Academy in Oxton, Wirral, England
Birkenhead High School Academy
is an all-ability state funded girls'
Academy
in
Birkenhead
,
Wirral
.
Introduction
[
edit
]
Birkenhead High School was the main Wirral private girls' school, but in 2010 became a non-fee paying Academy. It remains a member of the
Girls' Day School Trust
, a national educational charity based in London.
The school has sports facilities with a number of tennis courts, all-weather pitches, gymnasium and swimming pool. In addition to a wide academic curriculum, aided by IT facilities, there is a music and drama scene and a range of after school clubs. The Academy has a nursery, primary and secondary school.
It is situated
[1]
on Devonshire Place
[2]
just north of Trinity with Palm Grove Church. The school lies within the parish of
Christ Church, Birkenhead
[3]
although the tennis courts
[4]
are in the parish of
St Saviour's
,
[5]
and the playing fields are in the parish of St. James, Birkenhead.
[6]
History
[
edit
]
The High Schools Company opened Birkenhead High School for Girls in 1884 in a building on Village Road in
Oxton
,
Birkenhead
. In 1901 it was purchased by the
Girls' Public Day School Company
(GPDSC). The school moved into 86 Devonshire Place in September 1905. In 1918 the school acquired 31 Devonshire Place to be the home of the junior school. During World War Two the girls were evacuated to
Shrewsbury High School
.
[7]
[8]
Headmistresses
[
edit
]
- 1917?1923: Edith Mabel Lucy Lees, (1878?1956)
[9]
- 1923?1930: Jessie Margaret Hunter McCaig (d. 1965)
[10]
- 1930?1952: H N Stephen (1891?1984)
[11]
- 1952?1963: Phyllis Edith Winter
[12]
- 1964?1970: Irene Hindmarsh, afterwards Principal of
St Aidan's College
,
Durham University
, 1970?1988
- 1971?1986: Freda Kellett
[13]
- 1986?c.1997: Kathleen Irving
[14]
- Mrs C Evans
- Mrs C Mann
- Present: Rebecca Mahony
Transition to Academy
[
edit
]
Parents of pupils at the school were informed in September 2007 that the school was to become an
Academy
, with the GDST (Girls' Day School Trust) as the founding sponsor, so that the benefits of the schools might reach a wider cross-section of the community. Since then the facilities have been improved with a £12million building project.
[
citation needed
]
As part of the state-funded system the Academy no longer charges fees. Fair
banding
is used to ensure a comprehensive intake of the full range of academic ability. Sixth Form admission is six GCSE passes at Grade B or above, including English and mathematics.
[15]
The school's particular specialisms are Music and Mathematics.
[16]
Local response to Academy decision
[
edit
]
In response to the school's decision to become a state-funded all-ability Academy, and the consequent abandonment of the planned merger between the schools which had been actually initiated by Birkenhead High School, the neighbouring
Birkenhead School
became fully co-educational in September 2008, stating that it had "the desire to play our role in providing a selective and independent choice for all children on Wirral, whether boys or girls". Subsequently, it has completed a £2m investment to support its co-educational future and deal with increased numbers.
[17]
Currently around 28% of its pupils are female with its initial intake primarily from Birkenhead High School Academy.
Academic Performance and the Impact of Academy Status
[
edit
]
In 2009, the last year of Birkenhead High School as an independent selective school, it achieved the best A level results in Wirral, measured as points per entry, together with Birkenhead School, a co-educational independent selective school.
[18]
In 2011, Birkenhead High School Academy received national recognition for the proportion of top grades achieved by its pupils in the GCSE examinations. It qualified as one of the top 10% of non-selective schools in England, where at least 19% of students gained 5A*-A grades, including English and Maths, proving itself to be one of the best schools in the country.
[19]
Notable former pupils
[
edit
]
- Ann Bell
, actress
- Professor
Jane Guyer
, nee Mason, professor of anthropology and director of undergraduate studies, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland, US.
- Nicola Horlick
, fund manager
[20]
- Penny Hughes
, businesswoman
[21]
- Marian Lines
, actress and writer
- Dame
Mary Marsh
, chief executive from 2000?8 of the
NSPCC
- Dame
Patricia Routledge
CBE, actress.
[22]
- Dr
Sheila Shribman
, doctor, national clinical director for children.
