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A High School Heritage

The story of how Parkfield, Stonefield / Hall Green / Bilston High School
became Ormiston SWB Academy
2
Contents

Parkfield High School Stonefield / Hall Green


Pages 1 to 2 / Bilston High School
Pages 1 to 2

Ormiston SWB Academy


Pages 1 to 2

Acknowledgements

3
About the Project
Memories of school days can evoke a wide range of emotions. For some they are the best days of their
lives. For others they couldn’t wait to be released from the confines of the dreaded timetable. Of course
the path for many lies somewhere in between these two extremes. Needless to say they are memorable
days, whatever those memories might have been.

What is certain though is that these precious memories are worth collecting and preserving. People
will have their own personal archives but the aim of this book was to bring as many memories, stories,
photographs and other aretfacts together for posterity.

Gareth Kibby, Head of Performing Arts at Ormiston SWB Academy had worked with heritage consultant,
Peter Ralley, on a number of other projects. One of which was to do just the very same thing for a school
which had closed and was close to being lost to demolition. Together, and with the support of the Senior
Leadership Team at OSWB, they looked at a possible project.

Two schools would form the main focus of the project; Parkfield High School and Hall Green High School,
formerly known at Stonefield High School and later as Bilston High School. These would have one time
been known as secondary modern schools which were non-seective. On this basis a successful bid was
made to the National Lottery Heritage Fund and the project was underway.

The names and former names of the various schoolis quite a complex web and it’s thanks to former
staff and students who, through social media and face-to-face interviews, helped us to make sense of
it all.

We would like to thank the National Lottery Heritage Fund for having
faith in this project and giving us the means to make it a reality.

Thanks to to all the former staff and students of PArkfield and Hall
Green and to the current staff and students at Ormiston South West
Bilston Academy.

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The Schools and How They Changed and Merged

© OpenStreetMap contributors

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A Little Bit About Bilston
Bilston is an ancient town dating back to at least the 900s
when it was know as Bilsatena and Bilsetatun. Bilsetnatun
can be interpreted as meaning the settlement (ton) of the
folk (saetan) of the ridge (bill), although there are several
other theories as to the meaning of the name. As with many
other towns, the name has changed for various reason of the
many hundreds of years it has been used. Then, England was
divided between Anglo-Saxons and Vikings and is referred to
a the Middle Ages. It came to an end in 1066 with the Batte of
Hastings.
In the Domesday book Bilston was a settlement in the
hundred (administrative centre) of Seisdon and the county of
Staffordshire and was referred to as Billestune.
It had a recorded population of 11 households (probably
50 to 60 people) in 1086, putting it in the smallest 40% of
settlements recorded in Domesday and was valued at 1pound
and 10 shillings, or one pound fifty in today’s money!

Over subsequent years is was called Byllestone, Billsington,


Bylstune, Bylston, Bilson and eventually Bilston.

Bilston has a population of around 25,000 people and was for a long time an independent town
before being absorbed into Wolverhampton in 1966.

Our thanks to the Bilston Memories Club for allowing us to use some of their wonderful collection of images
of Bilston past and present.
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This 1885 map shows the extent of industrialisation in Bilston during the Industrial Revolution.

Below shows where Ormiston SWB Academy now stands.

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Terminology
One issue that has arisen from this project is the names of the school we are looking at.
Schools changed their names, merged and were demolished.

Were the schools High Schools, Secondary Schools, Secondary Modern Schools, Community Schools or
Academies?

It is of course all relative to when you were at a particular school.

A secondary or high school provides seconary education, now from the ages of 11 to 18 and is a
general term for this phase of education.

A secondary modern school was a type of secondary school that exitsed between 1944 until the 1970s
under what was called the tripartate system.

The tripartate sytem divided schools into grammar schools, secondary technical schools and
secondary modern schools. Most authorities used only grammar and secondary modern schools.

Grammar schools were selective and only pupils who had passed their 11 plus exam could attend
them. Grammar schools were phased out to a large extent in the 1970s and either became fee-paying
schools or comprehensive schools.

In latter years schools have been called Grant Maintained, or as is the case now, Academies which are
directly funded by the government and are out of local authority control.

