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Orleans Park School

Coordinates: 51°26′58″N 0°19′13″W / 51.4495°N 0.32027°W / 51.4495; -0.32027
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Orleans Park School
Address
Map
Richmond Road

, ,
TW1 3BB

Coordinates51°26′58″N 0°19′13″W / 51.4495°N 0.32027°W / 51.4495; -0.32027
Information
TypeAcademy
MottoBe the Best You can Be
Established1914 - Orleans County Secondary School
1973 - Orleans Park School
Department for Education URN138651 Tables
OfstedReports
Head teacherKathy Pacey
GenderCoeducational
Age11 to 18
Enrolment1,213[1]
Websitehttps://www.orleanspark.school/

Orleans Park School is a Mixed comprehensive school[2] with academy status, located in the Twickenham area of the London Borough of Richmond upon Thames, England. It is situated 10 miles south-west of central London.

Location and history

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Orleans County Secondary School was established in 1914 on Napoleon Road, Twickenham, designed to accommodate 840 boys and girls. The school served the growing local population, providing mixed secondary education.[3] In 1961, the school expanded by acquiring a sports field on Richmond Road, formerly the Exiles Football Ground, enhancing its facilities and extracurricular opportunities for students.

Demands for rebuilding the school were first made in 1946 and by 1964 a site had been acquired by Middlesex County Council in Orleans Park, although a new school had not been included in the Education Ministry's building programme up to 1967.[4] In the mid-1960s, proposals to close or merge Orleans School with Kneller Girls' School as part of borough-wide secondary education reorganization faced significant opposition from parents and staff. A 1966 Middlesex Chronicle article documented a campaign against its closure, with over 3,250 signatures collected in protest.[5]

By 1971, the Richmond Borough Council approved plans to replace Orleans School with a new mixed secondary school at Orleans Park, Twickenham.[6] on four of the sixteen acres of the former Orleans House estate.[7] The new building was designed as a 900-place school with a sixth form entry, aligning with the borough’s shift to a comprehensive system in 1972.

The pupils moved into the newly built and renamed Orleans Park School in September 1973[8] marking it as Richmond’s first purpose-built comprehensive school[9]. On March 18, 1974, Margaret Thatcher, then Secretary of State for Education, was to have officially opened the new Orleans Park School on the Richmond Road site[10], however, these plans were postponed[11] A second phase of building was completed in September 1975 and on Tuesday April 13 1976, Lord Boyle of Handsworth (then the vice-chancellor of Leeds University and a former Education Minister) opened the school officially.[9]

The Headteacher who had overseen the transition of the school to the new site and name was Sidney Altman. He died in early 1977 whilst still serving as Headmaster, and the school's library was dedicated in his honour. The Altman Memorial Trophy was also presented to the school by his widow to be awarded annually for service to the school.[12]

The school continued to expand and in 1993, Lord Richard Attenborough opened a new building at the school[13][14], contributing to the school's development. Orleans Park School gained specialist status as a Mathematics and Computing College in September 2003, as a Language College in September 2008 and it became an academy in 2012.

Sir David Attenborough, continued his family's connection with the school by opening the Attenborough Building, a new sixth form centre[15] named in their family's honor, on March 10, 2015[14]. During his speech, Sir David fondly remembered his brother, who had passed away the previous year, and expressed delight in the building's dedication to the Attenborough family.

Uniform

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The uniform consists of a maroon sweatshirt with an added gold band around the v., a white shirt and grey trousers or skirt; both the skirt and the jumper display the school's logo in gold, which from 2012 (when the school became as academy) became the interlocked letters O and P.

The prior logo of Orleans Park School in use in the 1980s, 1990s and early 2000s

Prior to that, the school's logo was a coat of arms-style emblem with several elements associated with its location including a swan at the top, below which were the three curved seaxes (saxon swords), representing Middlesex, and a fleur-de-lis symbol beneath the swords representing the historical French influence of the Orleans name. The school's motto, "Looking Forward" was unchanged, suggesting a progressive and future-focused ethos.

Catchment

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Many pupils at Orleans Park come from the following nearby primary schools: St. Stephen's School, Archdeacon Cambridge's School, St. Mary's School, Chase Bridge Primary School, Orleans Primary, Ivybridge school, and The Vineyard School.[citation needed]

Performance

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The school's history has seen a number of peaks and troughs in its overall performance. In the latter quarter of the twentieth century there are references to its high quality of the teaching[9]. However, a fuller picture and history is only available once the Ofsted inspections became more regular following the Education (Schools) Act 1992. In 1997, there was a hard hitting inspection. The school then went through a difficult period immediately following that inspection after which time Ofsted noted that substantial improvements were made, especially after the appointment of David Talbot in 1999.[16] GCSE results rose and attendance improved. A continued improvement can be charted through subsequent Ofsted reports, becoming Outstanding (the highest level) in 2010 and maintaining that since. In the 2024 GCSE examinations, 32% of students achieved the highest two grades with 92% of students attained a pass in English and Mathematics combined. At A Level, the school surpassed the national average for A*/A grades and 85% were A*-C.[17]


