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Carter Community School
File:Carterlogo2014.jpg
Address
Map
Blandford Close

, ,
BH15 4BQ

England
Information
TypeAcademy
MottoThe Best in Everyone
Established1946
Department for Education URN139258 Tables
OfstedReports
GenderCoeducational
Age11 to 16
Enrollment400 as of January 2014
HousesAustin Churchill Hawkins Holmes
Websitehttp://www.carter.poole.sch.uk/

Carter Community School is a mixed secondary school with academy status for 400 pupils aged 11 to 16 in Hamworthy, Poole, Dorset, England. The school serves the Hamworthy and Turlin Moor areas and pupils are taken mostly from Hamworthy and Turlin Moor Middle Schools.

History

The school opened in 1946 as Herbert Carter Secondary School which was named after Alderman Herbert Carter of Carter's tiles which was based in Hamworthy. The school was the first secondary school to be built after the Second World War in Poole on open fields at the southern end of the Hamworthy peninsula. The school has wide corridors and large classrooms which tell of its reserve purpose which was to act as a hospital should war break out again.

The school was awarded Good in an Ofsted report in November 2012.

In April 2013, the school converted to academy status as part of the United Learning group of schools.

Overview

Carter Community School is a small secondary school for students aged 11 to 16 with 400 students on roll as of January 2014. Since 2004 standards have risen considerably and GCSE results continue to improve year on year with 48% of students achieving 5A* - C grades (including maths and English) in 2012.[1] Students who attend Carter Community School currently make more progress than in any other secondary school in Poole and Bournemouth; the school is placed in the top 25% of all schools nationally (FFT -D).[citation needed] The school's most recent Ofsted inspection in 2012, judged the school to be ‘Good’ in all areas.[2] The school has had extensions such as the sports hall in 2003 and full size all-weather sports pitch.

The Leadership Team

Carter SLT May 2014
Carter SLT May 2014.

The school's leadership team is organised around key missions that are designed to drive school improvement. Each leader takes responsibility for one mission and the line management of one subject area. The missions are as follows:

Leader Role Mission Subject Link
Sam Davidson Acting Principal Every Lesson - Good or Better
Lisa Linscott Asst Principal Every Child In School, Every Child Supported SEN and Behaviour
Nicola Pitman Asst Principal Every Adult Matters CPA
Sara Buchanan Asst Principal Curriculum Fit for All Humanities & BV
Rachel Lawes Business Manager Future Planning Admin and Support

This structure allows the school leaders to contribute across the whole of the school development plan, but ensures a strong focus is given to each mission. These "golden strands" of leadership run into the subject teams who plan their own improvement around these whole school structures.

Year 7 Intake

In September 2013 Carter received students at the age of 11 for the first time. This change in age of transfer was championed by the local authority to bring Poole schools in line with most of the rest of the country. Carter has devised an innovative project based curriculum that builds other best practice from Key Stage 2 and then combines this with specialised subjects that students are so keen to study at secondary school.

Mr. Davies, Principal of Carter said "we had planned to run our project based curriculum across the whole of the year 7 week, but she we talked with our students they told us that the thing they most looked forward to about secondary school was the change to be taught specialist subjects, in specialised rooms by expert teachers. So we scaled back the project to two days a week and our students have flourished".


References

  1. ^ "GCSE league tables: Key stage 4". London: Telegraph Media group. 2010-01-13. Retrieved 2010-10-04.
  2. ^ "Ofsted Inspection Report". Office for Standards in Education, Children's Services and Skills. 2008. Retrieved 2009-09-12.[permanent dead link]