Loreto Grammar School is located in Trafford, England. Pupils must sit an entrance exam to enter, and fulfil several other entry criteria. It is part of the worldwide Loreto community, and the Altrincham school was founded by the Sisters of Loreto in 1909. It has also assumed the status of an academy (30 August 2012) and is a specialist school for maths and science.[1]
Loreto Grammar School (Catholic grammar school) | |
---|---|
Address | |
Dunham Road , , WA14 4AH England | |
Coordinates | 53°23′18″N 2°21′26″W / 53.38824°N 2.35725°W |
Information | |
Type | Grammar school; Academy |
Motto | "Women in time to come will do much" |
Religious affiliation(s) | Roman Catholic |
Established | 1909 |
Department for Education URN | 138464 Tables |
Ofsted | Reports |
Headteacher | Jane Beever |
Gender | Girls |
Age | 11 to 18 |
Enrolment | 1053 |
Colour(s) | Navy, Burgundy, Cream and White |
Website | http://www.loretogrammar.co.uk/ |
The school's values are justice, truth, sincerity, freedom, joy, and more recently excellence and internationality.[2]
At the school there are 1050 students and 100 staff members. Loreto is also part of a bigger, worldwide community which was founded by Mary Ward and this consists of over 120 schools and 70,000 students.[3]
The 266 students of the school's sixth form are expected to support the ethos and values of the school and show the ability to follow an academic AS/A2 level course or the International Baccalaureate course.
The school was described in its 2005 Ofsted report as "outstanding with an outstanding sixth form".[4] In its next report in 2008 Ofsted remarked "This is an outstandingly effective school. It has improved substantially since the last inspection and has demonstrated excellent capacity to develop further".[5]
History
editIndependent school
editThe school was called Loreto Convent Grammar School, Bowdon, in the 1950s; the school was not a direct grant grammar school, but an independent catholic school, not a state school. Girls would attend from as far away as Warrington and Alderley Edge in the 1950s.[6] It was a Cheshire school, playing netball against teams such as Northwich County Grammar School for Girls.
Sport was emphasised, and competitions would take place against Wirral schools, then likewise in Cheshire.[7] A similar type of school today would be Alderley Edge School for Girls, a catholic girls school, or the former Culcheth Hall School.
New buildings were built in the early 1970s, costing around £250,000. The school included a prep school section. In the late 1970s Stockport council sent catholic assisted places to the school.[8] The school was called Loreto Convent Grammar School in the early 1990s. Local councils bought catholic places at the school.
State school
editIn around 1997 the school became a grant-maintained state school.
Notable former pupils
edit- Suzanne Charlton, former BBC weather presenter, daughter of Sir Bobby Charlton
- Jade Clarke, England netball captain 2020, also plays for Surrey Storm netball club
- Lucette Henderson (born c.1972) played the main character, a 16-year female fan, in the music video of Everyday Is Like Sunday by Morrissey, directed by Tim Broad, where she was picked up in a car driven by 55-year-old Billie Whitelaw with passenger 35-year-old Cheryl Murray; the video was an apparent parody of Jacques Brel Is Alive and Well and Living in Paris[9][10][11]
- Antonia Quirke, film critic, TV and radio presenter
- Anna Scaife, professor of radio astronomy at the University of Manchester, winner of the 2018 Jackson-Gwilt Medal
- Colette Stevenson (born Royton), Brookside and Coronation Street actress, married the Canadian actors Ray Jewers and Maurice Dean Wint[12][13]
- Nina Warhurst, BBC Breakfast presenter
See also
edit- Loreto Convent High School, a catholic direct grant grammar school until the late 1970s, became Loreto College, Manchester, a sixth form college
References
edit- ^ "HEAD OF CLASSICS: Information for candidates" (PDF). January 2016.
- ^ "Ethos & Values - Loreto Grammar School". www.loretogrammar.co.uk. Retrieved 4 September 2018.
- ^ "Welcome from the Headteacher - Loreto Grammar School". www.loretogrammar.co.uk. Retrieved 4 September 2018.
- ^ "Loreto Grammar School for Girls inspection report" (PDF). Ofsted. 9 December 2005. Retrieved 18 July 2007.
- ^ "Loreto Grammar School for Girls inspection report". Ofsted. 11 November 2008. Archived from the original (PDF) on 9 November 2011. Retrieved 17 March 2012.
- ^ Manchester Evening News Friday 12 October 1956, page 1
- ^ Winsford Chronicle Saturday 30 September 1961, page 3
- ^ Wilmslow Advertiser Thursday 14 December 1978, page 22
- ^ IMDb
- ^ IMDb Lucette Henderson
- ^ Manchester Evening News Saturday 2 January 1988, page 25
- ^ Manchester Evening News Thursday 23 January 1992, page 29
- ^ IMDb Colette Stevenson