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{{short description|Coeducational multi-campus academy in Nottingham}}
{{Infobox UK school
{{Use dmy dates|date=June 2018}}
| name = Nottingham Academy
{{Use British English|date=June 2018}}
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| name = Nottingham Academy
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| motto = Be Inspired
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| country = England
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| type = [[Academy (English school)| Academy]]
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| head = [[Barry Day]]
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| trust = [[Greenwood Academies Trust]]
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| campuses = {{Bulleted list|[[#Greenwood Campus|Greenwood 1]]|[[#Greenwood Campus|Greenwood 2]]|[[#Wells Academy Campus|Wells Academy]]}}
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| urn = 122904
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'''The Nottingham Academy''' is a self funded Academy in [[Sneinton, Nottingham]], [[England]]. It places an emphasis on technology, and is attended by over 6000 pupils aged 3-19. The Nottingham Academy is a [[Specialist school|specialist technology college]]. The school is designated as a Leading Edge school and a National Support School.<ref name=Ofsted/> The school is intended to become a [[Academy (England)|city academy]].<ref>[http://www.accessmylibrary.com/coms2/summary_0286-12147111_ITM "City's three academies win backing."], Europe Intelligence Wire, [[Financial Times]], [[22 December]] [[2005]]</ref> Prior to earning Academy Status, the Academy consisted of four separate schools, one of which was Greenwood Dale, well known for its 'Outstanding' Ofsted inspection results.


'''Nottingham Academy''' is an academy school located in [[Nottingham]], [[England]]. It is an all-through 3-19 school. The school is made up from two (formerly three) predecessor schools, [[#Greenwood Dale School|Greenwood Dale]] 11-19, [[#The Jesse Boot Primary School|The Jesse Boot Primary School]] 3–11, and formerly [[Elliott Durham School|Elliott Durham]] 11–16.
==Becoming an Academy==
In 2009 Greenwood Dale was granted permission to become an academy, and with funding from [[Experian]], they merged with Jessie Boot School, also in Sneinton, and The Elliot Durham school. Elliot Durham was part of a deal whereby Greenwood agreed to take over a failing school in order to be granted Academy status.


The Nottingham Academy was founded in 2009 but formally opened during the year of 2011 when Greenwood Campus had completed construction, becoming the 'largest school in Europe', serving up to 3,780 pupils ages 3–19. It is administered by a principal, and each site has a Head of School. The academy is sponsored by the [[Greenwood Academies Trust]] (GAT).
The Sites work with a system of Heads, with each school having several assistant heads, A head, and finally above them all the Principal [[Barry Day]], Who is also [[CEO]] of the Academy is in charge of all three sites.


In September 2020, The Nottingham Academy, Greenwood Campus and Ransom Campus separated and become two individual schools under the [[Greenwood Academies Trust]]. The Greenwood Campus remained called The Nottingham Academy while the Ransom Campus became [[The Wells Academy]].<ref name=":2" />
In 2010 The Nottingham Academy took over The Manning School for Girls, keeping it as a girls school, it was renamed as The Nottingham Girl's Academy, and a new head appointed. <ref>[http://www.thisisnottingham.co.uk/Plan-approved-girls-academy/story-12202174-detail/story.html"Manning School For girls is set to become the Nottingham Girl's Academy"], Nottingham Evening Post,[[19 April]] [[2010]]</ref>


==History==
{{anchor|Elliot Durham School}}
{{anchor|Greenwood Dale School}}
The Nottingham Academy is the result of the combination of the former '''[[Elliot Durham School]]''', which was labelled the third worst performing school in the country in 2007, the '''Greenwood Dale School''', which had been highlighted by [[Ofsted]] in 2009 as one of 12 outstanding schools serving disadvantaged communities. Also included was the [[#The Jesse Boot Primary School|Jesse Boot School]].<ref name=firstday>{{cite news|last1=Shepherd|first1=Jessica|title=First day of term at Nottingham Academy - the largest school in Europe|url=https://www.theguardian.com/education/2009/sep/07/nottingham-academy-opens-secondary-school|access-date=17 December 2017|work=The Guardian|date=7 September 2009}}</ref><ref>[http://www.lampton.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/Twelve_outstanding_secondary_schools1.pdf Twelve outstanding secondary schools - Excelling against the odds], Ofsted, 24 February 2009. Retrieved 17 December 2017.</ref> The Academy was formed in 2009 as [[Academy (English school)|city academy]].<ref>[http://www.accessmylibrary.com/coms2/summary_0286-12147111_ITM "City's three academies win backing."], Europe Intelligence Wire, [[Financial Times]], 22 December 2005</ref>
<ref>{{cite web|title=Old sneinton schools, greenwood, sneinton boulevard, sneinton trust|url=https://nottstalgia.com/forums/topic/6065-old-sneinton-schools-greenwood-sneinton-boulevard-sneinton-trust/|website=Nottstalgia Nottingham Forums|access-date=17 December 2017|date=2009}}</ref>
[[File:Nottingham Academy Ransom 7891.jpg|left|thumb|Nottingham Academy, Wells Academy Campus]]
Greenwood Dale school, in [[Sneinton]] was a maintained comprehensive that was popular with parents and was full to capacity and too full to take extra pupils, and the site was impossible to expand. It had previously been Greenwood Bilateral School, changing from being a [[bilateral school|bilateral]], with its grammar stream, to a [[comprehensive school]] in 1972. It had not lost its kudos. It had failed some key Ofsted tests in 1992 but had raised these indicator results from 12% five A* to C, not including maths and English, in 1992, to 97% overall pass rate in 2007 and it had a 53% pass rate when including maths and English.<ref name="firstday" />