[23]
- Charlotte Voake
, children's author
[24]
and illustrator
- Dame
Frances Yates
OBE, historian.
[25]
- Sam Quek
- England Hockey Player and Gold Medalist at Rio
References
[
edit
]
- ^
"Entrance to Birkenhead High School GDST: OS grid SJ3088"
. Geograph.org.uk
. Retrieved
26 January
2011
.
- ^
"Bridge across Devonshire Place: OS grid SJ3088"
. Geograph.org.uk
. Retrieved
26 January
2011
.
- ^
"Christ Church Birkenhead: OS grid SJ3087"
. Geograph.org.uk. 10 December 2007
. Retrieved
26 January
2011
.
- ^
"Birkenhead Lawn Tennis Club: OS grid SJ3088"
. Geograph.org.uk
. Retrieved
26 January
2011
.
- ^
"St. Saviour's Church, Oxton: OS grid SJ3087"
. Geograph.org.uk
. Retrieved
26 January
2011
.
- ^
"Sports field for Birkenhead High School GDST: OS grid SJ3088"
. Geograph.org.uk
. Retrieved
26 January
2011
.
- ^
Magnus, Laurie (1923).
The Jubilee Book of the Girls' Public Day School Trust, 1873?1923
. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 166?167.
- ^
Girls' Public Day School Trust (1972).
The Girls' Public Day School Trust 1872?1972
. pp. 33?36.
- ^
Institute of Education
Archives,
From File 'Miss Edith Mabel Lucy Lees' Ref: GDS/15/3/47, Records of the Girls' Day School Trust
, retrieved
1 August
2010
- ^
Institute of Education
Archives,
From File 'Miss Jessie Margaret Hunter McCaig' Ref: GDS/15/3/58, Records of the Girls' Day School Trust
, retrieved
1 August
2010
- ^
Institute of Education
Archives,
From File 'Miss Stephen' Ref: GDS/15/3/66, Records of the Girls' Day School Trust
, retrieved
1 August
2010
- ^
Institute of Education
Archives,
From File 'Miss Winter' Ref: GDS/15/3/93, Records of the Girls' Day School Trust
, retrieved
1 August
2010
- ^
Institute of Education
Archives,
From File 'Miss F Kellett' Ref: GDS/15/3/120, Records of the Girls' Day School Trust
, retrieved
1 August
2010
- ^
"From File 'Mrs K R Irving' Ref: GDS/15/3/147, Records of the Girls' Day School Trust"
.
Institute of Education
Archives
. Retrieved
30 August
2015
.
- ^
Birkenhead High School Academy (November 2008).
"Admissions"
. GDST. Archived from
the original
on 25 May 2009
. Retrieved
6 February
2009
.
- ^
Birkenhead High School Academy (November 2008).
"Our specialisms"
. GDST
. Retrieved
6 February
2009
.
[
dead link
]
- ^
Birkenhead School (2 May 2008).
"Co-educational School"
. Birkenhead School. Archived from
the original
on 28 April 2008
. Retrieved
2 May
2008
.
- ^
Daily Telegraph (8 April 2010).
"2009 A Level league table"
. London: Daily Telegraph. Archived from
the original
on 17 January 2010
. Retrieved
10 April
2010
.
- ^
SSAT:Wirral Globe (4 July 2011).
"Adademy's GCSE results top class"
. London: Wirral Globe
. Retrieved
4 July
2010
.
- ^
Halstead, Richard (19 January 1997).
"I learnt I could beat the boys"
.
The Independent
. Retrieved
12 December
2020
.
- ^
"The Times"
. London. 16 December 2009
. Retrieved
26 April
2010
.
- ^
"Patricia Routledge"
. British Musical Theatre. Archived from
the original
on 26 January 2007
. Retrieved
29 April
2008
.
- ^
"Shribman, Dr Sheila"
. National Health Service. Archived from
the original
on 5 May 2013
. Retrieved
12 June
2008
.
- ^
"NameBright - Coming Soon"
. Archived from
the original
on 28 October 2007
. Retrieved
10 December
2020
.
- ^
Trapp, J. B. (2004). "Yates, Dame Frances Amelia (1899?1981)".
Oxford Dictionary of National Biography
. Oxford University Press.
External links
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]
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Primary schools
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Non-selective
secondary schools
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Grammar schools
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Independent schools
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FE & sixth form colleges
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Closed schools
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