Aylesford School is a mixed-sex school comprising years 7 to 11, plus a Sixth Form for pupils in years 12 and 13. It was formerly known as Aylesford School - Sports College and locally known as Teapot Lane, is a co-educational secondary school in Kent, England. Situated in modern campus buildings in Teapot Lane, the school serves an area to the west of Maidstone.
Aylesford School | |
---|---|
Address | |
Teapot Lane , , ME20 7JU England | |
Coordinates | 51°17′57″N 0°27′54″E / 51.2992°N 0.4650°E |
Information | |
Type | Academy |
Established | c. 1940 |
Local authority | Kent County Council |
Trust | Character Education Trust |
Department for Education URN | 149319 Tables |
Ofsted | Reports |
Headteacher | Tanya Kelvie |
Gender | Co-educational |
Age | 11 to 18 |
Enrolment | 842 (2022) |
Capacity | 1000 |
Houses | Nightingale, Harvey, Pankhurst, Faraday |
Colour(s) | Blue White Yellow |
Website | www |
History
editThe school site at Teapot Lane, originally built largely by Italian prisoners of War during the 1940s, was redeveloped in 2005–2008, as part of a KCC-sponsored PFI scheme which also included two other local secondary schools, Holmesdale in Snodland, and The Malling, in East Malling, and three others elsewhere in Kent. Construction of the new school was headed by Costain. Unlike the other schools involved, space constrictions on the site meant that the new buildings had to be built over the original foundations, so a "temporary village" of classrooms was constructed on part of the site to house the majority of pupils and staff during the reconstruction period.[1]
The School achieved Specialist status as a Sports College in 2004, which ensured that a focus on sport was introduced to all aspects of the curriculum, though this specialism was later dropped in 2018.
Secretary of State for Children, Schools and Families, Ed Balls, accompanied by local MP Jonathan Shaw and officials from KCC, officially opened the new school buildings on 28 May 2008. Referring to the three local schools, the Minister said: "If we can do around the country, what we've seen in these three schools, we could really transform education in Britain."[2]
Between 2008–2012, the sixth-form was part of the Medway Valley Sixth-form Consortium - collectively known as WHAM[3] - a collaboration with Wrotham School, Holmesdale Technology College and The Malling School, which offers a wider range of A-level and equivalent courses than any one of the schools could provide individually. Aylesford has a particular strength in Business Studies provision.[4]
On 5 January 2010 it was reported that, because of severe cold weather with hard frost and snow, many pupils came to school in non-uniform winter coats, and that several were confiscated by staff. Eight pupils refused to surrender their coats and walked out of school. A number of parents protested to the school, complaining that the school uniform coat was too thin to be warm enough in extreme cold weather. The school's head teacher, Doug Lawson, defended his decision:
"We told pupils about the uniform policy and 32 coats were confiscated, but only until the end of the day. We did not tell pupils they had to go home but eight pupils decided not to hand over their coats and, supported by their parents, left the school. We will be treating this as truancy."[5][6]
Because of the restricted site at Aylesford School, it was necessary to rebuild the school largely in the same location on the site that the old buildings occupied. This required careful planning and a certain amount of disruption to both staff and pupils. When the school was housed in the old buildings, its reputation was very poor. Even with the news that new buildings were on the way, the school was still considered to be underperforming. During the rebuilding process many of the old buildings were demolished and replaced with 23 small mobile classrooms, which become known as the Learning Village. Only B block (Science), C block (Technology and Art) and M block (English, and the library) remained in use from the old school. The mobile huts were difficult to maintain in a clean and tidy manner, especially as they were often surrounded by construction work and materials, and teaching was considered very difficult. Many believe this is the reason why many teachers and pupils left. Over 40 teachers have left since 2005.[citation needed]
The School now consists of 4 Main Buildings named after famous sporting venues: Twickenham, Lords, Wembley and Wimbledon. Wimbledon - formerly known as C-Block, is the only building to remain from the old school, and has been fully refurbished. The School also boasts a large Hall with a performance stage, an indoor sports hall containing 6 badminton courts and mechanically retracting basketball nets, a separate gym with dance mirrors, gymnastics/trampoline facilities and an indoor climbing wall, an outdoor assault course and fitness area, and a Multi-Use Games Area (MUGA). Funding was being sought for an Astroturf football pitch; though these plans have now been scrapped.[citation needed] The school is also equipped with state-of-the-art ICT facilities, with over 500 desktop PCs, over 200 staff and student laptops, fixed and portable projectors, interactive whiteboards and interactive learning zones.[citation needed]
In 2007, Aylesford introduced a new structure: although most teaching and learning continues to be carried out in year-based classes, instead of pupils being in year-based tutor groups, they join small mentor groups with pupils from all years. These meet regularly to focus on removing the barriers to education, so improving pupil's behaviour and achievement levels, through generating a family-based sense of belonging.[citation needed]. From 2007 to 2016, each mentor group belongs to one of four larger groups known as 'Schools of Learning' (SoL). Schools of Learning allow for peer group mentoring to take place naturally, greater involvement for each and every child and more of a competitive atmosphere when it comes to Sports Day and similar events, as well as reducing incidents of bullying and intimidation, breaking down barriers across year groups, easing year seven pupils into secondary school education, and helping to build civil responsibilities and shared experiences for all. Each School of Learning has a Director of Learning (DoL) who acts as a mini Headteacher for that particular "School" and a dedicated Pastoral Support Manager (PSM) who deals entirely with student issues, parental contact in school hours and helps the students on a more personal level.