Elliott Durham, was a deeply unpopular comprehensive which served one of Nottingham's poorest neighbourhoods, [[St Ann's, Nottingham|St Ann's]]. It had space for 1,350 pupils, but in 2007 had only 350. Families would rather bus their children out of the city than send them to Elliott Durham. Academically it had just 21% A* to C grades at GCSE in 2007, including maths and English, though that was a rise on the 7% two years previously; considerably down on the 47.6% average for secondary schools in England. It was a classified as a "national challenge" school, ones where fewer than 30% of pupils achieve five GCSE passes including in maths and English, it had been told to rapidly improve or close down.<ref name="firstday" />
==Academic standards==
[[Office for Standards in Education|Ofsted]] inspected the school's predecessor Greenwood Dale in September 2007 and awarded a rating of ''Outstanding'', the highest available, commenting "Greenwood Dale is an outstanding school. It serves a community facing significant challenges
and turns out young people who achieve highly and develop into well rounded, ambitious young people, equipped in all respects for a modern, diverse society. Seventeen years ago, going through the school was described by the current Chair of governors, then a new parent, as 'like walking through a war zone'. Since then the school has been transformed, in its appearance as well as its effectiveness."<ref name=Ofsted>[http://www.ofsted.gov.uk/reports/pdf/?inspectionNumber=314435&providerCategoryID=8192&fileName=\\school\\122\\s5rti_122904_20071016.pdf "Greenwood Dale School"], [[Office for Standards in Education|Ofsted]], [[16 October]] [[2007]]</ref><ref>[http://www.thisisnottingham.co.uk/displayNode.jsp?nodeId=134233&command=displayContent&sourceNode=133984&contentPK=18662654&folderPk=78481&pNodeId=133952 "School Rated 'Outstanding' by Watchdog"], [[Nottingham Evening Post]], [[13 October]] [[2007]]</ref>


Jesse Boot, a primary school in Bakersfield down the road, urgently needed to replace its 1930s classrooms and do something about its falling rolls. It had 500 pupils on roll, but capacity for 630.<ref name="firstday" />
The school was rated the sixth best in 2006, in the [[United Kingdom|UK]], for improving [[Student|pupils]].<ref>[http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/6250179.stm "Region has best and worst schools"], [[BBC News]], [[11 January]] [[2007]]</ref> It sent its first pupil to [[University of Oxford|Oxford University]] in 2005.<ref>[http://www.nottinghamcity.gov.uk/news_page/noticenottinghamhome/psct_archive/psct_option_38.htm "Notice Nottingham Issue 38"], [[Nottingham City Council]], [[23 December]] [[2005]]</ref>


=== Opening of the Nottingham Academy ===
==Barry Day==
Europe's biggest school catering for 3,600 pupils opened to the public on 7 September 2009.<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.theguardian.com/education/2009/sep/07/nottingham-academy-opens-secondary-school|title = First day of term at Nottingham Academy - the largest school in Europe| newspaper=The Guardian |date = 7 September 2009 | last1=Shepherd | first1=Jessica }}</ref> The academy merged three schools. The academy had 200 teachers and more than 100 administrators and assistants on roll during its opening.{{citation needed|date=February 2018}}
{{main|Barry Day}}
[[Barry Day]], [[Head teacher|headteacher]], was awarded the [[Order of the British Empire|OBE]] in the 2007 [[Orders, decorations, and medals of the United Kingdom|Queen's Birthday Honours List]].<ref>[http://www.dfes.gov.uk/honours/birthday2007.shtml "Queen's Birthday 2007 Honours List"], [[Department for Children, Schools and Families]], [[16 June]] [[2007]]</ref> He was also appointed one of the [[National College for School Leadership]]’s National Leaders of Education in October 2007.<ref>[http://www.egovmonitor.com/node/15215 "Minister of State welcomes NCSL’s newest leaders of education"], eGov Monitor, [[18 October]] [[2007]]</ref> Since the Opening of the Academy, he left his post as Head of Greenwood Dale (Now the site of the Academy's Sixth form College.) To become Principle of the Entire four site Academy.


The Nottingham Academy was one of the Government's most costly schools building projects. It was among many 'all through' schools providing education for children aged 3 to 19.{{citation needed|date=February 2018}}
==Sport==
Greenwood Dale won the ''State School of the Year'' award at the ''The School Sport Matters Awards 2006''. The citation said "Greenwood Dale School, in one of the toughest communities in the country, in Nottingham, is a hotbed for sport in spite of having no grass pitches and limited facilities ... Exceptional."<ref>[http://juniorsport.telegraph.co.uk/school-sports-matters/roll-of-honours/ "School Sport Matters - Roll of Honours"], [[Daily Telegraph]], 2006</ref>


