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Chiswick School

Chiswick School /ˈtʃɪzɪk/ ⓘ is an English secondary school with academy status in Chiswick, West London. It educates more than 1,300 pupils, aged 11 to 18 years.[1]

Chiswick School

1968

R.K Hands

Laura Ellener

Mixed

11 to 18

1288

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Chiswick School News

This number includes 200 pupils studying at the upper school sixth form within the school grounds. The current headteacher is Laura Ellener.[1] The school operates a very wide curriculum, mainly focusing on Science and the Arts, and has many extracurricular activities.

Admissions[edit]

The school has a wide catchment, encompassing its native borough of Hounslow, but also areas including Kensington and Chelsea, Richmond, and Hammersmith and Fulham. As of 2004, the school's intake was almost 60 percent male, explained by the number of girls' schools nearby.[2] Half of the school's students are of minority ethnic backgrounds, and 44% are from ‘disadvantaged’ backgrounds. 50% have English as their second language.[1][3] The percentage of disadvantaged students receiving help from the pupil premium is also above average.[4]

History[edit]

Chiswick County School for Girls opened in 1916 in Burlington Lane,[5] and Chiswick County School for Boys opened in 1926 beside the girls' school.[5] Rory K. Hands was appointed head of the boys school in 1963, and in 1966, he oversaw a merger of the two institutions, to form the co-educational Chiswick County Grammar School.[6] Shortly thereafter, the Borough proposed that Hands' grammar school should be merged with two nearby secondary modern schools to form a comprehensive school,[6][7] following Circular 10/65. This amalgamation created Chiswick Comprehensive School, which opened in 1968.[5] The new school operated across two sites, with the lower school (for ages 11 to 14) occupying what had been the secondary modern school's buildings at Staveley Road, and the upper school operating on the old grammar school site at Burlington Lane.[8]


In 1973, some of the buildings at Staveley Road had to be closed as they were made of brittle high alumina cement. The school was forced to operate with a "village of huts"; Hands maintained school morale with a production of The Gondoliers by Gilbert and Sullivan.[6] He retired the headship in 1975 after suffering a series of heart attacks.[6] Dame Helen Metcalf was the school's headteacher from 1988 to 2001, providing strong and emotionally intelligent leadership.[9] Sometime after 1978 the school was renamed Chiswick Community School; the name reverted to Chiswick School when it became an academy on 1 March 2012.[10]

Official site

Official Twitter

National Archives: minutes of the School Board 1872-1903

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