Quarrydale Academy

Academy in Sutton-in-Ashfield, Nottinghamshire, England
53°08′08″N 1°15′59″W / 53.13560°N 1.26634°W / 53.13560; -1.26634InformationTypeAcademyDepartment for Education URN137857 TablesOfstedReportsHeadteacherT PalingGenderCoeducationalAge11 to 18Enrolment1035Websitehttp://www.quarrydale.notts.sch.uk/

Quarrydale Academy (formerly Quarrydale School) is a secondary school with academy status located in the ex-mining and textile community of Sutton in Ashfield, Nottinghamshire, England. In March 2017, Ofsted judged this to be a ‘good’ school on their 4-point scale

History

Stoneyford Road Secondary Modern School opened in 1958, as a four stream coeducational school.,[1] costing £105,000.[2] Stanton Hill School opened in September 1955, a coeducational school with 200 in 6 classrooms.

Buildings

The school has recently undergone redecoration in several areas. The science block has had its classrooms refurnished, and modernised. And other classrooms have been converted into new computer rooms. Several of the subject blocks have been moved around, with only English, P.E, Science, Technology and the sixth form building being exempted from this re-arrangement. The school is now undergoing further improvements on blocks which didn't receive redecoration.

The school has 6.9% authorised absences which is marginally above the national average. It also experiences 3% unauthorised absences which is over three times the national level. The proportion achieving five A* to C passes, including in English and mathematics, is well above average and continues to rise. Sutton Community Academy, a nearby ‘competitor’, is often shown worse than Quarrydale in the league tables and general image.[3]

Notable former pupils

  • Kris Commons,[4] retired-footballer who formerly played for Celtic F.C. and Scotland international.
  • Daniel Tompkins, vocalist of progressive metal band Tesseract
  • Steve Ogrizovic, retired goalkeeper for Coventry City F.C.
  • Peter Sansom, poet
  • Justin Walker (footballer)

References

  1. ^ Nottingham Evening Post Thursday 26 June 1952 page 1
  2. ^ Nottingham Evening Post Tuesday 3 November 1953, page 5
  3. ^ BBC education table
  4. ^ "Kris Scoops Top Award". nottinghamforest.co.uk. Nottingham Forest F.C. 1 March 2005. Archived from the original on 11 September 2012. Retrieved 30 December 2012.
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