Oakwood Park Grammar School

Oakwood Park Grammar School
Oakwood Park Grammar School
Oakwood Park Grammar School logo.jpg
Motto Strive and Serve
Established 1918
Type Foundation, Grammar
Headmaster Kevin Moody
Chairman of Governors M. D. Stevens
Specialisms Mathematics & Computing, Applied Learning
Location Oakwood Park
Maidstone
Kent
ME16 8AH
United Kingdom
Local authority Kent County Council
DfE number 886/5422
DfE URN 118894
Ofsted Reports
Staff 65
Students 994[1]
Gender Boys (co-ed Sixth Form)
Ages 11–18
Houses Broughton, Fisher, Hazlitt, Sadler, Wilberforce
Publication @Oakwood
Website opgs.org

Coordinates: 51°16′12″N 0°29′56″E / 51.270°N 0.499°E / 51.270; 0.499

Oakwood Park Grammar School is a boys foundation grammar school located in Maidstone, United Kingdom. The school is co-educational in the sixth form (years 12 and 13). The school takes boys at the age of 11 and over by examination (11+) and boys and girls at 16+ on their GCSE results. It is a mathematics and computing specialist college. The current headteacher is Kevin Moody. The school is popularly known by its initials OPGS.

Contents

History

OPGS was founded in 1918 as the Co-educational Junior Technical School for Boys and the Junior Commercial School for Girls.[2] The school was based at two sites in Maidstone town centre: Faith Street and Tonbridge Road. The school admitted pupils at the age of 11 and 13. The school was also known as the Maidstone Technical School or the Maidstone Technical School of Boys.

By the 1950s the school had outgrown these two sites and a new site was found at Oakwood Park, further along on the Tonbridge Road. The school moved into its new premises between September 1958 and September 1959.[1][2] The new premises were officially opened in September 1959 with a service of dedication performed by the then Archbishop of Canterbury Geoffrey Francis Fisher.

The advent of comprehensive education in the 1970s meant that Thameside scheme was introduced in the Maidstone area.[2] September 1971 saw the last admission at age of 11. There were no new admissions in the next two academic years. From September 1974 pupils were admitted at the age of 13. At the same time the school was renamed Maidstone School for Boys.[2] Under the Thameside scheme technical schools had in effect become grammar schools but were not allowed to call themselves as such. Now the school had to compete with Maidstone Grammar School for pupils.

In 1983 the use of the "grammar school" title was relaxed and on 10 October 1983 Maidstone School for Boys became Oakwood Park Grammar School.[2][3] In the 1980s the school started admitting girls into the sixth form.

Enrollment declined in the late 1980s and Kent County Council, the local education authority, considered merging OPGS with Invicta Grammar School, a girls grammar school located in east Maidstone. A vigorous campaign by parents, staff and governors prevented the merger. On 1 April 1992 OPGS became one of the first schools in the area to achieve grant maintained status, giving it independence from KCC. Enrollment increased thereafter and in September 1993 grammar schools across the area started admitting pupils at the age of 11 (year 7).

After the scrapping of grant maintained status in the late 1990s OPGS became a community school, reverting to KCC control. The school became a mathematics and computing specialist college in 2003.[1] The school is now a foundation school, giving it some independence from KCC.

Extra curricular activities

OPGS's extra curricular activities are extensive and varied. The school has sports teams in football, rugby, cricket, basketball, rowing and athletics which compete at local, county and national levels.[4] There are regular inter-form competitions and an annual sports day. The school has numerous music groups including an orchestra and the Coconut Grove steel band.[4] The school has purpose built drama studio which is home to the drama club.[4] Other school clubs include debating, chess and robotics.[4] The school is a participant in the Duke of Edinburgh Award scheme and has numerous overseas trips.[4]

Houses

OPGS used to have houses named after local villages - Allington, Brenchley, Chilham, Detling, Egerton and Farleigh. This house system was abandoned in the 1980s.

The house system was re-introduced in 2009 mainly due to the school's growing size. The school's five houses are:[5]

  • Broughton (named after Andrew Broughton, former Mayor of Maidstone and signatory of Charles I of England's death warrant)
  • Fisher (named after Geoffrey Francis Fisher, Archbishop of Canterbury, who led the dedication service at the official opening of the school's Oakwood Park site)
  • Hazlitt (named after William Hazlitt, a famous English essayist, playwright and social commentator who was from Maidstone)
  • Sadler (named after David Sadler, a former OPGS student who went on to play 272 games for Manchester United football club following the devastating Munich air disaster, and 4 games for England)
  • Wilberforce (named after William Wilberforce, the famous British politician who successfully stood against slavery, who has family in East Farleigh)

Headmasters

  • 2006- Kevin Moody
  • 1992-06 Mike J. Newbould
  • 1984-1992 A. G. Sanford
  • -1984 John A. Skinner

Head boys / school captains

  • 2011-2012 Samuel Holland
  • 2010-2011 Daniel Crittenden
  • 2009-2010 Thomas Murton
  • 2007-08 James Kailanathan
  • 2006-07 Samuel Mann
  • 2005-06 Ryan Leader
  • 2003-04 Ganesh Ramanathan
  • 1994-95 Robert Bartlett (Deputies: Ian Wilson, Alistair Griffiths and Richard 'Legend' Grist)
  • 1993-94 Alex Wilson
  • 1992-93 Michael Hyde
  • 1991-92 Richard Tuff
  • 1990-91 Nicholas A. Tansley
  • 1989-90 Khalid S. Garousha

Sex video

OPGS hit the headlines on 22 June 1995 when pupils using a 'blank' VHS tape for a project found it contained footage of a male chemistry teacher and a female physics teacher engaging in sexual acts in the school's gymnasium. Pupils reportedly had to be instructed not to speak to the sizable number of journalists who congregated at the school gates.[6]

Notes and references

  1. ^ a b c "About Oakwood Park". School. Oakwood Park Grammar School. http://www.opgs.org/aboutus.htm. 
  2. ^ a b c d e Lewis, Jon (Summer Term 2009). "A rose by any other name". @Oakwood. Oakwood Park Grammar School. 
  3. ^ Yates, Nigel (2001). Kent in the twentieth century. Kent County Council. pp. 314. http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=6sQjOlwvyNcC. 
  4. ^ a b c d e "Extra Curricular". School. Oakwood Park Grammar School. http://www.opgs.org/extra.htm. 
  5. ^ "House System". Community. Oakwood Park Grammar School. http://www.opgs.org/houses.htm. 
  6. ^ "Teachers axed for sex video". The Sun. 22 June 1995. http://www.flickr.com/photos/salamandertome/3319960197/sizes/l/in/set-72157614630872064/. 

External links


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