Notre Dame High School, Norwich

Notre Dame High School and Sixth Form College
Motto Ah qu'il est bon, le bon Dieu!
Established 1738
Type Academy
Religion Roman Catholic
Headteacher Mr Brian Conway
Location Surrey Street
Norwich
Norfolk
NR1 3PB
England
52°37′22″N 1°17′48″E / 52.62284°N 1.29667°E / 52.62284; 1.29667Coordinates: 52°37′22″N 1°17′48″E / 52.62284°N 1.29667°E / 52.62284; 1.29667
DfE URN 137913 Tables
Ofsted Reports Pre-academy reports
Students 1,396, pupils
Gender Coeducational
Ages 11–18
Houses
  • Rome
  • Santiago
  • Walsingham
  • Jerusalem
Colours
  • Yellow
  • Green
  • Blue
  • Red
Website NotreNet

Notre Dame High School is a Roman Catholic secondary school and sixth form with academy status located in Norwich, England. The current Headteacher is Mr Brian Conway. The school was opened in 1864 and currently teaches around 1,400 pupils, 400 of whom are in the sixth form. The Roman Catholic Diocese of East Anglia, Norfolk County Council, and the Department for Education all support Notre Dame High School.

History

In 1889 a new wing was built to accommodate around 70 pupils, and in 1915 what is now Franchise House with adjoining land on Surrey Street, was purchased. On this land the present main building was erected and opened in 1926 when there were 238 girl pupils. A year later, the school became recognised by the Ministry of Education. In 1939 additional buildings became available for the dining hall and domestic science and in 1973 the Lady Julian Building, which had formerly housed its prep department, became part of Notre Dame High School. The prep department later became separate and is now an independent school.[1]

A major development in the school took place on 1 September 1979 when ownership of the school was transferred from the Sisters of Notre Dame de Namur to the Diocese of East Anglia, and the school's status changed from girls' direct grant grammar school to a voluntary aided mixed comprehensive school.

Since 1980, the St Peter's Building (Science & Technology completed in 1994), the St Paul's Building (Sports Hall, 1985), the St Julie's Building (Reception and Administration, 1996) and St Catherine's Building (Modern Languages, 1996) have been acquired and modernised. In 1995 the Lady Julian Building (Library, Careers, History and Sixth Form Centre) was refurbished. In 2006, the St Paul's building was extensively refurbished, providing a Drama Studio and four new classrooms for Religious Education. This allowed the old Chapel, up until then used as a Drama studio, to be refurbished and turned back into a chapel. A new building is currently being built; it is expected to be completed by the end of October 2006, and will house a Sixth Form centre, a cafeteria, a library and extensive language classrooms. The St Catherine's building will then be used for staff training. The St Mary's building, currently the cafeteria, will be demolished. The school has purchased a plot of land, once belonging to Norwich Union, for use as a playground for pupils once the new building is completed.

Mr John Pinnington became the first lay headteacher of the school in January 1997, as successor of Sister Mary Cluderay. The school was awarded specialist school status for Languages in September 2000. Since then the school has become very much involved in charity work, including a pupil visit to Phuket, Thailand by two pupils in October 2005. As well as this the school also works closely with the charity HCPT, which raises money for sick children, to take part in an annual pilgrimage to Lourdes in southwestern France.

The school also has a new teacher training building. Mr. Ed Balls, the former Education Secretary, visited the school on 19 December 2008. Following a long internal and public consultation, it was decided that the school would acquire Academy status on 1 March 2012. This move will give Notre Dame more power over finances and curriculum, as power is moved away from Norfolk County Council.[2]

Old Notre Damians

References

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