Emmanuel College, Gateshead

Emmanuel College
Established 1991
Type City Technology College
Principal Mr J Winch
Location Consett Road, Lobley Hill
Gateshead
Tyne and Wear
NE11 0AN
England
Local authority Gateshead
DfE URN 108420
Ofsted Reports
Students 1,229[1]
Gender Co-educational
Houses Romans, Corinthians and Galatians
Alumni Old Emmanuellians
Website www.emmanuelctc.org.uk

Emmanuel College is a secondary school based in Gateshead, England. It was founded in 1990 as a City Technology College, i.e. a secondary school which is partly funded by donations from business donors who remain involved in management of the college. Emmanuel now instructs up to 1,250 students aged between 11 and 19, and has over 120 staff working on the purpose-built site. It is part of the Emmanuel Schools Foundation and in each of its four Ofsted inspections it has achieved a status of "Outstanding School".[2]

Students come from a wide variety of socio-economic backgrounds but predominantly from the inner-city areas within Gateshead and Central and West Newcastle upon Tyne.[3]

Contents

Intake policy

The college was described by The Guardian in 2002 as achieving "consistently outstanding academic results", having received a "glowing" Ofsted report.[4]

By law, the school must admit pupils of mixed ability, according to a normal distribution representative of the whole population. In common with other City Technology Colleges, Emmanuel College uses non-verbal reasoning tests set and marked by the National Foundation for Educational Research, a leading independent research organisation, to assess general intelligence, as opposed to prowess in literacy or mathematics. After marking, the NFER places test results into nine separate categories, and informs the school how many are to be taken from each category.[3]

Another condition is that two thirds of places are given to students considered to be from the most socio-economically deprived wards within its catchment area, with the other third coming from other areas of the catchment area, ensuring a mix not only academically but socially too.[3]

In terms of Sixth Form admission, the reduced number of places available (130) are first offered to the school's own Year 11 students, but others are invited to apply for places should any become available.[3]

Controversy

The school was at the centre of a storm of protests from scientists and educationalists when it was revealed that some members of the management team, including both the principal and the head of science,[5] were sympathetic to Young Earth creationism and had allowed its hall to be rented by Answers in Genesis, an organisation which promotes such views. This led to allegations by Richard Dawkins, John Polkinghorne, and others in 2002 that the school taught creationism in science lessons.[4][6][5]

However, after re-inspecting the material used to teach science at Emmanuel College, Ofsted decided that the matter did not need to be pursued further.[7] The next Ofsted inspection in 2006 described the school as 'Outstanding' and found no problem with its science provision.[8]

Some allegations centred on the school's Head of Science Steven Layfield who had in 2000, prior to his taking up the post, publicly advocated the teaching of Intelligent Design in schools.[9] Layfield was at some point a director of creationist body Truth in Science, but resigned from its board in 2006 to underscore the separation between his private views and the school's teaching of science.[10]

Concerns have also been expressed that students may be made to listen to Christian beliefs to the exclusion of other views on religion. However, other faiths are also studied in Religious Education, a compulsory subject for each student up to GCSE, mainly Judaism and Islam which can be studied through the "largely biblically based" syllabus.[11][4]

Notable Alumni

References

External links