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Connaught_School_for_Girls Latitude and Longitude:

51°33′59″N 0°00′17″E / 51.56629°N 0.00461°E / 51.56629; 0.00461
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Connaught School for Girls
Address
Dyers Hall Road
Leytonstone

London
,
E11 4AE

England
Coordinates 51°33′59″N 0°00′17″E / 51.56629°N 0.00461°E / 51.56629; 0.00461
Information
Type Academy
MottoSeize the day
Established1932
Department for Education URN 139293 Tables
Ofsted Reports
Head teacherLinsey Hands
GenderGirls
Age11 to 16
Enrolment632
Colour(s)Blue and gold
Website http://www.connaught-school.co.uk/

Connaught School for Girls is a single-sex girls' secondary school and comprehensive school situated in Leytonstone, London. It educates up to 636 girls between the ages of 11 and 16. In February 2013 it became an academy. [1]

History

The first school on the Connaught Road site was a temporary mixed school which opened in 1900 and was discontinued after four years. In 1904 the school became a high school for boys as part of the Norlington Road council school for boys, girls and infants. In 1932 the school reopened as Connaught Road senior girls' school with a junior mixed department. The reopened school was the only Leyton school to be built between the two world wars under the Leyton School Board 1929–32 reorganisation programme. The junior mixed department closed in 1948 when the school became a secondary (modern) school for girls, taking over its adjoining premises. In 1960–61 the school annexe was built on Madiera Road to accommodate the science and PE departments. In 1964 the main site was extended with a new dining room and main assembly hall. The school became a community secondary comprehensive school for girls in the 1970s. In February 2013 the school converted to become a state-funded independent academy for girls aged 11 to 16.

Notable former pupils

References

  1. ^ "Academy status". connaught-school.co.uk. 1 February 2013. Archived from the original on 2 March 2013. Retrieved 11 March 2013.
  2. ^ "Olympics 2016: Where did the medal winners go to school?". Schools Week. 9 August 2016. Retrieved 8 April 2017.

External links