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Highworth Grammar School for Girls

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Established
  
1904

Local authority
  
Kent

Motto
  
Ad caelestia sequere

Headteacher
  
Paul Danielsen

DfE URN
  
136379 Tables

Phone
  
+44 1233 624910

Highworth Grammar School for Girls

Type
  
Grammar school; Academy

Location
  
Maidstone Road Ashford Kent TN24 8UD England

Address
  
Maidstone Rd, Ashford TN24 8UD, UK

Founded
  
1904, Ashford, United Kingdom

Colors
  
Black, Yellow, White, Blue, Purple, Green, Red

Similar
  
The Norton Knatchbull School, Towers School & Sixth For, The John Wallis Church of, The North School, Ashford School

Profiles

Highworth Grammar School for Girls is a state-funded selective secondary school (grammar school) in Ashford, Kent. The school also admits boys to the sixth form. At an Ofsted inspection in June 2013, the school was rated 1 (outstanding) in all categories .

Contents

Highworth Grammar School is a selective school of over 1,307 pupils, of whom over 330 are in the Sixth Form, which admits both boys and girls. The school was established in 1904 and moved to its present site in 1928. Since that time there has been a considerable amount of rebuilding and expansion. The school gained Music Specialist Status in September 2005 and applied to convert to Academy status in 2010.

Pupils from the school were chosen to form part of a "guard of honour" for athletes at the opening ceremony of the 2012 Olympic Games, displaying artistic creations their school made to celebrate the event.

The headteacher is Mr Paul Danielsen, who has been in the role since January 2006.

History

The school was formed as the Ashford County School for Girls in 1904. It was the first state secondary school for girls in Ashford. Initially, it was housed in the Assembly Rooms but then moved to Dover Place where there were fifty pupils and three teachers. Later there was another move to a large house in Station Road. Most girls had to pay fees although some won scholarships and could attend free. Some joined the school from as young as seven years old and were taught in a separate class until they reached secondary school age when they would join other entrants for specialist subject lessons.

As the school grew, the building at Station Road was not big enough and the girls attended some lessons in the South Kent College of Technology until the school moved to its present site in 1928.

The school suffered from considerable disruption during World War II. At first it became very crowded as members of another school, the Mary Datchelor School, were evacuated to Ashford and shared the premises. Later the pupils who lived in Ashford were themselves evacuated to Burford in Oxfordshire. The girls who lived in the villages still attended the school but sometimes had to spend hours in air-raid shelters.

In 1946, following the 1944 Education Act, the school became the Ashford County Grammar School for Girls. In order to gain entry, girls now had to pass the eleven-plus examination and fee-paying was abandoned. After 1947, no girls were admitted before the age of eleven.

Numbers attending the school continued to grow and this, together with developments in the curriculum, necessitated extensive building programmes in the 1950s and 1960s. It was at this time that most of the science laboratories, the hall, gym and dining area were added as well as art studios (now history rooms) and a sixth form common room (now the food technology room).

In 1973, the Thames-side Scheme was introduced in Ashford and the school changed its name to the Highworth School for Girls. Instead of transferring from primary school at the age of eleven, girls now came at thirteen after two years in a high school and they were admitted on the basis of assessments carried out at their previous schools instead of having to pass an examination.

In 1990, the age of entry reverted to eleven. The expansion of the school that this involved led to the construction of the Kingsdown building. Numbers of new entrants also grew so the school increased to six forms of entry in the 1990s. This led to the need for the Pym building which was opened in 2000.

Notable former pupils

  • Prof Cecilia Heyes, Professor of Psychology since 2009 at the University of Oxford, and from 2000-08 at UCL
  • Penny Mallory, first woman to compete in a World Rally Car (WRC), and television presenter
  • Jan Mark, children's writer, who wrote Thunder and Lightnings in 1976
  • Ashford County Grammar School for Girls

  • Patsy Byrne, television actress
  • Former teachers

  • Linda Wybar, Headteacher since 1999 of Tunbridge Wells Girls' Grammar School (Deputy Head from 1992–99, and taught English from 1982–86)
  • References

    Highworth Grammar School for Girls Wikipedia