Impington Village College

Impington Village College

The school in 2006
Established 1939 (1939)
Type Academy
Executive Principal Rob Campbell
Principal Ryan Kelsall
Location New Road
Impington
Cambridgeshire
CB24 9LX
England
52°14′50″N 0°07′00″E / 52.2471°N 0.1166°E / 52.2471; 0.1166Coordinates: 52°14′50″N 0°07′00″E / 52.2471°N 0.1166°E / 52.2471; 0.1166
DfE number 873/4004
DfE URN 137826 Tables
Ofsted Reports
Students 1,371 as of January 2016
Gender Mixed
Ages 11–18
Website www.impington.cambs.sch.uk

Impington Village College is a mixed secondary school and sixth form located in Impington in the English county of Cambridgeshire. The buildings of 1938/9 by Walter Gropius and Maxwell Fry are Grade I listed.[1]

The school opened in 1939, two weeks after the outbreak of World War II. It was the fourth Village College to be opened in Cambridgeshire. As a village college, it was originally intended to encompass all aspects of learning in the village, and included prominent space for adult education and the First Histon Scouts, who are now based in a hut on the grounds of the college.

In 1998 the school was awarded the Sportsmark by Sport England and was also granted international school status by the British Council's central bureau for education visits and exchanges, the first of eleven schools to be designated that way. In September 1999 it built on this with a successful application to the Department of Education to become a specialist Language College.[2] The school converted to academy status in January 2013.

Building

Adult education wing of the college

Henry Morris, founder of the village college system in Cambridgeshire, employed prominent architects to design the colleges, and Impington was designed by Walter Gropius, founder of The Bauhaus School of Architecture, and his partner Maxwell Fry. It is the only example of Gropius’s work in Britain[3] and the building is now Grade I listed building. In 2014, the college received a £100,000 grant from the Heritage Lottery Fund for important repair and restoration works to the listed part of the site.[4] Work began in the August of that year.

A modern school contrasted with an old school. Colour lithograph after Abram Games, 1942.
Music students at Impington College in April 1944

House system

Starting in the 2014/15 academic year, the college introduced a house system for pastoral care in years 7-11. These houses were named after Helen Keller, Rosa Parks, Alan Turing and Raoul Wallenberg. The following year, a vertical tutoring system began, based around these houses.

Sixth Form Centre

Impington Village College has an international sixth form, educating pupils from a mix of nations and cultures. The sixth form offers both A Levels as well as the International Baccalaureate Diploma Programme. It also offers its own course called 'Ideal' which is for students with learning difficulties and teaches them essential life skills, as well as some basic qualifications.

Notable former pupils

References

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