Established 1951 DfE URN 136481 Tables Phone +44 1953 609000 | Principal Mr Jonathan Taylor Ages 11–18 | |
Motto Floreat Sapientia(Let Wisdom Flourish) Type AcademyDay and boarding school Location Golf Links RoadMorleyWymondhamNorfolkNR18 9SZEngland Houses Y7-Y11: Cavell Hall, Fry Hall, Kett Hall, New Hall, Peel Hall Y12-Y13: Lincoln Hall Profiles |
Wymondham college where tomorrow starts today
Wymondham College is a coeducational secondary school with academy status in Wymondham, Norfolk, England. A former grammar school, it is one of 36 state boarding schools in England and the largest of its type in the country, with up to 700 boarding places. Although boarders do not pay for their education in the same way as at an independent school, they are still required to pay for the costs of living at the school (£10,000) whereas day pupils attend the school for free. It has specialisms in technology (maths, science, ICT & Design Technology) and in modern languages. It is one of the highest performing state schools in England and Wales. In 2015 it was the top performing state school in East Anglia. In 2016 The DfE recognised the College as being in the top 100 schools nationally on each the main three measures, attainment, EBACC pass rate and Value added progress. The college was awarded world class school status in November 2015.
Contents
- Wymondham college where tomorrow starts today
- Wymondham college we can be heroes year 13 leavers video 2016
- Former Military Hospital
- Grammar schools
- Comprehensive
- Academy
- Premises
- House system
- Notable Old Wymondhamians
- Wymondham Grammar School
- References
Wymondham college we can be heroes year 13 leavers video 2016
Former Military Hospital
The School is built on the site of the Second World War USAAF 231st Station Hospital, and when the school first opened in 1951 the hospital's forty Nissen huts were used as classrooms and dormitories. It was established by Lincoln Ralphs, the chief education officer of Norfolk County Council. Brick-built accommodation began to appear in the late 1950s, but Nissen huts remained in use, principally for classrooms and storage, through to end of the 1990s. The only Nissen hut now remaining is the College chapel. A memorial garden has been created on the site of the former USAAF mortuary, which for many years was used as the school's technical drawing classroom.
Grammar schools
In 1951 there were two separate schools, Grammar and Technical, each with separate Heads. They merged in the mid-1950s after an uneasy co-existence. The school was a co-educational boarding grammar school. It was intended for academically-gifted children in remote rural areas with no grammar schools in their local area that they could attend, as well as those with parents abroad or who regularly moved around the country. It gave priority, where possible, to children from families where the parents had separated, thus possibly under financial hardship. Admissions were by examination and headmasters' reports.
In January 1958, a hoard of 881 Anglo Saxon (Edward the Elder) coins were found at the school when a drain was being dug.
In the mid-1970s, the school had 700 boarders and 750 day pupils (from the former county grammar school). By 1978 this was 1,000 day pupils as well as the 700 boarders. Margaret Thatcher visited the school in the early 1970s.
The school remained exclusively 'boarding' until the early 1970s, when it was merged with the County Grammar School, which had been hosted at Wymondham on a 'temporary' basis for the best part of ten years.
The school in the 1970s had been in a state of disrepair with an out-dated water supply and drainage system, and had an unreliable heating system (built by the USAF in 1944) in the winter and lack of insulation. Despite these problems it was still producing outstanding academic results. It was offered £250,000 in 1978 by the Labour government to address the situation, on condition that the school became a comprehensive school. The money never appeared, partly because soon after Labour lost the 1979 general election.
Comprehensive
Grammar school status was lost with the advent of comprehensive education. In the early 1990s it became a grant maintained school.
The facilities are used for external summer schools. In August 1998, seven children from London on a course run by a special needs charity were taken to the Norfolk and Norwich Hospital after being stung by a swarm of non-native Median wasps. On 9 March 1990, the Duke of Edinburgh visited the school.
Academy
In 2010 the school became an academy as part of the Academies Act 2010.
Premises
The accommodation blocks (in order of construction) are:
The grouping of Houses into Halls varied over time.
A recent major development includes a football AstroTurf pitch with floodlights, nine new classrooms, two new science laboratories (linking the old part of the science block with the newer part) and infill to Peel boarding house roof for additional dormitories. A new dining room extension includes the admin block and new staff room. Peel Hall has increased capacity with departure of the staffroom and admin to the new building.
Another recent major development is a new International Centre which was built to replace the old Language Block which was a Morgue in World War Two. The old Language block is then due to become the new administration centre. The International Centre houses Modern Foreign Languages Block and the UK office of the Model European Parliament. It was completed in June 2011.
House system
A House system was first established in 1953, with house names North, South, East and West. As the College expanded and brick-built accommodation came into use in the early 1960s, the system was revised and the Houses were given names of Cathedral towns and cities:
When mixed Houses were introduced in the early 1970s, the cathedral House names were scrapped and the Houses adopted the names of the Halls themselves. Lincoln and Peel Halls were converted to Sixth Form boarding houses in 1978, Peel Hall being further converted into a boarding house for Year Sevens in 1995.
The house system was as follows:
As of the 2010–2011 academic year, Peel started to retain some year 7 students in order to become a 'main school house'. Under the new system, the houses appear so: