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Location: Saint Paul's Way, London, England, United Kingdom.
Phone: +44 20 7987 1883
St Paul's Way Trust School:
St Paul's Way Trust School is a mixed comprehensive 11-18 secondary school in the London Borough of Tower Hamlets.
The School became a Foundation Trust School in March 2010. The Foundation Trust comprises Queen Mary, University of London, King’s College, London, University of East London, University of Warwick, Catlin Group Limited, London Borough of Tower Hamlets and Tower Hamlets NHS.[3]
In March 2013 Ofsted described the school as outstanding in every category.[4] It commended the school for its “relentless pursuit of scholarship and excellence”.[4] This follows a sustained and rapid improvement in GCSE results that ranked the school amongst the 'most improved schools in England' for 3 consecutive years.
The School moved into an award winning new building with outstanding facilities in January 2011.[6] It is a Faraday Science Specialist School,[7] which also specializes in Visual and Performing Arts. Its academic Sixth Form opened in September 2011.
History of St Paul's Way Trust School:
The school opened as St Paul's Road School in 1873, the building being on the junction of Bow Common Lane and the then St Paul's Road; Bow Common Lane in 1900 becoming the border of the Poplar and Stepney Borough Councils. By the 1950s it was a "central school" using five separate locations.
In the 1960s the school was merged with Millwall Central School and Southern Grove School. Millwall Central School in Glengall Grove is now the Cubitt Town Primary School and the Southern Grove School is now the borough's Professional Development Centre. The merger with the Millwall Central School meant that there were no secondary schools left on the Isle of Dogs, at a time when the Island population was increasing as a result of the building of the Samuda and St Johns Estates in Cubitt Town and the Barkantine Estate in Millwall. St Paul's Way therefore became the main choice of school for Islanders until the new George Green's School opened in Cubitt Town in September 1975. This led to the school becoming heavily oversubcribed.
A new school building at the original site was commenced construction in 1966 and the new modern school opened, including swimming pool and auditorium in September 1968. Mr Arthur J. Davenport became the new Headmaster in September 1970, having previously been Deputy at the nearby Stepney Green Boys School. The school was divided into six houses:
City - Green - named after the City of London;
Gate - Yellow - named after Mile End Gate;
Mill - Brown - named after the Mills on the western wall of the Isle of Dogs;
Palace - White - named after the People's Palace on Mile End Road;
Thames - Red - named after the river;
Tower - Blue - named after the Tower of London.
The next Headmaster Mike Bannister,[12] who arrived in January 1981, ended the house system with the new intake in September 1981, and introduced a dress code and a tutorial system based on year levels.[citation needed] The East London Advertiser remarked in 1980 on the number of pupils for whom English was a second language, around one in ten.[12] The first Bangladeshi pupils were inducted in 1982. A major HMI report in 1984/5 rated the school's social relationship with its community as "Excellent".
Looking back on her training there, the school was described by Bushra Nasir (later the Head of Plashet School) as 'incredibly tough'.
Vivien Cutler was appointed Headteacher in 1988, and made it a priority to improve security as pupils felt unsafe. On leaving in 1994, she admitted that she had only been partially successful, but had at least improved conditions for female students.[14] Incidents of violence, other anti-social behaviour and gang culture at the school were reported again in 2006, when parents of pupils from the closing Homerton College of Technology in Hackney opposed transfers to St Paul's Way.
Under Martyn Coles, headmaster for 1995—2003, the school was an early adopter of specialist schools status, being the second in the country to be awarded a specialism in visual arts in 1998. In 2001 Coles said the school's exam results had improved markedly after this.
In 2006 the school joined the Building Schools for the Future programme to completely replace its 40-year-old building. The £41 million (approx.) construction project by Bouygues began in 2009. The works are within a wider "St Paul's Way Transformation Project", chaired by Lord Andrew Mawson.[20] The school took the opportunity to commission a large artwork on the hoarding,[20][21] incorporating art by the pupils—described as a "crucial" touch by Sir Bob Kerslake of the Homes and Communities Agency.
In 2008 the school caused controversy for firing a teacher, Adrian Swain, for wearing trainers and tracksuit in class, as these were not permitted items of clothing for students.
The school was also threatened with closure that year for poor results. In 2007, 2008 and 2009, fewer than 30% of pupils achieved the benchmark of 5 A* to C grades in GCSE including English and Maths, bucking the trend of improving results in Tower Hamlets as a whole.[24][25] Ofsted noted recent improvements in March 2009, particularly since the new head's appointment, but served a Notice to Improve.[26] The Council resolved in 2009 to make it a foundation school, handing over management of the school to a new trust.
The school became a National Challenge Trust on 26 February 2010, attracting extra funding of £700,000 from the DCSF and bringing the expertise of Queen Mary, University of London to bear on the school's performance.[28] The Trust, named St Paul's Way Foundation, is chaired by Nigel Relph of Queen Mary and also includes representatives of the Institute of Education, University of East London and King's College London.
Ofsted inspected the school again in July 2010, and concluded that it had made "huge" improvements since the previous inspection, was providing a satisfactory education and was "securely on track to be good or even excellent." It was scored "outstanding" on some matters, including the extent to which pupils feel safe.
The school will have a second specialism in science, with interactive teaching methods backed by cutting-edge facilities in a new "Faraday Unit".[19][30] As of 2012 the EduBase website lists the school as having a second specialism in Applied Learning.
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