The two schools have had many names over the years and for the purposes of this book they will, in the
main, be referred to as:

Parkfield High School


Hall Green High School

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Famous Bilstonians

Richard Salter
The firm began life in the
late 1760s Bilston which
was then littlee more than a
village. By 1825 his nephew
George had taken over the
company, which became
known as George Salter &
Co. George and established
a factory in West Bromwich
where it thrived throughout
the 1900s, and by 1950 it employed over 2000 people.
Photo by Jane Booker

James Fleet the actor famous for roles in ‘Four Weddings and A Funeral’ and ‘The Vicar of Dibley’ was
born in Bilston in 1952 and lived there until he was 10 years old.

Don Powell,
(second from left in photograph) drummer with the Midlands Band
‘Slade’ was born in Bilston in 1946 and attended Etheridge Secondary
Modern School.

Michael Lyons was born in


Bilston in 1943. He attended
Wolverhampton College of Art
from 1959 to 1963. He was
instrumental in setting up the
famous Yorkshire Sculpture Park
which occupies 500 acres of
parkland in Bretton Hall.

By AVRO - Beeld En Geluid Wiki - Gallerie Photo courtesty of David Lyons


Toppop 1973, CC BY-SA 3.0 nl

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Filmed Interviews
As part of this project we have also interviewed many for staff and students fromParkfield and Hall
Greem High School. Some have been face-to-face interviews, otherd audio interviews and some have
been video interviews. Clips from these interviews have been used as part of the film we have made for
the project. The film is available on the project website at: www.ahighschool-heritage.co.uk
These are some of the people we have interviewed.

Lee Thompson
Lee was a pupil at Hall Green and admits that he could at times be a
‘challenging’ pupil. Despite that he started working at the school as site
manager in 2006, a temporary job, or so he thought! As time went on he
became senior site supervisor, a role he continues at OSWB.

Sue Watson
Sue started working as a probationary teacher at Parkfield High School in
1981 and still works at OSWB today, some 43 years later. In that time she
taught at both Parkfield and Hall Green School sites. She has a lot of happy
memories of Parkfield which you can hear about in her interview.

Donna Hughes
Donna also started her career at Parkfields and now works at OSWB. She
remembers how kind everyone was and how she was helped and encour-
aged to gain her qualified teacher status. Donna is a hugely enthusiastic
teacher with a great love for her job and the students she works with.

Sue Watson
ssssss

Lee Thompson
ssssss

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Lee Thompson
Lee was a pupil at Parkfield and admist that he could at times be a ‘challenging’
pupil. Despite that he started working at the school as an assistant to the
caretaker when he left full-time education. As time went on he became
senior site supervisor, a role he continues at OSWB.

Sue Watson
Sue started working as a probationary teacher at Parkfield High School in
1981 and still works at OSWB today, some 43 years later. In that time she
taught at both Parkfield and Hall Green School sites. She has a lot of happy
memories of Parkfield which you can hear about in her interview.

Lee Thompson
ssssss

Sue Watson
ssssss

Lee Thompson
ssssss

Sue Watson
ssssss

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Parkfield High School
Parkfield High School was opened in April 1962 and situated in the Parkfield
area, which has been administratively part of Wolverhampton since
1966. The school served the neighbourhoods of Lanesfield, Woodcross,
and Ettingshall. It was built during the 1960s, with extensions following
during the 1970s, and around 1980 the main building was extensively
renovated due to mining subsidence. The school replaced the former
Manor Secondary School near Woodcross, Coseley.

There were two sites for the school, the main site was Parkfields and the
Bilston site was where the astroturf is now at OSWB. This school was known
as Parkfield Bilston High School.

The last headmaster before the school was succeeded by South Wolverhampton and Bilston Academy
was Mr Arthur Thompson, who retired in July 2009. The two sites which Parkfields maintained joined
together on the Wolverhampton Road East site from September 2009.The school closed on 31 August
2009 and was replaced by Ormiston SWB Bilston. The old site now houses the Khalsa Academy.

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Memories of Former Staff
I started teaching at Parkfields in 2001, and I did my first placement to park fields, which I just absolutely
loved. I was really lucky to get a job there, and I’ve been here ever since, and it’s I’ve always said to
myself, if I hated my job I’d leave. And it’s never happened, you know, 23 years later. I’m still here. My
dad was brought up in park fields. My grandma was born literally 5 minutes from park Fields so the
school was very close to my heart. So it meant that I understood the kids.

