Mascalls Academy

Mascalls Academy

Mascalls Academy, Paddock Wood
Established 1956 (1956)
Type Academy
Principal Wayne Barnett
Location Maidstone Road
Paddock Wood
Kent
TN12 6LT
England
51°10′10″N 0°23′20″E / 51.1694°N 0.3889°E / 51.1694; 0.3889Coordinates: 51°10′10″N 0°23′20″E / 51.1694°N 0.3889°E / 51.1694; 0.3889
DfE number 886/5439
DfE URN 136847 Tables
Ofsted Reports
Students 1,370 as of March 2016
Gender Mixed
Ages 11–18
Houses 4
Website mascallsacademy.org.uk

Mascalls Academy (formerly Mascalls School) is a mixed secondary school and sixth form located in Paddock Wood in the English county of Kent.[1] The school accepts pupils from Brenchley, Matfield, Capel, Collier Street, Five Oak Green, East Peckham, Horsmonden, Cranbrook Lamberhurst and Yalding, as well as Paddock Wood itself.

The school opened in 1956 and was converted to academy status in July 2011. Before becoming an academy it was a foundation school administered by Kent County Council; however, Mascalls Academy continues to co-ooperate with Kent County Council for admissions. In the Summer of 2015, Mascalls became a member of the Leigh Academies Trust and Stuart Reeves, headteacher at the time was promoted to LAT Executive Director of the West Kent cluster of Academies.

Mascalls Academy offers GCSEs, BTECs and OCR Nationals as programmes of study for pupils. Students in the sixth form have the option to study from a range of A Levels and further BTECs.[1]

Mascalls Gallery is a public art gallery which opened in 2006 on the site of Mascalls Academy. It was originally curated by Nathaniel Hepburn; in 2014 he was succeeded by Rebecca Hone. It has a frequently changing programme of exhibitions featuring national and internationally known artists.[2] These have included Henry Moore, L. S. Lowry, Graham Sutherland and Lee Miller as well as artists from Latin America, Japan and America. In 2010, Mascalls Gallery exhibited for the first time in the UK drawings by Marc Chagall for nearby Tudeley Church.[3] An exhibition of watercolour paintings by Roland Collins led to further exhibitions in London, raising the artist's profile.[4]

Notable staff

References

  1. 1 2 "Mascalls School website". Retrieved 24 November 2013.
  2. Mascalls Gallery website
  3. "Must see exhibitions for mid June". Country Life. 13 June 2013. Retrieved 2 October 2015.
  4. Andrew Lambirth. "Roland Collins obituary". the Guardian. Retrieved 2 October 2015.
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