Headteacher | |||
---|---|---|---|
Deputy Headteacher | |||
Assistant Headteacher | |||
Red SoL | Yellow SoL | Green SoL | Blue SoL |
Red DoL | Yellow DoL | Green DoL | Blue DoL |
Red PSM | Yellow PSM | Green PSM | Blue PSM |
In 2016, Aylesford modified the organisation with the arrival of Headteacher Charlie Guthrie. Schools of Learning were renamed after famous pioneers and scientists. Pastoral Support Management changed from supporting houses to year groups.
Headteacher | |||
---|---|---|---|
Deputy Headteacher | |||
Assistant Headteacher | |||
Nightingale
(referring to Florence Nightingale) |
Harvey
(referring to William Harvey) |
Pankhurst
(referring to Emmeline Pankhurst) |
Faraday
(referring to Michael Faraday) |
Nightingale DoL | Harvey DoL | Pankhurst DoL | Faraday DoL |
Student support within the school:
Year 7 | Year 8 | Year 9 | Year 10 | Year 11 | Year 12 & 13 (Sixth Form) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Year 7 PSM | Year 8 PSM | Year 9 PSM | Year 10 PSM | Year 11 PSM | Sixth Form PSM |
On 16 March 2017, it was reported that the school allegedly prevented students from going to the toilet during class. According to social media, one pupil was excluded from the school for ‘speaking out’ about the issue. A number of parents took to social media to suggest the school was breaching their children's human rights. The school's head teacher, Tanya Kelvie, defended her decision:
"Toilet facilities are always available for all students, however due to inappropriate use by a small number of students it has become necessary to restrict access to toilet facilities during lesson times to the toilets in the Twickenham building. During break and lunch times all toilets are available. Please be assured that at no time will a student be denied necessary access to facilities."[7][8]
Previously a foundation school administered by Kent County Council,[9] in September 2022 Aylesford School converted to academy status. The school is now sponsored by the Character Education Trust.[10]
Recent Headmasters of Aylesford School
editName | Period |
---|---|
T. Kelvie | 2017 - Current |
C. Guthrie | 2015 - 2017 |
D.T. Lawson | 2006 - 2015 |
Notable people
edit- Sharon Bennett, English Illustrator, designer, artist and author
References
edit- ^ "Aylesford School - Sports College website". aylesford.kent.sch.uk. Retrieved 28 October 2015.
- ^ Kent Messenger Newspaper, 13 June 2008
- ^ http://www.whamsixthform.co.uk/WHAM-Prospectus.pdf [dead link]
- ^ WHAM Consortium Website Retrieved May 2008 [dead link]
- ^ Wardrop, Murray (5 January 2010). "Heavy snow forces hundreds of schools to close". The Daily Telegraph. London. Retrieved 5 January 2010.
- ^ Hollands, Luke (4 January 2010). "Video: Aylesford School Sports College gets tough over uniforms". Kent Online. Retrieved 3 July 2013.
- ^ "Aylesford School Sports College on Teapot Lane 'locks toilets'". Kent Online. Retrieved 30 May 2017.
- ^ "Aylesford School pupils banned from using the toilet". www.downsmail.co.uk. Retrieved 30 May 2017.
- ^ "Aylesford School - GOV.UK". get-information-schools.service.gov.uk.
- ^ "Character in our schools".