How have things changed? Kids are still like the kids I was teaching 23 years ago, they’re not that different
to the kids that come through into year seven. One of the big changes now of course is social media
and the influence that has on their lives. There was none of that when I first started. There is a lot more
pastoral support now, which is a good thing and teachers have more time to deal with that side of
things. In the earlier days it was about managing behaviour and the frequent playground tussles. When
I became head of department I was responsible for discipline and would often have five or six disruptive
pupils in my classroom. We now have a special unit for that, so it takes the pressure off staff.

When I first started at Parkfields it was right down at the bottom of the tables of schools in Wolverhampton.
It had a bad reputation. When I started it was true that the kids were naughty, but they were also very
loyal. That’s something I loved about it.
It was eventually decided that Parkfields would pair up with the Bilston site which is next to OSWB,
where the astro turf is now. At first some students were bused from this site to Parkfields for some
lessons, including science, and the difference between the two sets of students was very noticeable.
Eventually they got used to each other and in the end all of the kids were bussed up every day while this
school was being built.

I’ve always loved the kids here, they’re honest and I like that and I think this school is now regarded
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highly in the area. We’re really lucky to have such an amazing building to work in. I remember, in the old
building, having to turn all the Bunsen burners on in the lab to heat the place up it was so cold. It was
three degrees one day!

I started with a part-time job at the old Parkfields School when my kids were very small. They’re now
27 and 30 and I’ve been here all that time. I’ve worked in lots of different areas of the school and I
eventually applied as exams officer which I’m still doing now.

There were two sites for the school. One was the Bilston site and the other Parkfields, which was called
the main site, they merged in 2001.

It was great working there and we had a good laugh, the staff were great and that’s why I’m still here!

The students now have more attitude than back in the day. Then they more or less did what they were
told to do, there’s more kickback from them now.
When the school closed, the headteacher, Arthur Thompson, gave some of us a frame with the dates
of the school, from September 1963 to August 2009. Just to say thank you for all the happy memories.
I was very sad when it closed. I had to be interviewed for my own job even though I was the only one
doing my job! A lot of people left but many stayed and teach at this school. It’s a lovely place to work,
I feel very comfortable here.

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School Houses and Colours
WINDSOR TUDOR HANOVER STUART
Current reign- Royal house Royal house Royal house
ing royal house reigning from reigning from reigning from
since 1917. 1485 to 1603. 1714 to 1901 1390 to1625

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Memories of Former Pupils

Anyone remember the female PE Teachers? Mrs Whitehouse? Running cross country in PE around
the school and up the Birmingham New Rd. They used to drive up in their car and shout through
the window if they caught us walking. Best times were sneaking down the short cut off Dovedale,
down Ashbourne and over Kazzas. Then we would have to hide by Bevan Ave shops, so we weren’t
back too quick and be ahead of the Wolverhampton and Bilston runners.

Who else used to get their mark and run up those steps off truanting?
I used to jump the fence and spend the day in Jack’s cafe playing space invaders
I remember it well we use to get our mark and go over to the cafe over the Birmingham New Road.

Loved my time at Parkfields, best school ever. Best people,friends and teachers.

Even though I must of been a handful all the time, I had plenty of slippers, cane, ruler across the
knuckles and backside and once made to tread water in the freezing cold pool on my own in
pyjamas for a full one hour while the Teacher checked on me every 15 minutes to see if I hadn’t
drowned. After all that you made me the man I am today. Thank you.

Mr. Brookes always used to get me to read stuff out in class because I was the only one who
attempted a French accent. I didn’t have a clue what I was saying, I just used to take off Peter
Sellers from ‘The Pink Panther’.
He used to come to school on a Triumph Bonneville.
He became a priest at St Peter’s Church in Wolverhampton. His funeral was there and it was
packed.
Mr Brooks. he was my favourite teacher, always had a smile on his face.
On my leaving certificate he wrote ‘viva les Beatles ‘

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1973 the first trophy a Parkfield Team
won, the Bird Cup, Mr Hughes was the
proudest man in the World.
My favourite teacher, he’s still a hero of
mine today.

Great pics! Brings back some


funny memories! We actually
thought we were the spice girls!