Nottingham Academy was one of the first of its kind with a target to build more premium academies across the country.{{citation needed|date=February 2018}}<!--{{pov}}-->
The standard of sport at the school has been described as "sporting excellence" and the students have won many individual awards.<ref>[http://alacarte.lexisnexis.com/partners/int/lexisnews/results.asp?id=23890473&mtid=1&ws=9j0hDk1UboE=&ws_pub=Nottingham%20Evening%20Post&ws_date=September%2030,%202006&ws_len=243&ws_lni=4M15-0JT0-TX58-J2S3-00000-00&ws_lastupdate=20061001&ws_title=School%20scores%20sporting%20success&ws_refer=http://news.google.co.uk/archivesearch?hl=en&oe=UTF-8&um=1&ie=UTF-8&tab=wn&q=%22Greenwood+Dale+School%22 "School scores sporting success"], [[Nottingham Evening Post]], [[30 September]] [[2006]]</ref>


Today Nottingham Academy is among 31 other academies just like it, all sponsored to the Greenwood Academy Trust.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.greenwoodacademies.org/|title=Greenwood Academies Trust.}}</ref>
==Security==
There was controversy in August 2004 over the decision of the headmaster to install full perimeter [[Fence|fencing]], partly for security, but also to help stop pupils leaving the school at lunchtime.<ref>[http://www.accessmylibrary.com/coms2/summary_0286-13050587_ITM "Security at school was a 'reasoned response'"], Europe Intelligence Wire, [[Financial Times]], [[18 August]] [[2004]]</ref>


Michael Gove, former Secretary of State for Education, officially opened the new Greenwood Campus 1 building at Nottingham Academy on 22 September 2011.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-YAPtmkp3_8|title=Department for Education, GC1 Opening|website=[[YouTube]] }}</ref>
==Notable alumni==
* [[Tom Huddlestone]] football player currently with [[Tottenham Hotspur]]
* [[Ali Mustafa]], Bodybuilder


== Greenwood Campus ==
==Notes==
[[File:Nottingham Academy Greenwood 7916.jpg|thumb|left|The Greenwood Site, 2018]]The Nottingham Academy, Greenwood Campus is set on the former Jesse Boot School and the Greenwood Dale School, creating Greenwood Campus 1 & 2. The Greenwood Campus 1 (GC1)  holds the Primary Academy (Nursery - Year 3), the Secondary Academy (Year 9-11) and the Sixth Form Centre (Year 12-13)
{{reflist}}

The Greenwood Campus 2 (GC2) currently holds the Primary Academy (Year 4-6) and the Secondary Academy (Year 7-8). The Greenwood Campus 1 & 2 serves the [[Sneinton]] and [[Bakersfield, Nottingham|Bakersfield]] areas.

=== The Jesse Boot School, Hereford Road ===
{{anchor|The Jesse Boot Primary School}}
[[File:Jesse Boot Birds Eye View .png|thumb|Jesse Boot School]]
The Jesse Boot Infant and Juniors School was a primary school located on Hereford Road, Bakersfield, Nottingham (Now, Nottingham Academy, Greenwood Campus 1). It provided education for students aged 3–11. The Jesse Boot School was permanently closed in September 2009. Miss L Valentine was the last headmaster at the school, she retired in 2017.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://get-information-schools.service.gov.uk/Establishments/Establishment/Details/131538?searchQueryString=searchtype%3DByLocalAuthority%26d%3D133%26startIndex%3D100%26Count%3D304|title=Jesse Boot School - Info, GOVUK}}</ref>

==== Jesse Boot, 1st Baron Trent ====
Jesse Boot's father ([[John Boot]]) founded the [[Boots UK|Boots Company]]. [[Jesse Boot, 1st Baron Trent|Jesse Boot]] transformed the Boots company into a national retailer. The company branded itself 'chemists to the nation' before Jesse sold his controlling interest to American investors in 1920. Jesse donated land to the [[University of Nottingham]]. He was knighted in 1909, and died in Jersey on 13 June 1931.

The Jesse Boot School was built as a memorial for [[Jesse Boot, 1st Baron Trent|Jesse Boot]], the school was opened in 1935 following his death. His son, [[John Boot]] officially opened the school on 17 July 1936, he said: "There was no memorial that my father would have appreciated more than to have a school like this named after him."  The Jesse Boot School opened with two headmasters, Mr. A.J Bates, and E.A Worsdall.

In September 2019, Greenwood Campus and Greenwood Campus 2 could re-open as 'Colwick Park Academy' in efforts to raise the standards, control and overall education at the Nottingham Academy set out by [[Greenwood Academies Trust|Greenwood Academies]]' Proposal.<ref name=":1">{{Cite web|url=http://www.greenwoodacademies.org/news/?pid=0&nid=6&storyid=1731|title=Proposal to re-open academy.}}</ref>

=== Elliot Durham ===
{{anchor|Elliot Durham School}}
[[File:Nottingham Academy Ransom 7889c.jpg|thumb|The Sports Hall in 2018]]
Elliot Durham opened in 1966. Schoolsnet in 2003 described it as an 11 to 16 co-educational school, which is housed in excellent purpose-built accommodation on a very attractive site. It emphasises the sports facilities, which include a sports hall with a full size of basketball court, four badminton courts and areas for gymnastics, indoor football, netball and hockey, and a small carpeted hall for dance and aerobics. Outside there are four tennis courts, two floodlit astro-turf fields, extensive playing fields and pool. The school was not popular with parents and though having a capacity of 1350, it had only 353 students on roll.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.schoolsnet.com/uk-schools/school-details-reviews/nottingham/elliott-durham-school/16180339/0/205158.html|title=Elliott Durham School Nottingham: Read Parent Reviews & Rankings|website=www.schoolsnet.com|access-date=27 January 2018}}</ref>

