Kalpana Kalpana (Editor)

Rickmansworth School

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Established
  
1954

Headteacher
  
Keith Douglas

DfE URN
  
136606 Tables

Color
  
Green

Founded
  
1954

Type
  
Academy

Chair of Governors
  
John de Braux

Phone
  
+44 1923 773296

Number of students
  
1,277

Gender
  
Mixed-sex education

Location
  
Scots Hill Croxley Green, Rickmansworth Hertfordshire WD3 3AQ England

Address
  
Rickmansworth School, Scots Hill, Croxley Green, Hertfordshire WD3 2AQ, UK

Motto
  
Nisi Dominus Aedificaverit

Profiles

Rickmansworth school overview


Rickmansworth School (colloquially Ricky School), formerly Rickmansworth Grammar School, is a coeducational secondary school of around 1,200 pupils, situated in Croxley Green (Hertfordshire), near Rickmansworth.

Contents

Rickmansworth school staff 2012


Admissions

Rickmansworth is a day secondary school, providing education to boys and girls aged 11 to 18 of all academic abilities, although 25% of the 11+ intake are selected using tests in mathematics and verbal reasoning, with a further 10% selected for aptitude in music. Most children are admitted at 11 and there is an additional intake at 16 into the Sixth Form.

Rickmansworth is a self-governing academy school and the governing body are responsible for the employment of staff, the admission of pupils, and all aspects of the organisation and running of the School. Previously the school was a 'grant maintained school' in the 1990s, with much the same powers.

Location

The school stands in twenty-six acres of Metropolitan Green Belt woodland situated in a residential area well served by road and rail, on the south side of the A412 near the Royal Masonic School. The M25 motorway is five minutes distant by car, and Croxley and Rickmansworth Metropolitan line stations are ten- and fifteen-minute walks respectively. Watford Junction station (National Rail to London Euston) is fifteen to twenty minutes by car. The school campus was used as the location for the university in which Prof. Henry Jones, Jr. (Indiana Jones) teaches in Raiders of the Lost Ark.

Grammar school

Rickmansworth School, the fifth grammar school to be built after the war, was formally opened on 20 June 1956 by Countess Mountbatten of Burma, the first students having arrived in September 1954. In the mid-1960s it had around 950 boys and girls, and was situated in eighteen acres of land.

Comprehensive

In September 1969 the school ceased to be academically selective and became fully comprehensive. The School was maintained as a county school by the Hertfordshire local education authority until September 1990, when it was among the first schools in the country to take advantage of the opportunity offered by grant-maintained status to become a self-governing school.

In 2003 the school was designated as a specialist Arts College, with a major focus on performing arts, and in April 2008 was awarded a second specialism as in Science. The school continues with the specialisms today.

Academy

On 1 April 2011, Rickmansworth School officially converted to an academy.

2014

In 2013, it was announced that Dr Stephen Burton, who had been headmaster for over 10 years, had left the school's employment It was announced, subsequently, the existing Bushey Meads School headteacher, Mr Keith Douglas, was to become Rickmansworth's Head in January 2014.

House system

From 2007, the school house system was reorganised. Formerly students were placed randomly in houses named after ex-teachers and later in houses named after local rivers: the Chess, Colne and Gade. Previous conventions had seen the houses named Anson, Carey, Caius, and Penn and a system with houses named after ancient civilisations : Romans, Spartans, Athenians and Trojans. Then each of the seven forms in each year group belonged to a different house, each with a different colour which students were encouraged to wear on Sports Day. The houses were named after famous performers and artists in line with the school's performing arts status. The houses were Hockney, Ashton, McCartney, Elgar, Blake, Turner and Olivier. Now the houses at Rickmansworth School are named after each lake situated around the local area. Each house has 2 form groups from each year. This means that there are only 4 houses. The houses are Bury, Stocker's, Springwell and Inns.

Flora advertising campaign

On 22 May 2007, the school's 7th, 8th and 9th years participated in a Flora advertising campaign whereby a photo of the three year groups was taken to be displayed on approximately 600 billboards around the UK, with text beneath likely saying "Two thirds of them will end up with raised cholesterol."

Mitchell and Webb

The school appeared in an episode of the BBC comedy That Mitchell and Webb Look in the sketch "The Surprising Adventures of Sir Digby Chicken-Caesar", in which the heroic duo break into the house of an elderly woman, tie her up and pretend that they are visiting "Dear Auntie Marigold". They steal her television and are pursued. Ginger is beaten up. They break into Rickmansworth School and steal scientific equipment in order to make crystal meth.

Academic results

Its standing in comparison with the national average is very favourable at GCSE level and A Level. Its results at GCSE and A level are similar to a grammar school.

Notable alumni

  • Adam Godley, actor
  • Adrian Newman, Church of England bishop
  • Nick Stringer, England international and London Wasps rugby player
  • Adrian Williams, Composer and pianist
  • Rickmansworth Grammar School

  • Robert Jobbins OBE, Director of News, BBC World Service from 1996 to 2001
  • References

    Rickmansworth School Wikipedia