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Who faked their own sick note?
It was OK for me, my mums signature was easy to forge.
I couldn’t, my dad was the caretaker of Parkfields when I was there!
Only did it once and the teacher saw straight through it I got put on report.

Battered sausage chips and beans for £1.20 with your dinner ticket. I used to sneak an extra
sausage under my chips so the dinner lady at the till didn’t see it. Dinner times were like a special
ops mission
I used to put chips in my blazer pocket so I could go play football quicker.
A turkey drummer in the middle of your jacket potato with cheese on the top so no one could see
it.
Wasn’t there a cheese pie for about 50p? I used to love that.
Yes, cheese and potato pie and lasagna in the round dishes delicious.

Who remembers Copy and Pasting from Encarta for your homework everyone would hand in the
same thing!

One of my best memories is the school library. They had a fantastic library with a huge range of
books. I have always been interested in television and they had some very good books on the
subject. There was a book about American TV that I now have my own copy of, it was fascinating
to read in the 90s as a lot of old American comedies were reshown on Sky at the time and the
book had a lot of information on them.

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The Parkfields championship
winning basketball team 1986.

Nevas Cruise 1969 or 1970

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Anyone remember Mrs. Evans, home economics and textiles teacher ?
Always on about sewing buttons on as soon as they fell off!
Yes. Great teacher. She gave me a distinction for my waistcoat creation. Loved that lesson.
I remember in one cookery class, Mrs. Bibby was appalled because I was Scottish, I didn’t know
how to make shortbread! Making shortbread was never top of my priorities back then!
Mrs Bibby was wonderful. She gave me the interest in catering and I was a cook for 25 years …
loved it.
Yes I remember her. I was sewing a jumpsuit for needlework class, and she told me to overlock it
after I’d sewn it which caused the needle to go right through my finger and snap in half. Had to go
to A&E to get it cut out.

Lunchtime caught the 58 bus to Wolverhampton to buy latest records from Ruby Reds

My time at Parkfields (1965-1970) really brought me out of myself and gave me the confidence to
go on and become a teacher myself. The title of Andy Whyatt’s production of ‘The Happiest Days
of Your Life’ in which I played Hopcroft minor pretty much sums up my time there.

Who remembers the temporary wooden huts when the school was partially closed for emergency
repairs? It was like a scene from ‘The Great Escape’.
I had lessons in them for ages, they were cold and dirty places . When we moved into the new
school building, we were amazed because it was so modern at the time .
I was there when the main block closed and the ‘temporary’ Portacabins were installed on the
playing fields, mid 1970s.
Spent 2-3 years in them until I left in 1980. Freezing cold in the winter, red hot in the summer.
Spent most of my Parkfield time in those cold huts, oh the life we had!
I remember when I used to walk up and down the huts ringing the big brass bell for home time.
In the late 1970s, we had to use prefab huts as the main building was not safe and had to be
rebuilt. I can remember the huts but also remember being bused to another school for cooking
lessons.
I remember being bused somewhere for metal work lessons when the huts were up.

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German Exchange Trip 1997.

Netball Team 1981-1982, under the


management of Mrs Coachman who was a
great teacher and excellent coach.
We were a class team!

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This 1886 map shows the Parkfields area which is dotted
with old mine shafts. This is more or less the area where
Parkfields High School was built and was responsible in
1978 for the drawing up of plans to demolish much of
the original building as it was becoming unsafe due to
subsidence caused by the unstable ground beneath.

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This rebuild meant that the main school had to
be abandoned and students moved to mobile
classrooms for the duration of the work. These
were placed to the north of the main building on
part of the playing fields.

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This plan shows the school site after the rebuild was completed in XXXX.
The plans opposite are the ‘before’ and ‘after’ build and show as distinct growth in the size of the school.
The left-hand aerial image is the Parkfield site as it is in 2024 with the right-hand version showing the
1978 outlibe superimposed over the top. It can be clearly seen that some parts of that 1978 build have
now gone, indeed the swimming pool, gymnasium and tradskills building have been demolished in
recent years as it was structurally unsafe and further building are likely to disappear in coming years.
A legacy of where it is built.

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The Towers
The Towers was an outdoor education centre owned
and run by Wolverhampton Education. Like similar
centres across the country it became financially
difficult to run and so was taken over by a private
company who still runs it as an outdoor centre.

Below is the logo for the Towers which is part of the


Active Learning Centre group.