== Proposal to de-merge ==
[[File:Face Painting Student at nacPride2019.jpg|left|thumb|227x227px|Nottingham Academy student engaged in face painting at Nottingham Academy Pride 2019|alt=]]
In November 2018, [[Greenwood Academies Trust|Greenwood Academies]], sponsor of '''Nottingham Academy''', announced their plans to separate the Greenwood Campus and Ransom Campus.<ref name=":1" />

The original proposal saw changes to the names of both Ransom Campus and Greenwood Campus. Greenwood Campus would be renamed 'Colwick Park Academy' and Ransom Campus would be renamed as 'Mapperley Park Academy'. The newly formed academy would receive a new principal and a personalised curriculum.<ref name=":1" />

After the consultation in December 2018, a series of changes were made to the proposal. Under the new proposal, the Ransom Road Campus would be renamed to '[[The Wells Academy]]' in September 2020, but until 2020 it would be referred to as 'Nottingham Academy - Wells Academy Campus'.<ref name=":2">{{Cite web|url=http://www.greenwoodacademies.org/news/?pid=0&nid=6&storyid=1744|title=GAT De-Merger Proposal Changes|website=Greenwood Academies Trust}}</ref>

Other changes consisted of an extended day for the Wells Academy Campus for additional pastoral support, academic revision and an improvement upon reading and new uniform policies which included the removal of the skirt for female students and the proposal to include a line of blazers.<ref name=":2" /> However, after complaints from parents, the decision to remove skirts from the uniform has been removed.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://ransomroad.nottinghamacademy.org/news/?pid=115&nid=2&storyid=64|title=NottinghamRansom - Proposed changes at Ransom Road Campus|website=ransomroad.nottinghamacademy.org|access-date=2019-09-15}}</ref>

Under the new proposal, Greenwood Campus would remain the same, the earlier proposed 'Colwick Park Academy' rename would no longer come into effect and the campus would stay as 'Nottingham Academy, Greenwood Campus 1&2'.<ref name=":2" />

The proposal took complete effect after September 2020, with the Ransom Road campus becoming '''The Wells Academy'''.

==Governance==
The Nottingham Academy is part of the [[Greenwood Academies Trust]] and is controlled by the trustees. There is no local governing body, just an advisory board. Each region has a liaising advisor. Individual schools do not have local governing bodies, but advisory panels.<ref name=About>{{cite web|title=About us|url=http://www.greenwoodacademies.org/page/?title=About+us|website=www.greenwoodacademies.org|access-date=17 December 2017}}{{Dead link|date=April 2020 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}</ref>

==School structure==
A central team from the trust provides support services for finance, ICT, procurement, human resources, catering, data, curriculum development, staff development, health and safety. The academy has control of 94.5% of the budget; the central team controls the other 5.5%.<ref name=About/>

[[File:Nottingham Academy Ransom7894.jpg|thumb|left|The Wells Campus, formally Ransom Campus]]
There are three sites representing the three former schools. They are grouped into two campuses.

The Greenwood Campus serves the [[Sneinton]] and [[Bakersfield, Nottingham|Bakersfield]] areas and the Wells Academy Campus serves the [[Mapperley]] and [[St Ann's, Nottingham|St Anns]] areas. On the Greenwood Campus, the Greenwood Road site includes pupils from primary year groups from Nursery through to year 3 and secondary students in year groups 9 through to Post 16. The Sneinton Boulevard site includes primary year groups year 4 to year 6 and secondary year groups 7 and 8, like a [[List of middle schools in England|traditional middle school]].<ref name=About/>

{| class="wikitable"
|-
!Cohort
!Greenwood Campus
!Ransom Road Campus
|-
|Year 7 || 246 || 138
|-
|Year 8 || 233 || 154
|-
|Year 9 ||244 || 138
|-
|Year 10 || 233 || 130
|-
|Year 11 ||230 || 108
|-
|Year 12 ||76 ||--
|-
|Year 13/14 ||99 ||--
|}
<ref name=About/>

=== Buildings===
The three sites were given a £55 million rebuild.{{When|date=June 2019}} The architects were Franklin Ellis Architects and the scheme was managed by Carillon.

