The Nottingham Emmanuel School
Address
Gresham Park Road

, ,
NG69 4SN

Coordinates52°55′54″N 1°09′01″W / 52.93163°N 1.1503°W / 52.93163; -1.1503
Information
TypeAcademy
MottoTogether To Grow, To Learn, To Serve
Religious affiliation(s)Church of England
Department for Education URN139765 Tables
OfstedReports
HeadteacherS. Stapleton
GenderCoeducational
Age11 to 19
Enrolment1,087
Websitehttp://www.emmanuel.nottingham.sch.uk

The Nottingham Emmanuel School is a coeducational Church of England secondary school and sixth form with academy status, located near the banks of the river Trent in West Bridgford, Nottinghamshire, England. It is next to the former Great Central Main Line in the borough of Rushcliffe.

History

The School began in September 2002 and has been using the old Wilford Meadows building until the arrival of its completed 'new build' in late 2008. The first 6th-form students began their A-Levels in September 2007.

In 2000 a project group was established to plan a programme of consultation, including a range of feasibility studies. There was very strong support from parents for the development of another Church school and this proposal was also supported nationally through the recommendations made in the Dearing Report for new Church Aided Schools to be established. In 2001 a temporary Governing body was convened to set up the School.

The Nottingham Emmanuel School was so named because it reflects faith in God. The Governors realised that a specifically Christian spiritual ethos in which other faith traditions were hosted within an Anglican framework was crucial to the overall purpose. This is reflected in the School's Admission Policy.

The School celebrated its official opening in 2002 with 180 students and is now full in Years 7, 8, 9, 10 and 11. In September 2006 the school welcomed their fifth year of intake and this meant students for the first time were entered for public examinations at Key Stage 4. The school has a planned full size of 1150 students, including the Sixth Form in 2008/9.

The school converted to academy status on 1 June 2013.

Grammar school

The true origins of the school, in a convoluted and chequered history, start with the Mundella Grammar School, on Colygate Road in the Meadows, which opened in 1899. The school's name came from Anthony John Mundella, a Liberal MP for Sheffield, and Sheffield Brightside.

World War II

In September 1939 153 boys were evacuated to Stamford School, and 117 girls to Stamford High School.[1][2] The boys and girls travelled by train on 5 September 1939.[3] Some were confirmed by the Bishop of Lincoln at St Mary's Church on Thursday 7 December 1939.[4]

The group returned by train on Tuesday 12 March 1940, but Nottingham had not been bombed.[5] The Nottingham Blitz was on 8 May 1941.

Comprehensive

This became a comprehensive in the 1970s, keeping its former name. These school buildings were demolished in 1985. The school transferred to the Roland Green Comprehensive School, which became the Wilford Meadows School. Due to its low results, this school was closed, and has now re-opened as the Nottingham Emmanuel School.

Academic performance

The school gets above average results for Nottingham at GCSE, and A Levels. Nottingham LEA gets the lowest results in the East Midlands.

The uniform is a white shirt, black blazer with the new 'NES' logo, and a purple tie which has two stripes to representative of the students' houses.

Pastoral care

Form tutors

Each Tutor Group of mixed ability students is attached to a Year Group and a House. The Tutor Group of approximately 30 students has its own Form Tutor who is supported by two Assistant Tutors from Year 10. The Form Tutor is responsible for supporting the students in their care in all aspects of their school life – academic, social and personal. They will be closely monitoring their academic progress in the National Curriculum through teacher assessment data and their rewards and behaviour record through the online school’s information management system. Advice and guidance can be given over any matter which might affect the individual’s work and personal development. The Form Tutor is the first point of contact for parents and students over any matter relating to school life and normally stays with their tutor group from Year 7 – 11 to ensure continuity of pastoral care and support throughout their school career.

Achievement and pastoral managers

All of the Tutor Groups and Form Tutors are managed by the Achievement and Pastoral Manager. This person is responsible for co-ordinating the work of the Year group and monitoring overall academic progress. They co-ordinate intervention programmes and ensure that the whole year group work together effectively and maintain high standards of behaviour. The Achievement and Pastoral Manager is available to support parents and tutors in more serious matters of concern relating to any aspect of school life or when initial attempts to resolve issues with the tutor or subject teacher have not been successful.

Heads of house

The Nottingham Emmanuel School has a house system the houses are represented by colours: Red, Blue, Yellow and Green. This changed in Sept 2017 to King Jnr (Green), Romero (Red), Pullinger (Yellow) and Booth (Blue) following a vote by students and staff of the respective houses.

Special educational needs

The SENCo is responsible for the leadership and management of Special Educational Needs provision across the School. Specialist support for students is identified in collaboration with staff and parents and where appropriate, outlined in a student tracking document which details the SEN profile of the student and tracks academic progress against agreed targets. This enables students and staff to work collectively on specific targets that can be monitored on a regular basis.

Senior leadership

  • Mrs S. Stapleton: Principal

Notable former pupils

Mundella Grammar School

The Nottingham Emmanuel School

References

  1. Sleaford Gazette Friday 23 February 1940, page 4
  2. Grantham Journal Friday 10 May 1940, page 8
  3. Nottingham Evening Post Monday 4 September 1939, page 5
  4. Nottingham Journal Wednesday 6 December 1939, page 3
  5. Nottingham Evening Post Tuesday 12 March 1940, page 8
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