Twyford Church of England High School
Motto | "I have come that you should have life, and have it to the full" (John 10:10) |
---|---|
Established | 1954 |
Type | Academy |
Religion | Church of England |
Executive Head Teacher | Dame Alice Hudson MA (Oxon) DBE[1] |
Associate Head Teacher | Ms Karen Barrie |
Deputy Headteacher | Mr Phil Bennett |
Location |
Twyford Crescent London W3 9PP England Coordinates: 51°30′33″N 0°16′44″W / 51.5092°N 0.2788°W |
DfE number | 307/4602 |
DfE URN | 137546 Tables |
Ofsted | Reports Pre-academy reports |
Students | approx. 1,450 |
Gender | Coeducational |
Ages | 11–18 |
Website |
www |
- Not to be confused with Twyford School.
Twyford CofE High School is a co-educational Church of England Academy school located in Acton, west London. It consists of just under 1400 pupils aged 11–18 (with over 500 students in the Sixth Form)[2] and has specialisms in music and languages.
On 1 October 2011, the school converted to academy status and is now operated by the Twyford Church of England Academies Trust.
History
Twyford High School was purchased from the London Borough of Ealing by the London Diocesan Board for Schools and established in 1981 and is one of a family of 13 LDBS secondary schools within the city. The school opened as the result of a concerted campaign by local parents.
One of the school buildings, The Elms, is the oldest surviving building in Acton. It was built by Charles Morren in 1735 as a Baroque country villa and has been occupied by various wealthy citizens. In 1954 it ceased to be a private home. There were plans to demolish it but the former local council, Middlesex County Council, opposed it and bought the house to be used as a school. An extension was added to house new classrooms. In 1981 it was taken over by the new Twyford C of E High School[3][4]
The name "Twyford" comes from the Twyford Brook that runs underground near the Elms, and literally means "Two Fords". This same brook is connected to Twyford Abbey in the West Twyford area of Ealing.[5]
Academic Profile
With results well above the national and LEA average,[6] Twyford is a school with a strong academic record. It ranks 2nd out of 10 and 5th out of 17 for A-level and GCSE results respectively in the LEA (of both selective and non-selective schools). In successive Ofsted inspections (2007 & 2012), it was rated "outstanding".[7][8]
Extracurricular Activities
Sport
Rugby, football, netball, and hockey are the most popular sports at Twyford, though opportunities for students to participate in trampolining, table tennis and basketball are available through many different lunchtime and after school clubs. A wide variety of sports including self-defence and gymnastics are mandatory during progression through the school. Cricket and Rugby are also played, particularly in the summer term.
The school has an affiliation with the London Wasps whose training grounds it uses: it provides schooling for Wasps Apprentices, helping make the rugby team one of the country's most formidable; it reached the final rounds of the National Schools Sevens Festival Tournament 2007.[9]
Music
The school specialises in music, and music is a highly valued curricular and extra-curricular activity within the school. Annual classical and popular music competitions are held in which a wide section of talent is displayed. The school runs many groups and choirs as extra-curricular activities and the Gospel Choir won the title of Songs of Praise School Choir of the Year 2009. The choir is renowned throughout London and has played at many major venues including the Royal Albert Hall and the Royal Opera House. In addition to the gospel choir, Twyford boasts a full school orchestra, large chamber choir spanning all school years, junior choir, community choir (for parents, friends and staff), student run jazz band, swing band, urban collective and many small vocal and instrumental ensembles including string quartets, female vocal ensembles and a samba band. The Music and Drama departments join together each February to put on the annual school production, with a full student cast, orchestra, stage crew and technical team. A wide range of instrumental tuition is also offered with highly specialised peripatetic teachers.
Societies and Clubs
Societies and clubs of varying subject can be found meeting weekly at the school including a debating society (taking part in the annual[10] Mace Debating Competition), chess club and Art club. The Duke of Edinburgh Award is offered at Gold, Silver and Bronze levels.
Pastoral Care
Twyford Chaplaincy
The dedicated chaplaincy team organises the services of the school and provides support for families and staff. It is headed by the school chaplains (The Rev. John Seymour) and the head of the Twyford Fellowship Group (Geoff Lumley). The student chaplaincy team is currently headed by Geoff Lumley.
Twyford Fellowship Group
TFG is effectively the school's Christian Union in which students meet to worship God together using contemporary and relevant worship. It includes Bible study and regular guest speakers as well as annual weekends away.
School Structure
Twyford is organised into year groups each containing seven tutor groups, which are also members of the school's seven houses: Truro, Wells, York, Fountains, Ripon, Durham & Canterbury. Each tutor group has its own Form Representative, Chapel Ambassador and Sport, Enterprise and Endeavour representatives.
