Washwood Heath Academy

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Washwood Heath Academy
Established 1967
Type Academy
Head Teacher Mrs Beverley Mabey
Location Burney Lane
Birmingham
West Midlands
B8 2AS
England
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DfE number 330/4084
DfE URN 139888 Tables
Ofsted Reports Pre-academy reports
Students 1,400 (approx.)
Gender Mixed
Ages 11–19
Houses Zephaniah

Tolkien Chamberlain Benson

Harewood
Colours Yellow, White, Blue, Green, Purple
Website washwoodheath.com

Washwood Heath Academy is a secondary school located in the Washwood Heath ward of Birmingham, England.[1] Originally known as Washwood Heath Comprehensive School, it opened in September 1967. It was extended in 1996 to make way for the Post-16 centre. The school became a specialist Technology College and was renamed Washwood Heath Technology College. It has the first year group in the country to have a portable laptop for each child in year 8, as part of a national pilot. Although this scheme is free parents have been asked to give a voluntary contribution as is the case at all schools that run this scheme.[citation needed]

The school uses the house system, there are five houses each containing students from all the school years. The school is one of the first to use the vertical tutoring system, this system places students in mixed age group forms, the intention of vertical tutoring is to create greater cohesion between the year groups and allow for peer mentoring. They have recently had David Harewood who made a documentary about how he attempts to turn a group of Washwood Heath pupils into accomplished Shakespearean actors in just five days. As of July 2013 Washwood Heath technology was converted into an academy and was renamed Washwood Heath Academy

Houses

Zephaniah- colour purple- Named after Benjamin Zephaniah. He was a poet he also had dyslexia

Chamberlain- colour white- Named after Joseph Chamberlain. He was the Mayor of Birmingham

Harewood- colour green- Name after former pupil David Harewood who is now a film star and his brother is a footballer

Benson- colour blue- Unknown name

Tolkien- colour yellow- Named after John Ronald Reul Tolkien. He was an English scholar

School Uniform

Boys

  • school shirt
  • a tie
  • a navy jumper with the school logo and name of their house
  • black or grey trousers
  • school shoes
  • School bag no pouches
  • Blue polo shirt (summer)

Girls

  • school shirt
  • pinafore (optional)
  • tie
  • black skirt or black trousers
  • plain black headscarf with no patterns on it
  • navy jumper with the school logo and the name of their house
  • school shoes
  • school bag no pouches

Boys should not have any patterns in their hair and girls are only allowed to wear small studs. This will change as of September 2013

P.E Kit

Girls

  • a gold rugby shirt (winter)
  • short sleeved yellow polo shirt (summer)
  • black plain jogging bottoms
  • white nylon socks
  • trainers

Boys

  • royal blue football shirt (winter)
  • white polo shirt or blue polo shirt (summer)
  • black or white shorts
  • black or blue jogging bottoms
  • royal blue sock
  • trainers

This will change as of September 2013

Controversy

  • In 1996, maths teacher Israr Khan bought the school into national disrepute following his decision to interrupt a Christmas carol rehearsal performance, questioning the involvement of Muslim pupils professing to Christian theology in the festive songs.[2]
  • In 2002, the school became the first in Britain to have its entire governing body sacked under new government powers after an 18-month row over race and religion created internal disagreements amongst staff. The board were replaced by a council team and subsequently received praise from Ofsted.[3][4][5][6]
  • In 2010, following a General Teaching Council disciplinary hearing, teacher Jasbir Dhillon was suspended for three months for being late for class on 21 occasions. Action was taken after pupils complained about his punctuality.[7][8][9]

Alumni

References

  1. Office For Standards In Education: 3 August 2006 Inspection Report, Retrieved 16 November 2006
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"The Independent (London)", 14 May 2000. Accessed 19 November 2007.

External links