buildings were added. The palace hosted the Witenagemot, an assembly of powerful figures, in AD 941, 956 and 968. The remains were excavated during the construction of the school, but have since been re-buried. The layout is marked with concrete plinths.

In January 2006 during the building of a new languages block at the school a grave, believed to be Roman, was uncovered.[7] The grave contained the skeleton of a man, believed to be around 50 years old and pagan rather than Christian due to the north-south orientation of the grave.

At least one member of staff has been found to have genetic links to stone age inhabitants of the area.[8] Scientists compared DNA taken from a 9,000 year-old skeleton known as "Cheddar Man" with that of 15 school pupils and 5 adults from Cheddar village. A match was found, appropriately enough with the school's history teacher, Adrian Targett. This is claimed to be the longest human lineage ever to be traced, and supports the theory that the Britons were descended from ancient hunter-gatherers who later turned to agriculture, rather than a from more recent wave of immigrant farmers.

The school and its grounds are also used by the Kingfisher Trust's Christian youth camps in early August each year.

[edit] Technology College status

Being in a rural area with few large local manufacturers, the school had some difficulty in raising the £54,000 of sponsorship necessary to gain Technology College status,[9] but many small donations from local employers and charities enabled it to reach the target. The headmaster claimed that the process of soliciting funds helped the school to refine its focus and gave local businesses more of a stake in the school. He also stressed that the new status of Technology College would not lead to any reduction of its strength in the arts.

[edit] Foundation status

In 2006 the school governors voted for foundation status. This was well supported despite some vocal opposition from a minority of parents in the local press. Foundation status has not changed the school's Christian ethos. It still maintains close ties with St Andrews Church in Cheddar and the vicar remains as one of the school governors.

[edit] Future

In 2006 the school opened a new languages block. In January 2008 it opened a new drama building, the Kings Theatre.[10] Unfortunately there is no prospect of government money being made available under the Building Schools for the Future initiative to rebuild the main fabric of the school within the next 10 years. The school is currently atttempting to get permission to rebuild their main entrance allowing for a two-way flow of traffic.

[edit] Controversy

In 2003, 22 children who were said to be wearing unsuitable uniforms were isolated in the school's supervised learning unit and forbidden to talk to each other.[11] Some had been wearing plain blazers purchased at supermarkets, instead of the more expensive blazers with badges available only from the school outfitters. Although parents soon complied with the regulations, they compared the measures to Dickensian strictness and formed an action committee which protested to the local education authority and to Education Secretary Charles Clarke. The headteacher justified the action, saying it had the desired effect. The schools pointed out that financial help is available for parents with modest means.

In January 2007 the school featured in TV and national newspaper reports following the punishment of a year 11 pupil for eating an apple in an area of the school where the consumption of food is forbidden. The pupil chose to ignore the 30 minute detention that he was given as punishment. As a result he was given an after school detention which he again ignored. The school then placed the pupil in the supervised learning unit for a day. The pupil's parents took the story to local TV station ITV West News, but then the story was picked up by the BBC,[12] as well as local and national newspapers.[13][14] The school defended its action and issued a press statement which said "For health and safety reasons students are only allowed to eat in designated areas (the school hall and gym). All students are aware of this rule and the consequences of not adhering to it." and "The Kings of Wessex is a high performing school and has high expectations of all students both in terms of academic work and behaviour. Kings is currently oversubscribed in all year groups. It is unfortunate this student and parents chose to escalate a relatively minor disciplinary incident by repeatedly refusing to accept the punishment." Subsequent press coverage praised the school for taking a firm stance on discipline.[15]

[edit] Alumni

Famous alumni include:

[edit] References

  1. ^ Key Stage 3 scores. DfES. Retrieved on 2007-06-03.
  2. ^ GCSE scores. DfES. Retrieved on 2007-06-03.
  3. ^ "School League Tables", BBC News, 11 Jan 2007. Retrieved on 2007-06-03. 
  4. ^ The Kings of Wessex School Inspection report (number 292830) (PDF). Ofsted (April 2007). Retrieved on 2007-06-03.
  5. ^ The Kings of Wessex School Inspection report (number 249867) (PDF). Ofsted (December 2002). Retrieved on 2007-06-03.
  6. ^ Cheddar History. Vince Russett - South West Archaeological Services. Retrieved on 2007-02-18.
  7. ^ "School dig uncovers Roman grave", BBC News, 20 January 2006. Retrieved on 2007-02-20. 
  8. ^ "DNA sample links 2 men, 9,000 years apart", CNN, 31 July 1997. Retrieved on 2007-02-18. 
  9. ^ "Specialist schools bring concerns", BBC News, 21 June 2001. Retrieved on 2007-02-18. 
  10. ^ "A new theatre fit for Kings", Cheddar Valley Gazette, 13 March 2008. Retrieved on 2008-03-28. 
  11. ^ "Pupils in cheap blazers isolated", BBC News, 8 October 2003. Retrieved on 2007-02-18. 
  12. ^ "Boy's detention after apple snack", BBC News, 18 January 2007. Retrieved on 2007-02-20. 
  13. ^ "Taking the pip?", The Weston Mercury, 25 January 2007. Retrieved on 2007-02-20. 
  14. ^ "Hardline head punishes boy for eating an apple", The Daily Mail, 17 January 2007. Retrieved on 2007-02-20. 
  15. ^ "Head wins top praise", The Weston Mercury, 1 February 2007. Retrieved on 2007-02-20. 
  16. ^ Richard Herring. MySpace. Retrieved on 2007-06-03.

[edit] External links