Each Year Group has a Head of Year and Assistant Head of Year and two Year Representative. The Head of Year 7 liaises with the Primary Schools that the students have come from, and for this reason remains Head of Year 7 each year. Once students move into Year 8 they will then remain with their new year head until the end of Year 11.
The lower years (7 to 9) cover the National Curriculum's Key Stage Three and are overseen by the Head of KS3. In the same way years 10 and 11 are overseen by the Head of KS4.
In the Sixth Form there is a permanent Head of Year 12, and also one for Year 13 (at the moment this post is held by Miss Keller) as well as an overall Head of KS5.
Points
Conduct points (or simply 'positives') are awarded by teachers to pupils for good behaviour, work, and through the winning of inter-house competitions. 'Negatives' can also be given to pupils for lacking behaviour, presentation, and work, with the effect of deducting points from the grand total. The House that has won the most points at the end of the Easter term is awarded the Inter-House Trophy.
House System
Each pupil is a member of one of the seven school houses at Twyford. House representatives meet at a council to represent the views of students in each house and year.
Houses are named after famous cathedrals or abbeys in England and each is associated with a colour.
House | Colour | |
---|---|---|
Truro | Red | |
Wells | Orange | |
York | Yellow | |
Fountains | Green | |
Ripon | Blue | |
Durham | Indigo | |
Canterbury | Purple |
The initial of each House joins to create the full name of the school (TWYFORD CE HIGH SCHOOL), with 'O' being excluded for historical reasons. [11]
Uniform
Uniform consists of the following mandatory items:[12]
- Black blazer (with school badge)
- Black trousers or black skirt
- White shirt or blouse
- Lower school tie (Years 7-8) or upper school tie (Years 9-11)
- Black shoes
Pupils are expected to ask their class teachers if they wish to take off their blazer during lessons and on particularly hot days the Headteacher may issue a notice that ties and blazers can be removed.
The following optional items may also be worn:
- V-neck jumper (grey)
- Cardigan (grey)
No uniform is worn by members of the Sixth Form, but they are required to wear an ID badge at all times whilst on the site.
Sports kit consists of:
- White polo shirt with a school badge
- Navy Blue shorts with badge (boys)
- Navy Blue kilt skirt (girls)
- Navy blue school sweatshirt with crest (all girls and boys except year 7)
- Blue and dark blue rugby shirt (year 7 boys)
- Studded football boots (boys)
- Dunlop Green Flash trainers
Old Twyfordians
- Myles Hippolyte (1994–), footballer[13]
- Harry Podmore (1994–), cricketer[14]
- Asma al-Assad (1986-), British born wife of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad
Controversies
In February 2014, several Sixth formers who attended the school where discovered to be using class A drugs at parties. The school has a zero tolerance policy on drugs and although the actions took place off the grounds, parents of those involved were individually contacted and the information was passed to the police.
In 2016 several pupils were suspended under allegations of drug abuse on school grounds, appropriate action was taken and the students were later suspended.[15] These students were later expelled.
Gallery
References
- ↑ "Alice Hudson becomes a Dame". Retrieved 15 August 2016.
- ↑ "Welcome to Twyford". Retrieved 5 April 2016.
- ↑ "Other notable buildings - The Elms, Acton". Ealing London Borough Council.
- ↑ "Retro West London: Acton's longest standing building". Ealing Gazette. 28 May 2012.
- ↑ West Twyford
- ↑ "League Tables | Twyford Church of England High School". BBC News. 2004-01-15. Retrieved 2009-07-18.
- ↑ "Reports & Exam Results". Retrieved 5 April 2016.
- ↑ "2007 Ofsted Inspection Report" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 4 April 2013.
- ↑ "National Schools Sevens". National Schools Sevens. 2007. Archived from the original on 2012-03-01. Retrieved 2009-07-18.
- ↑ "The English-Speaking Union". Retrieved 5 April 2016.
- ↑ "Twyford Church of England High School". Archived from the original on 11 February 2013. Retrieved 5 April 2016.
- ↑ "Uniform". Retrieved 5 April 2016.
- ↑ Murtagh, Jacob. "From Blackburn Rovers to Burnham: Ex-Bee rebuilding his career after turbulent year". getwestlondon. Retrieved 2016-04-05.
- ↑ "The Home of CricketArchive". cricketarchive.com. Retrieved 2016-04-05.
- ↑ Bazaraa, Danya. "Sixth formers from Church of England school 'taking class A drugs'". getwestlondon. Retrieved 2016-04-05.