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An Example of a Weeks Timetable at The Towers

I’m sure me and my mate got lost in the mountains after being told to walk back from the village.
Capil Curig I think.

I remember finding out the name of the Little walls, the ha ha’s and laughing shouting “Ha ha
funny funny ha ha!”

Aww lovely memories. I remember having a water fight on the canoes, ours sank we had to walk
through the mud. We got stuck in it up to our waists.

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HRH The Late Duke of Edinburgh, visiting 5th year (Year 11) pupils in
connection with a house decorating project for OAP’s organised by RE
teacher Alan Rumble after the exams were over. 1970.

The cast of “Running Riot” by Derek Benfield, the school play directed by
Head of English, Andy Whyatt.1968.

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Stonefield / Hall Green Secondary Modern School /
Bilston High School
The school, which stood in Prosser Street was called Bilston High
School, before that it was Hall Green and before that, in the 1950s,
was Stonefield Secondary Modern.Initially the boys and girls were
separated by different entrances and a high wall but came together
to be co-educational in xxxx.

It started life in 1906 as a Primary School. Built around a central


hall, highly ornate with large imposing windows. It had many
original features, including turrets, tall iron railings and terracotta
details and was locally listed in November 2001. However, this did
not stop it from being demolished in 2010.

The railings, which are not by one of the large Wolverhampton


firms but by Jones of West Bromwich, are interesting. They appear
to rest on terracotta copings; but these copings are, as the photo
shows, painted cast iron and came as part of the railings, not as part of the wall.

Stonefield, so called because of the stone field in front of it (see page 36) stood on what is now the
astroturf area of Ormiston SWB Academy as can be seen in the aerial image opposite.

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The School and area in 1920

The school in 1920 is smaller than in later maps. The section to the north has not yet been built.

38
The School and area in 1938

On the 1938 map the school has been extended and Prosser Street is now labelled.

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Photographs from the Archives

Photographs Courtesy of Bilston Memories Club

40
Mr Haddock, former headteacher

Stonefield Girls 1942 Photographs Courtesy of Bilston Memories Club

41
1970s Football Team

1967 Netball Team

1967 Netball Team Photographs Courtesy of Bilston Memories Club

42
Pigeon keeping has alwasy been
a big part of Back Country life
and no less at Stonefield School.

43
Photographs Courtesy of Bilston Memories Club

The name ‘Stonefield’ came from the stone field that lay in front of it
44
This group of students are seen helping to build a new room at the school.

45
Proud students showing off their woodworking projects.

Photographs Courtesy of Bilston Memories Club

46
Stonefield Staff 1962

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Photographs by Martyn Jones

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Photographs by Martyn Jones
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Photographs by Martyn Jones

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School Houses and Colours - When Merged with Parkfields
WINDSOR TUDOR HANOVER STUART
Current reign- Royal house Royal house Royal house
ing royal house reigning from reigning from reigning from
since 1917. 1485 to 1603. 1714 to 1901 1390 to1625

52
The Decline and Merger of Hall Green High School
With the decline in industry in Bilston and the changing nature of the housing, both Parkfield and Hall
Green found their student numbers falling.

Initially Hall Green was merged with Colton High School. This meant that students from Hall Green
were taken in coahces to Colton for some of their lessons, a journey of some fifteen minutes. However,
Colton decided that they no longer wished to continue this association and so a new partner was sought.
Parkfield was an obvious choice as it was actually half the distance from Hall Green, making the bussing
of students much quicker.

During the period of the merger staff and students from Parkfield were bussed down to Hall Green
along with teaching staff. Some students and staff were bussed from Hall Green to Parkfield, but to a
lesser extent.

Eventually, the decision was made by Wolverhampton Education Authority to build a brand new school,
an academy school, which would accommodate all the students from Parkfieds and Hall Green. Whilst
they were in lessons at Hall Green they could see the new school being built, and staff at the schools
were asked their views on how the school should be built so that they could feel an integral part of its
creation.

53
54
55
Ormiston SWB Academy

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Whilst stduents were being bussed from Parkfields to Bilston High School site to and back again on
a daily basis, plans were afoot to build a new school to combine both schools onto one site. It would
have been an odd feeling for many students and staff to see the new school being built which would
eventually mean the closing of their own. The school we now know as Ormiston South West Bilston
Academy started life as part of City of Wolverhampton Academy Trust (COWAT). COWAT was set up
in 2009 to run two new academies: North East Wolverhampton academy and the South West Bilston
academy. However, COWAT was banned from taking on any more schools due to poor performance
and is no longer in existence.

