Sponsored Links
-->

Sunday, February 11, 2018

Sports hall Athletics | Mayfield School
src: mayfield.portsmouth.sch.uk

Mayfield School is a mixed all-through school for pupils ages 4 to 16. It is located in Mayfield Road, North End, Portsmouth.

Mayfield School is the largest state school in Portsmouth.

The majority of the school building retains its original 1930s architectural style, with wooden door panels and wooden tile flooring; other parts of the school feature later stylised corridors.

The school adopted a house system in 2011, which became a vertical tutor system and more house orientated in 2013, replacing year group tutor system. The houses are:

A house cup, taking achievement points, house competitions, sports day, and other events, into a house competition, was also introduced in 2013 the results from this are:

Mayfield were the first school in portsmouth to introduce the house system, with most schools following.

A new building is in the process of being planned with plan to start construction in June 2018 with it opening 2020, with the current building with the 1930s architecture being demolished after the new building is finished.

The school is surrounded, on all sides by 1930s built residential housing. £22 million of public funding has been allocated under the Government's Priority School Building Programme. The option to build a new school and demolish the existing 1930s built school was selected, in preference to refurbishing the existing school, by the school's administration, on the grounds that it will be less disruptive to the pupils (there is ample room on the school fields for temporary classrooms), as well as not being cost effective to renovate the existing building The school is suffering from overdue major maintenance but was modified recently, using public funding and considered suitable for the through school education system. The basic school structure is sound however the corridors consistently leak with water damage becoming more of a problem in classrooms as well.

The current headteacher is David Jeapes (2010-present).


Video Mayfield School, Portsmouth



History

Grammar school

The school is located in the buildings of the former Portsmouth Northern Grammar School for Boys and Portsmouth Northern Grammar School for Girls, which were opened in 1932. (The boys school had begun as the Northern Secondary School in Kingston in 1921). After wartime evacuation, the two secondary schools were re-established in 1946 as a result of the 1944 Education Act. The boys' school housed approximately 550 boys in 1970 and was run by the City of Portsmouth Education Committee.

Comprehensive

In 1975 the two schools were amalgamated with Brunel School (boys) and North End Modern Girls' School to form the largest comprehensive school in Portsmouth, with approximately 1800 pupils. The roll was later reduced by the setting up of Portsmouth's Sixth Form College with the school losing its sixth form.

In 1999, the school was failing academically and was placed in "special measures" after an Ofsted inspection said it was failing to provide an acceptable standard of education. By 2001 the school was facing another crisis--this time a staff problem, as the school had 12 vacancies due to long-term sickness and unfilled positions. Training new teachers became a priority and the school introduced a new graduate teacher programme and created a new teacher training room. With a series of new teachers and new coaching programmes the school has experienced a slight increase in academic achievement, with a 4% rise in GCSE achievement in 2004, compared with 2003.

In 2005, 150 students of the school launched a protest against the deportation of a fellow student, Lorin Sulaiman, who had previously immigrated from Syria in 2003 after fearing for her safety.

Since 2005, the school reintroduced the prefect system with Deputy and Head Boy and Girl.

In 2007, the school received the Special Performing Arts Status after raising £50,000. The school spent the money on a new Dance/Drama Studio. The director of this status was Mr Gary Appleton who was the Head of Drama and Director of School Productions. During the summer of 2008 a Dance Studio was built under the specialist status, replacing the schools old 'small gym'.

All-through

In September 2014 the school opened an infant and junior section of the school meaning that pupils can attend from the age of 4 to 16.


Maps Mayfield School, Portsmouth



School productions

  • 2003 Oh What a Lovely War
  • 2004 A Midsummer Nights Dream
  • 2005 Romeo and Juliet
  • 2006 Oliver!
  • 2007 Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat
  • 2008 The Boy Friend
  • 2009 Sweet Charity
  • 2010 Sweeney Todd
  • 2011 Alice in Wonderland
  • 2012 The Wizard of Oz
  • 2013 Beauty and the Beast (Cancelled)
  • 2014 (No school production)
  • 2015 Into the Woods
  • 2015 Grease
  • 2016 Oliver!
  • 2017 Little Shop Of Horrors

Mayfield School pupils receive Wilkie Scholarship to attend PGS
src: www.pgs.org.uk


Studio 1 productions

Studio 1 productions are a new type of production within Mayfield School. Since becoming an arts college, the Drama Studio 1 has become renowned as an auditorium for smaller scale productions other than the main ones. So far these have been:

  • 2007 Find Me!
  • 2008 Piano Recital
  • 2008 Macbeth
  • 2009 The Lion, The Witch and The Wardrobe
  • 2010 The Tempest

Sports hall Athletics | Mayfield School
src: mayfield.portsmouth.sch.uk


Notable former pupils

Northern Grammar School for Boys

  • John Armitt CBE, Chief Executive from 1997-2001 of Costain Group, from 2001-2 of Railtrack, and from 2002-7 of Network Rail, and Chairman since 2007 of the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC) and Olympic Delivery Authority
  • Rear-Admiral Gordon Bridle CB MBE, Project Manager of the Sea Dart and Sea Slug (the Navy's first surface-to-air missile - SAM)
  • James Callaghan, Baron Callaghan of Cardiff, the UK Prime Minister from 1976 to 1979, completed his secondary education at the former (now Mayfield) Northern Secondary School in 1926.
  • Sir Barry Cunliffe CBE, an eminent archaeologist, Professor of European Archaeology from 1972-2007 at the University of Oxford, and President from 1976-9 of the Council for British Archaeology and from 1991-5 of the Society of Antiquaries of London
  • Sir Roger Fry (educationist) CBE. Founder King's Group 1981. Chairman (1996-2011) and President from 2011 Council of British International Schools.
  • Mike Donkin, former BBC world affairs correspondent
  • Maj-Gen Brian Pennicott CVO, Colonel Commandant from 1991-6 of the Royal Artillery
  • Sir John Pestell, Chief Adjudicator on Immigration Appeals from 1970-87 at Heathrow Airport
  • Prof Kenneth Rawson, Professor and Head of Department of Design and Technology from 1983-9 at Brunel University, Professor of Naval Architecture from 1972-77 at University College London, and Chief Naval Architect from 1979-83 at the MoD
  • Harold Robinson OBE, aeronautical engineer, Head of the Avionics Department from 1965-9 of the Royal Aircraft Establishment, President from 1982-3 of the Whitworth Society, and Project Leader of Hawker Siddeley Dynamics' Blue Streak ballistic missile and showed how the Black Knight (rocket) could be converted into the Black Arrow in 1963
  • Brian Slade, President since 2002 of the Shipbuilders and Shiprepairers Association, and Director General from 1986-91 of Defence Contracts at the MoD
  • John Tribe, leader of the NASA propulsion group (engines) for the Apollo and Space Shuttle projects, including the Apollo 11 moon landing
  • David Tuffin, President from 2007-8 of the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors (RICS)

Mayfield School Jarrow St Bedes Girls Pine Street. - YouTube
src: i.ytimg.com


See also

  • Mayfield High School (London) in Dagenham
  • The Portsmouth Grammar School - independent school, and former direct grant grammar school

GCSE results 17 | Mayfield School
src: mayfield.portsmouth.sch.uk


References


King Edward VI School, Southampton - Wikipedia
src: upload.wikimedia.org


External links

  • Mayfield School Website
  • Mayfield School League Tables, BBC News
  • EduBase

Source of the article : Wikipedia

Comments
0 Comments