The Ellen Wilkinson School for Girls
The Ellen Wilkinson School for girls | |
---|---|
Address | |
Queen's Drive , , W3 0HW England | |
Coordinates | 51°31′01″N 0°17′11″W / 51.517064°N 0.286493°W |
Information | |
Type | Foundation school |
Established | 1974 |
Local authority | Ealing |
Department for Education URN | 101941 Tables |
Ofsted | Reports |
Head teacher | R Kruger |
Gender | Girls |
Age | 11 to 19 |
Enrolment | 1410 |
Former name | Ealing Grammar School for Girls |
Website | www |
The Ellen Wilkinson School for Girls is a comprehensive, foundation secondary school for 1400 girls aged 11–19 years, located in the London borough of Ealing. The school is named after Ellen Wilkinson, one of the first female MPs in Britain, and the first female Minister for Education. It is near North Ealing tube station and West Acton tube station.
History
[edit]Grammar school
[edit]It was known as Ealing County [Grammar] School for Girls.
Comprehensive
[edit]It became the Ellen Wilkinson School for Girls in 1974, a comprehensive school, from three schools – St Ann's Secondary Modern, the Wood End and The Grange schools.[citation needed] In April 1992 it became a grant-maintained school. In 1999 it became a foundation school.
Academic
[edit]The current Headteacher is Ms R Kruger, who became head teacher in 2014, succeeding Ms C Sydenham.
It was awarded beacon status by the government in recognition of its academic excellence, and as a result became a specialist school for Science and Mathematics.[citation needed] The school has raised standards consistently over the past five years (improving 5A*-C GCSE passes from 58% in 2003 to 76% in 2010, with 6th Form results consistently in the top 15% nationally) and currently appears in The Good Schools Guide, where it is described as 'Ealing's top performing non-selective school'.[citation needed] As a high-performing Specialist School, the school was awarded Training School status.
GCSE results consistently outstrip national averages, and in 2010 A Level results showed the fourth highest average points score (735) of Ealing schools, the second highest of the non-selective schools in the borough.[citation needed]
In 2012 the school was rated by the Department for Education as one of the 'top 100 schools in the country', when measured by how much value is added from Key Stage 2 to Key Stage 4.[citation needed]
The school was the first in the country to receive the SSAT Gold Award for Cultural Diversity.[citation needed]
Buildings
[edit]In 2023, the school was one of those identified as having buildings that could be structurally unsound because reinforced autoclaved aerated concrete (RAAC) had been used in their construction. The areas out of action are the science blocks, the hall, canteen and old gym. However, works are undergoing to prop these up so will be safe for use soon.[1]
Notable former pupils
[edit]This article's list of alumni may not follow Wikipedia's verifiability policy. (September 2023) |
- Tina Daheley - journalist, newsreader and presenter
Ealing Grammar School for Girls
[edit]- Shirley Becke OBE - police officer
- Honor Blackman - actress
- Julie Carter, Ealing MP
- Tina Daheley - BBC reporter
- Leonie Elliott - actor
- Dame Wendy Hall CBE - Professor of Computer Science since 1994 at the University of Southampton
- Maxine Nightingale - singer
- Gloria Obianyo - actor, nominated in the Ian Charleson Awards 2022
- Gillian Rose - philosopher
- Jacqueline Rose - Professor of English since 1992 at Queen Mary, University of London
- Sylvia Tait - biochemist and endocrinologist
References
[edit]- ^ Duncan, Pamela; García, Carmen Aguilar (6 September 2023). "Schools in England affected by Raac: the full government list". The Guardian. Retrieved 18 September 2023.