[[The Wells Academy]] buildings have been refurbished and subjected to new cladding. They have been linked at the upper floor level.<ref name="fr-el">{{cite web|title=Ransom Road, Nottingham Academy Opens|url=http://www.franklinellis.co.uk/2011/11/ransom-road-nottingham-academy-opens/|website=www.franklinellis.co.uk|access-date=27 January 2018}}</ref>

Sneinton Boulevard's (Greenwood Site 2) annex building was demolished during the academic year of 2016/2017 making way for a new primary building that was finished in 2017.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://primary.nottinghamacademy.org/page/?title=Travelling+to+Nottingham+Academy+Primary%26%23160%3B&pid=194|title=Nottingham Academy Primary Information. (Greenwood Site 2)}}</ref>

==Pupil initiatives==
===Nottingham Academy Pride 2018===
[[File:Nottingham Academy Pride, Student Photo..jpg|left|thumbnail|250px|Mr S Gidda and his pupils]]
In early 2018, a Nottingham Academy year ten pupil presented the idea to run a series of educational events surrounded equality, diversity and the LGBTQ community to 10SGI tutor at Greenwood Campus. As a result to the proposal, development was made on the student's idea and from 6 to 13 July 2018 the tutorial group, 10SGI led the Nottingham Academy Pride and LGBTQ+ Awareness Week campaign.<ref name=":0">{{Cite web|url=http://www.nottinghamacademy.org/news/?pid=115&nid=2&storyid=71|title=Pride letter to parents}}</ref><ref name=":3">{{Cite web|url=https://www.nottinghamacademy.org/lgbtq|title=Report of Pride 2018}}</ref>

The tutor group, 10SGI presented activities that ran throughout the week. These activities included educational lessons on equality, diversity and LGBTQ topics, pride-themed fundraisers and educational assemblies.

The educational lessons were presented to tutors across Greenwood Campus that aimed to look at different subjects. Topics included 'The Pride Movement', 'The Meaning Behind LGBTQ+', 'Difference Between Sex & Gender' and others. These lessons were backed by physical activities which included worksheets and social conversations with other pupils. These activities were themed and included 'How masculine and feminine are you?' and 'What do the colours of the flag represent?'.<ref name=":0" /><ref name=":3" />
[[File:Nottingham Academy's LGBTQ Awareness Week Title..jpg|right|frameless|241x241px]]
The Nottingham Academy tutor group, 10SGI invited a trans woman into the campus to speak to the year ten group of pupils within an assembly about transgenderism. This assembly included her life, the science behind transgenderism and statistics with advice on bullying and abuse related issues.<ref name=":0" />

Throughout the week of Nottingham Academy Pride 2018, 10SGI ran a series of pride-themed fundraisers including cake sales, ice pole sales, non-uniform and face painting, raising £110 for Nottinghamshire Pride.<ref name=":3" />

The non-uniform and face-painting or 'celebration' events allowed for students to come together and embrace their differences despite their race, religion, colour, creed or sexual orientation while showing support for those within the LGBTQ+ community and those affected by anti-LGBTQ abuse.<ref name=":3" />

=== Nottingham Academy Pride 2019 ===
[[File:Nottingham Academy Pride 2019, July 12, Group of Pupils.jpg|left|thumb|273x273px|Nottingham Academy Pupils at Nottingham Academy Pride 2019.]]
[[File:Nottingham Academy Pride 2019, Academy student.jpg|thumb|220x220px|Student at Nottingham Academy Pride 2019]]
In 2019, a Nottingham Academy student proposed to run a second year of the Nottingham Academy Pride event for pupils across Greenwood Campus. The proposal saw developments from the 2018 Pride event with students from all secondary year groups participating in lessons and celebrations along with new lesson topics and fundraisers.

From 8 to 12 July 2019 Nottingham Academy, Greenwood Campus students participated within the second year of the school's pride, equality and diversity events with a series of new educational lessons and pride-themed fundraisers.<ref name=":4">{{Cite web|url=http://www.nottinghamacademy.org/news/?pid=115&nid=2&storyid=127|title=Pride report for 2019}}</ref>
The educational lessons saw development from previous years, with topics such as 'The Pride Movement', 'LGBTQ Abuse and Bullying' from 2018 with added topics such as 'Section 28', 'LGBTQ+ Rights' and more. These educational lessons were backed with physical activities such as class discussions and worksheets, similar to the 2018 event.<ref name=":3" /><ref name=":4" />

Nottingham Academy students from all secondary year groups across Greenwood Campus participated within pride-themed fundraisers and celebrations. These fundraisers included colourful cake, biscuit and ice pole sales along with pride badges with all proceeds going to [[Stonewall (charity)|Stonewall UK]], an LGBTQ+ charity.<ref name=":4" />
[[File:Nottingham Academy Pride 2019 Sheild.jpg|thumb|215x215px|Nottingham Academy Pride 2019 logo, created by Nottingham Academy Pupil]]
To end off the pride and LGBTQ+ Awareness and Acceptance events pupils from all secondary year groups stood together, supporting equality and diversity through a series of celebrations including face painting, colourful non-uniforms and more. Students embraced their differences regardless of race, religion, colour, creed, or sexual orientation.<ref name=":4" />

The Nottingham Academy Pride event was promoted on Twitter by Nottingham Academy and [[Greenwood Academies Trust]] using the hashtag '#StandingTogetherForPride'<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://twitter.com/hashtag/StandingTogetherForPride?src=hash|title=Pride 2019 hashtag.}}</ref>

''The event, "Nottingham Academy Pride is part of the 'Standing Together Programme', created by Nathaniel McLaughlin, Tamina Ikram and inspired by Mr S Gidda."<ref name=":4" />''


==References==
==References==
{{Reflist}}
* [http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/shared/bsp/hi/education/04/school_tables/secondary_schools/html/892_5402.stm "Greenwood Dale School"], [[BBC News]], [[19 October]] [[2005]]
* [http://www.thisisnottingham.co.uk/Plan-approved-girls-academy/story-12202174-detail/story.html "Manning Girls School to become academy"], Nottingham Evening Post, [[2010]]


