Jump to content

Avonbourne Boys' Academy

Coordinates: 50°44′20″N 1°49′38″W / 50.73896°N 1.82722°W / 50.73896; -1.82722
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Ser Amantio di Nicolao (talk | contribs) at 02:35, 2 December 2020 (add authority control). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Avonbourne Boys' Academy
Address
Map
Harewood Avenue

Bournemouth
,
Dorset
,
BH7 6NZ

England
Coordinates50°44′20″N 1°49′38″W / 50.73896°N 1.82722°W / 50.73896; -1.82722
Information
TypeAcademy
Motto"Labor Omnia Vincit"
Local authorityBournemouth, Christchurch and Poole
TrustUnited Learning
Department for Education URN147467 Tables
OfstedReports
GenderBoys
Age11 to 16
HousesMoore

Redgrave Pele

Macarthur
Colour(s)Blue/Yellow/White
Websitewww.avonbourneboysacademy.org.uk

Avonbourne Boys' Academy (previously "Harewood College" and "Portchester School") is a secondary school with academy status in Bournemouth, England, for boys aged 11 to 16. The school was located on Portchester Road, but was moved to a new site on Harewood Avenue and the former building was demolished.

Facilities

In the school, there are five technology rooms, five English rooms, seven science rooms, five IT rooms, three MFL rooms, five humanities rooms, five maths rooms and two music rooms, amongst many others. The school has also two drama studios, two halls, a library, a sports lab, a science lab, a fully equipped gym, a sports hall and music studio. There are outdoor tennis and basketball courts. The sports hall is new and is called the Roy Moore Sports Hall. It has seven badminton courts and a rock climbing wall.

School history

The school opened in January 1940 in the building previously used by Bournemouth School, which had been built in 1901. The school took its name from the site's address along Portchester Road and has always been a boys-only school. This section should be expanded significantly. Here I can only provide an insight into this from personal experience. I attended this school from 1951 - 1956. At this time it was already a secondary modern school - or perhaps a technical school. It had an unusual (unique?) capability in that it filtered off boys who had 'just failed' the 11 plus exam and provided them with a route to their taking "O" level GCE exams. This qualification was otherwise only available at grammar schools. As a result of providing this facility the headmaster was awarded a significant honor - I think the OBE though it may have been the MBE.

The school would later move to the present site along Harewood Avenue at Littledown in 1975 next to the sister school, Avonbourne School, although the Portchester Road building was also used until 1989. During the time after the school moved to Littledown, pupils attended both schools on alternate days until the "old school" at Portchester Road closed. Fenwick Court is now on the site and is named after D.r Fenwick, who was the first headmaster of Bournemouth School. The school changed its name from Portchester School to Harewood College in 2012. Additions have been added to the college in the following years and it now shares a sports hall, the Roy Moore Sports Hall, with Avonbourne that was built in 2012. Also recently, student Tom Clark became a Guinness world record holder for rowing. The 2012 World Junior and Cadet Kurash Championship was held at Harewood College's Roy Moore Sports Hall, of which a student from the school itself won a second place award.[1]

Harewood College, alongside other schools from the Avonbourne Trust, were acquired by United Learning in July 2019, with the 2 lower schools being re-branded as Avonbourne Boys' Academy (previously Harewood College) and Avonbourne Girls' Academy (previously Avonbourne School). This change also affected Avonbourne Sixth Form, which was re-branded as United Sixth Form for the start of the 2019-2020 academic year.

6th form

United Sixth Form (previously Avonbourne Sixth Form up until the trust's acquisition by United Learning), accepts students of both genders unlike both schools themselves. The 6th form has the same standards as most other 6th forms of the area. This being: 5 C-A* including English and Maths. No uniform is applied to these students.

Pupils from both the Avonbourne Boys' and Girls' Academies as well as other schools across the borough can join. The building for the 6th form was built in the grounds of Avonbourne Girls' Academy.

Following the acquisition of the trust by United Learning, the 6th form was re-branded to United Sixth Form

House system

The school has a house system based on sports personalities: Pelé, Redgrave, MacArthur and Moore. Each year group is split between the houses.

Uniform

All boys must wear black trousers, white shirt, school tie, dark blue school blazer (or tuxedo if 'School Captain' status) and black shoes. Boys are not allowed to wear any jewellery including rings, piercings or necklaces. Trainers, outside coats, hats, or 'hoodies' are not to be worn inside the school building.

Relationship with Avonbourne Girls' Academy

Avonbourne Boys' Academy shares a site with Avonbourne Girls' Academy (which also includes United Sixth Form). From the start of the 2011-12 academic year, the schools have been working more closely together. Starting in the 2019-2020 academic year, the schools became more inter-linked with shared communal areas and some subjects being held at either of the 2 academies.

Peer mediation

The school has a Peer Mediation Scheme in which students are trained to resolve arguments between other pupils.

References

  1. ^ Link Text Archived 2013-05-06 at the Wayback Machine, additional text.