Sir John Nelthorpe School

The Sir John Nelthorpe School is a secondary school and sixth form on Grammar School Road and Wrawby Road in Brigg, North Lincolnshire, England. The present school was established in 1976, and has a timeline through earlier schools to that established by Sir John Nelthorpe in 1669.

Sir John Nelthorpe School
Front View of Sir John Nelthorpe School
Address
Grammar School Road

, ,
DN20 8AA

England
Coordinates44°14′39″N 7°46′10″W
Information
TypeVoluntary controlled comprehensive
Established1669 (1669)
FounderSir John Nelthorpe
Local authorityNorth Lincolnshire
Department for Education URN118112 Tables
OfstedReports
Head teacherRobert Biglands
GenderCoeducational
Age11 to 18
Enrolment750
Chair of GovernorsE Wells
Websitehttp://www.sirjohnnelthorpe.co.uk

History

Grammar school

Sir John Nelthorpe Lower School
The Sign of the Nelthorpe Arms

The school, also referred to as SJN, was formed as a grammar school in 1669 by Sir John Nelthorpe, who was born in Brigg in 1614. He was unmarried and wanted his wealth from his estate across Lincolnshire to create a school in his name. The buildings were opened around 1680, and the Upper School Library dates from this time. New buildings were added in 1879, and the Nelthorpe family have retained strong links with the school.

The grammar school in the 1970s had around 350 boys. Brigg Girls' High School, on Wrawby Road, had around 250 girls, and became the lower school. These schools were administered until 1974 by the Lindsey Education Committee, based in Lincoln.

Comprehensive

The school became a co-educational comprehensive in 1976.

Building improvements have included a new canteen, refurbishment of the drama hall and science labs, redecoration of English classrooms and improved security. The school was one of two in Humberside LEA that had a boarding house; Bridlington School (a former grammar school) was the other. Since 1996 it has been administered by North Lincolnshire; the LEA's offices are also in Brigg.

Curriculum

The school shares the sixth form, known as the Brigg Sixth Form, with the town's other comprehensive school, The Vale Academy. This allows pupils a wider range of subjects. 'A' level results have traditionally been high, with many subjects placed in the national top 25%. School expeditions were made to Malawi in 2012, and India in 2014.[1] The school took part in a Great War research project supported by the Heritage Lottery Fund.[2] Its pupils are currently district netball and cricket champions and winners of the Magistrates Mock Trial competition.

Awards and recognition

In 2014 Ofsted rated the school Grade 2 "Good" for overall effectiveness, following a 2013 report of Grade 3 "Requires Improvement", and 2011, 2009 and 2006 of Grade 3 "Satisfactory".[3][4]

In recent years GCSE results have been consistent at over 70% A*-C. In 2015, 74% of students achieved 5 grades A* to C including English and maths, and 46% achieved the Ebacc, both figures the highest in North Lincolnshire.

Admissions

The school is for ages from 11 to 18. The Lower School is on Wrawby Road.

Partner schools

Since 1996, it has had a partnership with the Gymnasium Leoninum in Handrup, Lower Saxony (Niedersachsen) in Germany.

Notable alumni

Brigg Grammar School

Sir John Nelthorpe School

  • Duncan Heath, first-class cricketer
  • John Heath, first-class cricketer
  • John Osbourne, writer and broadcaster
  • Matt Sparrow, footballer
  • David Yelland, former editor of The Sun from 1998–2003, from 1976 to 1981.
  • Holly Mumby-Croft, British Conservative Party politician, serving as the Member of Parliament (MP) for Scunthorpe (2019-)

Brigg Girls' High School

References

  1. Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine: World Challenge India 2014. YouTube.
  2. "In the Footsteps of the Fallen on Vimeo". Archived from the original on 7 March 2016. Retrieved 22 September 2014.
  3. "Sir John Nettlethorpe School", Ofsted Report 2014.Retrieved 28 November 2018
  4. Ofsted Report 2013

Video clips

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.