==External links==
==External links==
{{Commons category|Nottingham Academy}}
*[http://gwdschool.org/ Official site]
* {{Official website|http://www.nottinghamacademy.org/}}

{{Nottinghamshire Schools}}


{{Education in Nottinghamshire}}
[[Category:Foundation schools]]
[[Category:Technology Colleges in England]]
[[Category:Comprehensive schools in Nottingham]]


{{authority control}}


{{DEFAULTSORT:Nottingham Academy}}
{{Nottinghamshire-school-stub}}
[[Category:Academies in Nottingham]]
[[Category:Secondary schools in Nottingham]]
[[Category:Primary schools in Nottingham]]
[[Category:Educational institutions established in 2009]]
[[Category:2009 establishments in England]]

Latest revision as of 01:21, 1 December 2024

Nottingham Academy
Location
Map

England
Information
TypeAll-through Academy
MottoBe Inspired
Established2009 (2009)
FoundersMerged
Local authorityCity of Nottingham
TrustGreenwood Academies Trust
Department for Education URN135881 Tables
OfstedReports
Lead Head PrincipalMr M Afaq
GenderMixed
Age range3–19
Enrolment2,928
Capacity3,570
Campuses
Colour(s)Purple and Black   
AccreditationDrugAware
Websitewww.nottinghamacademy.org

Nottingham Academy is an academy school located in Nottingham, England. It is an all-through 3-19 school. The school is made up from two (formerly three) predecessor schools, Greenwood Dale 11-19, The Jesse Boot Primary School 3–11, and formerly Elliott Durham 11–16.

The Nottingham Academy was founded in 2009 but formally opened during the year of 2011 when Greenwood Campus had completed construction, becoming the 'largest school in Europe', serving up to 3,780 pupils ages 3–19. It is administered by a principal, and each site has a Head of School. The academy is sponsored by the Greenwood Academies Trust (GAT).

In September 2020, The Nottingham Academy, Greenwood Campus and Ransom Campus separated and become two individual schools under the Greenwood Academies Trust. The Greenwood Campus remained called The Nottingham Academy while the Ransom Campus became The Wells Academy.[1]

History

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The Nottingham Academy is the result of the combination of the former Elliot Durham School, which was labelled the third worst performing school in the country in 2007, the Greenwood Dale School, which had been highlighted by Ofsted in 2009 as one of 12 outstanding schools serving disadvantaged communities. Also included was the Jesse Boot School.[2][3] The Academy was formed in 2009 as city academy.[4] [5]

Nottingham Academy, Wells Academy Campus

Greenwood Dale school, in Sneinton was a maintained comprehensive that was popular with parents and was full to capacity and too full to take extra pupils, and the site was impossible to expand. It had previously been Greenwood Bilateral School, changing from being a bilateral, with its grammar stream, to a comprehensive school in 1972. It had not lost its kudos. It had failed some key Ofsted tests in 1992 but had raised these indicator results from 12% five A* to C, not including maths and English, in 1992, to 97% overall pass rate in 2007 and it had a 53% pass rate when including maths and English.[2]

Elliott Durham, was a deeply unpopular comprehensive which served one of Nottingham's poorest neighbourhoods, St Ann's. It had space for 1,350 pupils, but in 2007 had only 350. Families would rather bus their children out of the city than send them to Elliott Durham. Academically it had just 21% A* to C grades at GCSE in 2007, including maths and English, though that was a rise on the 7% two years previously; considerably down on the 47.6% average for secondary schools in England. It was a classified as a "national challenge" school, ones where fewer than 30% of pupils achieve five GCSE passes including in maths and English, it had been told to rapidly improve or close down.[2]

Jesse Boot, a primary school in Bakersfield down the road, urgently needed to replace its 1930s classrooms and do something about its falling rolls. It had 500 pupils on roll, but capacity for 630.[2]

Opening of the Nottingham Academy

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Europe's biggest school catering for 3,600 pupils opened to the public on 7 September 2009.[6] The academy merged three schools. The academy had 200 teachers and more than 100 administrators and assistants on roll during its opening.[citation needed]

The Nottingham Academy was one of the Government's most costly schools building projects. It was among many 'all through' schools providing education for children aged 3 to 19.[citation needed]

Nottingham Academy was one of the first of its kind with a target to build more premium academies across the country.[citation needed]

Today Nottingham Academy is among 31 other academies just like it, all sponsored to the Greenwood Academy Trust.[7]

Michael Gove, former Secretary of State for Education, officially opened the new Greenwood Campus 1 building at Nottingham Academy on 22 September 2011.[8]

Greenwood Campus

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The Greenwood Site, 2018

The Nottingham Academy, Greenwood Campus is set on the former Jesse Boot School and the Greenwood Dale School, creating Greenwood Campus 1 & 2. The Greenwood Campus 1 (GC1)  holds the Primary Academy (Nursery - Year 3), the Secondary Academy (Year 9-11) and the Sixth Form Centre (Year 12-13)

The Greenwood Campus 2 (GC2) currently holds the Primary Academy (Year 4-6) and the Secondary Academy (Year 7-8). The Greenwood Campus 1 & 2 serves the Sneinton and Bakersfield areas.