The school was subsequently taken over by the Ormiston Academies Trust in 2017.

57
The architects of the new school were mondful of the emotions of demolishing a school. They asked
students to create artwork that would become part of the new school and thus bring the old and new
together. These can be seen in the librarya nd sixth form area where popular landmarks and sites are
recreated around the top of the wall.

58
There were plans to keep the old belltowers from Bilston High School and have
them as a feature in OSWB School Ground. They were carefgully lifted and laid in
place. However, one morning, it was found that the lead had been stripped from
them both and they were now no good!

At the front of the old school was a stone plaque commemorating when the
school was built and the local councillors involved. Plans were to mount it on the
wall in the school school hall. A recess was duly built for it. Again, things did not
go to plan as the gap created was too small. Eventually the plaque was mounted
on a stand in front of the old school gates.

59
About Ormiston Academies Trust

Peter Murray founded Ormiston Trust in 1969 in memory of his sister Fiona
Ormiston Murray who died in a car crash on her honeymoon. In 2009,
Peter sponsored Ormiston Trust’s first academy (The Gateway Academy
now the independent GLC) followed by Birmingham Ormiston Academy
(BOA, Ormiston Stage and Screen and Ormiston Digital). He then founded
Ormiston Academies Trust which took over the school in 2017.
We are a national education charity, underpinned by the belief that every
child should be given a chance to thrive. We serve pupils from many communities, all with their unique
character, strengths, and challenges.

Our sole purpose is “to provide OAT pupils with excellent learning opportunities, inside and outside the
classroom.”

We are ambitious for the 35,000+ children and young people we are responsible for as they all deserve
to be given every chance to succeed. Whether the pupils attend our primary, secondary, special or
alternative provision academies we are determined that every pupil we serve will be given the opportunity
to realise their dreams and aspirations.

For us to achieve this we know we must work in partnership with others. Children and young people
live in families of different types, located in diverse communities. Our role is to provide a haven in
which our pupils can thrive regardless of the context in which they are growing up. We are proud to be
an outward-facing organisation committed to deepening and extending our work with others locally,
regionally and nationally.

60
Information on pages 56 & 57 by kind permission of OAT
61
Ormiston SWB Academy students are expected to demonstrate a vast array of characteristics that will
prepare them for future success. Our values clearly signal to staff, students and parents the C.O.R.E
values of Character, Organisation, Resilience and Excellence which ensure our Academy is a focused,
happy and a safe place to learn and achieve.

Character
Show respect for everyone in the Academy
Show respect for all staff by following requests ‘FIRST TIME, EVERY TIME’
Use appropriate language at an appropriate volume
Use good manners. We will say
‘Please’, Thank you’ and ‘Pardon’
Avoid confrontation
Show respect for the Academy environment

Organisation
Have the correct equipment each day
look smart, correct uniform at all times
Take responsibility for my attendance each day
Attend all my lessons, making sure I am in the RIGHT place at the RIGHT time
Take responsibility for my behaviour and actions every time and not seek to blame others

Resilience
Keep myself safe moving around the Academy in a calm and orderly manner, respecting balconies and
stairs
Keep myself safe in all lessons by listening to the advice from staff and asking when I am unsure
Not bring prohibited items into the Academy
Keep myself safe by using technology
appropriately
Keep myself safe on my journey to and from the Academy
Never put myself/others in danger with my actions

Excellence
Have a positive attitude with a desire to learn and achieve
Take responsibility for my own learning and
complete all work to the best of my ability
Take responsibility for my own progress by acting upon teachers’ advice with positivity

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Academy Houses and Colours
ATTWOOD BRINDLEY WESTON SANDERSON
British racing 18th century British soldier Wednesfield
driver born in engineer and and heron of javelin thrower,
Wolverhampton. canal builder. the Falklands appeared in six
campaign. Olympic Games.

64
65
The Building
The Garden Level

Floor level wall pics in school here

66
Level 1

67
Level 2

68
Level 3

69
School Photographs by Sophie

70
School Photographs by Tyreece

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