Scalby School is a coeducational secondary school located in Scarborough, North Yorkshire, England. It caters for pupils aged 11–16, with around 980 on roll.
Scalby School | |
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Address | |
Fieldstead Crescent Newby , , YO12 6TH England | |
Coordinates | 54°17′38″N 0°26′06″W / 54.294°N 0.435°W |
Information | |
Type | Academy |
Established | 1942 |
Local authority | North Yorkshire |
Department for Education URN | 143288 Tables |
Ofsted | Reports |
Assistant Head teachers | Sam Adderley, Jordan Philiskirk |
Headteacher | Chris Robertson |
Deputy | Richard Davis |
Gender | Coeducational |
Age | 11 to 16 |
Enrolment | 1017 |
Colour(s) | Petrol Blue and Yellow |
Website | https://www.scalby.coastandvale.academy/ |
History
editThe school was built in 1942. In September 2002 the Department for Education and Skills (DfES) awarded the school specialist school status as a Technology College.[1][failed verification][citation needed]
In January 2009 the school started to be advised by the Outwood Grange College group of schools. A number of measures were introduced soon afterwards. In August 2009, the school achieved record results at GCSE, with some 61% achieving 5A*-C (including English and mathematics), the chief measure for English school league tables. This was a climb of 28% in one year, and placed the school top along the North Yorkshire coastal strip for raw results.[2] In the same year there was a similar 5A*-C improvement, with the results reaching 85%. Over the summer a number of rooms have been refurbished, and two extra ICT suites created. A banner celebrating the results of the 2009 Year 11 Leavers was hung on the front of the building, made up of student photographs taken at the school Prom. In the 2009 League Tables,[3] published in January 2010, it was confirmed the school was top in Scarborough for the benchmark 5A*-C including English & mathematics. The school also climbed to 9th in North Yorkshire out of 42 secondary schools for Level 2 CVA, a measure of the progress made by all students.[4][5]
In 2010 there was an increase in school performance, with 68% of students achieving at least 5 A*-C grades including English and maths, and 99% of students achieving at least 5 A*-C grades. This placed the school as the top performing in Scarborough for the second year running.[6][7] 49% of pupils achieved at least 3 A* or A grades, a rise of 20%. The school exceeded the FFTD target, a threshold for the top 25% of schools, by 10% overall, and by 8% in English and maths. The CVA score placed the school 18th in England.[citation needed]
On 5 July 2010 the school released a digital download Somewhere Over The Rainbow/Wonderful World, in an attempt to reach the charts. The song is a tribute to a young student of the school who raised over £25,000 with her friends, whilst battling against a brain tumour.[8]
In January 2011 Scalby was named the top school in Yorkshire, and 18th in England in the 2010 School League Tables using the CVA measure (Contextual value added).[9][10]
Previously a community school administered by North Yorkshire County Council, in September 2016 Scalby School converted to academy status. The school is now sponsored by the Scalby Learning Trust.
The school received a positive Ofsted inspection report in 2019 and was rated 'Good' overall.[11]
Tracking student progress
editThe school uses a reporting process known as "ATL" previously "Praising Stars" where a summary is given to pupils at the end of each half-term, as a form of report to parents. Grades are prefixed with the letter "E", standing for "Effort". These range from E1 (Outstanding) to E4 (Inadequate). The system also reports to parents whether the student is likely to reach Fischer Family Trust Band D "FFT D" targets, a common measure of progress in English schools. It is commonplace for individual year groups to have assemblies which recognize and commend students that have performed well throughout the term achieving E1s and E2s.
In many cases individual teachers also use the ATL system as a way of marking pieces of classwork.
Behaviour measures
editThe school uses a system of escalating "Consequences" as a framework for discipline, beginning with C1 and ranging through to C6 (exclusion).
Upon reaching a C4, a pupil is removed from the classroom and given an after-school detention. If the pupil chooses not attend the detention, then they are given a C5, which means isolation for one school day, in the "Consequences Room". A C6 is given if the student misbehaves in that room, resulting in a fixed term of exclusion from the school.
Pastoral care
editIn the summer of 2009 the school restructured how tutor groups were constructed, altering the way provision of pastoral care was organised. This involved a move away from the traditional horizontal (same age) structure of forms to a more progressive vertical one. The former structure saw each student belonging to a form group of around 30 pupils from their own year-group, with a teacher acting as a tutor. The new structure maintains a teacher acting each year as a tutor to the group, but the group is mixed-age with students from all years included. They are known as 'Vertical Mentor Groups' ("VMGs"). Each group therefore evolves annually, as older students leave and are replaced by new Year 7 student entering the school.