The Jesse Boot School, Hereford Road

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Jesse Boot School

The Jesse Boot Infant and Juniors School was a primary school located on Hereford Road, Bakersfield, Nottingham (Now, Nottingham Academy, Greenwood Campus 1). It provided education for students aged 3–11. The Jesse Boot School was permanently closed in September 2009. Miss L Valentine was the last headmaster at the school, she retired in 2017.[9]

Jesse Boot, 1st Baron Trent

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Jesse Boot's father (John Boot) founded the Boots Company. Jesse Boot transformed the Boots company into a national retailer. The company branded itself 'chemists to the nation' before Jesse sold his controlling interest to American investors in 1920. Jesse donated land to the University of Nottingham. He was knighted in 1909, and died in Jersey on 13 June 1931.

The Jesse Boot School was built as a memorial for Jesse Boot, the school was opened in 1935 following his death. His son, John Boot officially opened the school on 17 July 1936, he said: "There was no memorial that my father would have appreciated more than to have a school like this named after him."  The Jesse Boot School opened with two headmasters, Mr. A.J Bates, and E.A Worsdall.

In September 2019, Greenwood Campus and Greenwood Campus 2 could re-open as 'Colwick Park Academy' in efforts to raise the standards, control and overall education at the Nottingham Academy set out by Greenwood Academies' Proposal.[10]

Elliot Durham

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The Sports Hall in 2018

Elliot Durham opened in 1966. Schoolsnet in 2003 described it as an 11 to 16 co-educational school, which is housed in excellent purpose-built accommodation on a very attractive site. It emphasises the sports facilities, which include a sports hall with a full size of basketball court, four badminton courts and areas for gymnastics, indoor football, netball and hockey, and a small carpeted hall for dance and aerobics. Outside there are four tennis courts, two floodlit astro-turf fields, extensive playing fields and pool. The school was not popular with parents and though having a capacity of 1350, it had only 353 students on roll.[11]

Proposal to de-merge

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Nottingham Academy student engaged in face painting at Nottingham Academy Pride 2019

In November 2018, Greenwood Academies, sponsor of Nottingham Academy, announced their plans to separate the Greenwood Campus and Ransom Campus.[10]

The original proposal saw changes to the names of both Ransom Campus and Greenwood Campus. Greenwood Campus would be renamed 'Colwick Park Academy' and Ransom Campus would be renamed as 'Mapperley Park Academy'. The newly formed academy would receive a new principal and a personalised curriculum.[10]

After the consultation in December 2018, a series of changes were made to the proposal. Under the new proposal, the Ransom Road Campus would be renamed to 'The Wells Academy' in September 2020, but until 2020 it would be referred to as 'Nottingham Academy - Wells Academy Campus'.[1]

Other changes consisted of an extended day for the Wells Academy Campus for additional pastoral support, academic revision and an improvement upon reading and new uniform policies which included the removal of the skirt for female students and the proposal to include a line of blazers.[1] However, after complaints from parents, the decision to remove skirts from the uniform has been removed.[12]

Under the new proposal, Greenwood Campus would remain the same, the earlier proposed 'Colwick Park Academy' rename would no longer come into effect and the campus would stay as 'Nottingham Academy, Greenwood Campus 1&2'.[1]

The proposal took complete effect after September 2020, with the Ransom Road campus becoming The Wells Academy.

Governance

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The Nottingham Academy is part of the Greenwood Academies Trust and is controlled by the trustees. There is no local governing body, just an advisory board. Each region has a liaising advisor. Individual schools do not have local governing bodies, but advisory panels.[13]

School structure

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A central team from the trust provides support services for finance, ICT, procurement, human resources, catering, data, curriculum development, staff development, health and safety. The academy has control of 94.5% of the budget; the central team controls the other 5.5%.[13]

The Wells Campus, formally Ransom Campus

There are three sites representing the three former schools. They are grouped into two campuses.

The Greenwood Campus serves the Sneinton and Bakersfield areas and the Wells Academy Campus serves the Mapperley and St Anns areas. On the Greenwood Campus, the Greenwood Road site includes pupils from primary year groups from Nursery through to year 3 and secondary students in year groups 9 through to Post 16. The Sneinton Boulevard site includes primary year groups year 4 to year 6 and secondary year groups 7 and 8, like a traditional middle school.[13]

Cohort Greenwood Campus Ransom Road Campus
Year 7 246 138
Year 8 233 154
Year 9 244 138
Year 10 233 130
Year 11 230 108
Year 12 76 --
Year 13/14 99 --

[13]

Buildings

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The three sites were given a £55 million rebuild.[when?] The architects were Franklin Ellis Architects and the scheme was managed by Carillon.

The Wells Academy buildings have been refurbished and subjected to new cladding. They have been linked at the upper floor level.[14]

Sneinton Boulevard's (Greenwood Site 2) annex building was demolished during the academic year of 2016/2017 making way for a new primary building that was finished in 2017.[15]

Pupil initiatives

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Nottingham Academy Pride 2018

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Mr S Gidda and his pupils

In early 2018, a Nottingham Academy year ten pupil presented the idea to run a series of educational events surrounded equality, diversity and the LGBTQ community to 10SGI tutor at Greenwood Campus. As a result to the proposal, development was made on the student's idea and from 6 to 13 July 2018 the tutorial group, 10SGI led the Nottingham Academy Pride and LGBTQ+ Awareness Week campaign.[16][17]

The tutor group, 10SGI presented activities that ran throughout the week. These activities included educational lessons on equality, diversity and LGBTQ topics, pride-themed fundraisers and educational assemblies.