Each VMG is given the name of a country, and the countries are arranged in four continents. The continents are in different parts of the school: Africa, Asia, Americas, Australasia.
Vertical structuring has been implemented in other secondary schools, the main advantages being seen as the mixing of ages leading to an increased sense of community, allowing for pupils to share experiences, foster understanding and reduce bullying.[12] The system also complements the school curriculum, where in many cases, students in Years 9 and 10 and 11 are in the same subject mixed-age option groups.
Somewhere Over The Rainbow / Wonderful World
edit- This is about the charity song. For additional topics see Over the Rainbow (disambiguation) and Wonderful World (disambiguation)
"Somewhere Over The Rainbow/Wonderful World" | |
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Single by Scalby School Staff & Students | |
Released | 5 July 2010 |
Recorded | January – April 2010 Scalby School, Scarborough |
Venue | Scalby School |
Genre | Gospel, Pop |
Length | 4:58 |
Label | Unsigned |
Songwriter(s) | J. Morgan, Mr Tarn |
Producer(s) | J. Morgan, J. Marshall |
Music video | |
"Somewhere Over The Rainbow / Wonderful World" on YouTube |
"Somewhere Over The Rainbow/Wonderful World" is a charity and tribute song recorded by Staff and Students from Scalby School in Scarborough, North Yorkshire.[13] It is based on adaptations of well-known classics "Over The Rainbow" and "What a Wonderful World". The song was recorded and released as an online-digital download in tribute of the late Ellie-Othick Bowmaker, who died of a Brain tumor, and to raise money for Ellie's Fund, a charity set up after her death.[14] The song peaked in the top twenty on Amazon UK.[citation needed]
Music video
editA video was released along with the song on to YouTube. It features pictures of Ellie, her fundraising work, and also of the people singing in the video. As of January 2012, the video has almost 100,000 views, with many comments.[citation needed]
Release history
editRegion | Date | Format |
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Worldwide | 5 July 2010 | Digital download (iTunes & Amazon) |
Local / National Radio (UK) | ||
CD single (local-release only) |
Notable alumni
editThis article's list of alumni may not follow Wikipedia's verifiability policy. (January 2012) |
- Zoe Aldcroft - International rugby union player for England
- Ben James-Ellis - stage actor
- Joel Ross - BBC Radio 1 presenter
- Simon Slater - actor[citation needed]
- Paul Tonkinson - comedian and former presenter of The Big Breakfast
- David Sillito - BBC Media & Arts Correspondent
References
edit- ^ "Specialist Schools Home". Department for Children, Schools and Families. Archived from the original on 18 December 2008. Retrieved 6 June 2008.
- ^ "Success for Pindar and Scalby in GCSE results". Scarborough Evening News. Retrieved 17 October 2009.
- ^ "Secondary schools in North Yorkshire". BBC News Online. BBC. 15 January 2009. Retrieved 16 January 2010.
- ^ "Scarborough schools all put in a good performance". Scarborough Evening News. Retrieved 16 January 2010.
- ^ "Scarborough schools' delight at GCSE exam results". Scarborough Evening News. Retrieved 16 January 2010.
- ^ "School's celebrate students' success in GCSEs". Scarborough Evening News. Retrieved 28 August 2010.
- ^ "Students' delight over GCSEs". Scarborough Evening News. Retrieved 25 August 2010.
- ^ "Scarborough pupils record song to raise money for Ellie". Scarborough Evening News. Retrieved 26 June 2010.
- ^ "School makes great strides in league table". Scarborough Evening News. Retrieved 22 January 2011.
- ^ "Secondary schools and colleges in North Yorkshire". BBC. 12 January 2011. Retrieved 22 January 2011.
- ^ "Scalby School praised by Ofsted for 'high-quality teaching' and 'very well-behaved' pupils". The Scarborough News. 7 March 2019. Retrieved 2 April 2019.
- ^ Wymondham High School - Vertical Grouping
- ^ Popularity grows for Harrow charity single. Harrow Times.
- ^ [1] Ellie's Fund
Additional sources
edit- Chart hopes for school's song. Filey & Hunmanby Mercury.
- Ellie's record soars into charts. Scarborough Evening News.