The educational lessons were presented to tutors across Greenwood Campus that aimed to look at different subjects. Topics included 'The Pride Movement', 'The Meaning Behind LGBTQ+', 'Difference Between Sex & Gender' and others. These lessons were backed by physical activities which included worksheets and social conversations with other pupils. These activities were themed and included 'How masculine and feminine are you?' and 'What do the colours of the flag represent?'.[16][17]

The Nottingham Academy tutor group, 10SGI invited a trans woman into the campus to speak to the year ten group of pupils within an assembly about transgenderism. This assembly included her life, the science behind transgenderism and statistics with advice on bullying and abuse related issues.[16]

Throughout the week of Nottingham Academy Pride 2018, 10SGI ran a series of pride-themed fundraisers including cake sales, ice pole sales, non-uniform and face painting, raising £110 for Nottinghamshire Pride.[17]

The non-uniform and face-painting or 'celebration' events allowed for students to come together and embrace their differences despite their race, religion, colour, creed or sexual orientation while showing support for those within the LGBTQ+ community and those affected by anti-LGBTQ abuse.[17]

Nottingham Academy Pride 2019

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Nottingham Academy Pupils at Nottingham Academy Pride 2019.
Student at Nottingham Academy Pride 2019

In 2019, a Nottingham Academy student proposed to run a second year of the Nottingham Academy Pride event for pupils across Greenwood Campus. The proposal saw developments from the 2018 Pride event with students from all secondary year groups participating in lessons and celebrations along with new lesson topics and fundraisers.

From 8 to 12 July 2019 Nottingham Academy, Greenwood Campus students participated within the second year of the school's pride, equality and diversity events with a series of new educational lessons and pride-themed fundraisers.[18] The educational lessons saw development from previous years, with topics such as 'The Pride Movement', 'LGBTQ Abuse and Bullying' from 2018 with added topics such as 'Section 28', 'LGBTQ+ Rights' and more. These educational lessons were backed with physical activities such as class discussions and worksheets, similar to the 2018 event.[17][18]

Nottingham Academy students from all secondary year groups across Greenwood Campus participated within pride-themed fundraisers and celebrations. These fundraisers included colourful cake, biscuit and ice pole sales along with pride badges with all proceeds going to Stonewall UK, an LGBTQ+ charity.[18]

Nottingham Academy Pride 2019 logo, created by Nottingham Academy Pupil

To end off the pride and LGBTQ+ Awareness and Acceptance events pupils from all secondary year groups stood together, supporting equality and diversity through a series of celebrations including face painting, colourful non-uniforms and more. Students embraced their differences regardless of race, religion, colour, creed, or sexual orientation.[18]

The Nottingham Academy Pride event was promoted on Twitter by Nottingham Academy and Greenwood Academies Trust using the hashtag '#StandingTogetherForPride'[19]

The event, "Nottingham Academy Pride is part of the 'Standing Together Programme', created by Nathaniel McLaughlin, Tamina Ikram and inspired by Mr S Gidda."[18]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d "GAT De-Merger Proposal Changes". Greenwood Academies Trust.
  2. ^ a b c d Shepherd, Jessica (7 September 2009). "First day of term at Nottingham Academy - the largest school in Europe". The Guardian. Retrieved 17 December 2017.
  3. ^ Twelve outstanding secondary schools - Excelling against the odds, Ofsted, 24 February 2009. Retrieved 17 December 2017.
  4. ^ "City's three academies win backing.", Europe Intelligence Wire, Financial Times, 22 December 2005
  5. ^ "Old sneinton schools, greenwood, sneinton boulevard, sneinton trust". Nottstalgia Nottingham Forums. 2009. Retrieved 17 December 2017.
  6. ^ Shepherd, Jessica (7 September 2009). "First day of term at Nottingham Academy - the largest school in Europe". The Guardian.
  7. ^ "Greenwood Academies Trust".
  8. ^ "Department for Education, GC1 Opening". YouTube.
  9. ^ "Jesse Boot School - Info, GOVUK".
  10. ^ a b c "Proposal to re-open academy".
  11. ^ "Elliott Durham School Nottingham: Read Parent Reviews & Rankings". www.schoolsnet.com. Retrieved 27 January 2018.
  12. ^ "NottinghamRansom - Proposed changes at Ransom Road Campus". ransomroad.nottinghamacademy.org. Retrieved 15 September 2019.
  13. ^ a b c d "About us". www.greenwoodacademies.org. Retrieved 17 December 2017.[permanent dead link]
  14. ^ "Ransom Road, Nottingham Academy Opens". www.franklinellis.co.uk. Retrieved 27 January 2018.
  15. ^ "Nottingham Academy Primary Information. (Greenwood Site 2)".
  16. ^ a b c "Pride letter to parents".
  17. ^ a b c d e "Report of Pride 2018".
  18. ^ a b c d e "Pride report for 2019".
  19. ^ "Pride 2019 hashtag".
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