Summary table of Ofsted inspections
Year inspected Ofsted grade Headteacher Ref Notes
2023 Outstanding Kathy Pacey [18] Inspection
2017 Outstanding Elaine Bell [19] Full Inspection
2010 Outstanding Joanna Longhurst [20] Full Inspection
2007 Good David Talbot [21] Full Inspection
2003 No overall rating David Talbot [16] Full Inspection
No Ofsted single word (pre-2005).
Summarised as a good school with many very strong features

Headteachers

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Orleans County Secondary School

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  • G. H. C. Spencer - 1915
  • Mr. Howick - c.1942
  • W. McD. Regan - c.1965-1966
  • E. L. Evans (Acting Headteacher) - 1966
  • Sidney Altman - 1966–1973 (then transitioned to Orleans Park School)

Orleans Park School

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  • Sidney Altman - 1973–1977 (served until his death)
  • Mr. Garth Freeman - 1978–at least July 1986
  • Mrs. E. Clarke - before 1989–1990
  • Elizabeth Selman - 1990–1998
  • Mr. David Talbot - 1999–at least 2007
  • Ms. Joanna Longhurst - before April 2010–2013
  • Elaine Ball - 2013–2022
  • Ms. Kathy Pacey - September 2022–Present

Notable former pupils

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Notable former teachers

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  • Greg Davies, comedian and actor who taught drama at the school prior to his entertainment career. Best known for his role as the Taskmaster in Taskmaster, and as Mr Gilbert in The Inbetweeners[31]
  • Giselle Mather (née Prangnell), English rugby union international and coach, won 34 caps for England, part of the 1994 Women's World Cup winning side, first woman to achieve level 4 coaching status from the RFU, first woman to coach a male rugby union side, first coach of the Women's Barbarians and from 2024 coach of the Great Britain Women's rugby union sevens squad. Taught PE at the school from 1996 to 1999.[32]
  • Beth Potter, Paris 2024 Olympics Individual Triathlon bronze medalist.[33] She was a former science teacher at Orleans Park School, teaching physics A-level up until 2016[33]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Department for Education". Retrieved 24 June 2017.
  2. ^ Orleans Park School official website
  3. ^ Middlesex and Buckinghamshire Advertiser on October 4, 1913
  4. ^ Teachers' Legal Position In Question, Middlesex Chronicle, May 29, 1964
  5. ^ Middlesex Chronicle, May 6, 1966.
  6. ^ Plans to Replace Orleans School, Horncastle Target, April 16, 1971
  7. ^ "Orleans House". The Twickenham Museum. Retrieved 16 December 2012.
  8. ^ Middlesex Chronicle (Twickenham and Whitton ed.), Fri, Sep 14, 1973 Page 12
  9. ^ a b c New all-in gets praise from Tory, Middlesex Chronicle (Twickenham and Whitton ed.), Apr 16, 1976 Page 1
  10. ^ Horncastle Target, Fri, Dec 28, 1973, Page 5
  11. ^ Horncastle Target, Fri, Mar 08, 1974 Page 5
  12. ^ Dedication of Library to Ex-Head, Middlesex Chronicle, Hounslow, London, October 28, 1977
  13. ^ "Orleans Park | About". Orleans Park School. Retrieved 16 December 2012.
  14. ^ a b Sir David delighted to open sixth form centre named after Attenborough family, Richmond & Twickenham Times, 11th March 2015
  15. ^ "Welcome from the Head of Sixth Form". School Website. Retrieved 7 October 2013.
  16. ^ a b https://reports.ofsted.gov.uk/provider/23/102923
  17. ^ Exam results at Orleans Park School 2024
  18. ^ https://files.ofsted.gov.uk/v1/file/50237854
  19. ^ https://files.ofsted.gov.uk/v1/file/2747525
  20. ^ https://files.ofsted.gov.uk/v1/file/1954727
  21. ^ https://files.ofsted.gov.uk/v1/file/830917
  22. ^ "Heather Cowell England Rugby".
  23. ^ "Cameron Cowell Archives".
  24. ^ "RFU - England". englandrugby.com. Retrieved 19 August 2018.
  25. ^ "'I had the two unhappiest years of my life' - Supergroup's Julian Dunkerton". managementtoday.co.uk. Retrieved 19 August 2018.
  26. ^ "Tributes flood in for Eddsworld creator, who died aged 23". Richmond and Twickenham Times. Retrieved 19 August 2018.
  27. ^ "Muggle lands a wizard part". News Shopper. Retrieved 19 August 2018.
  28. ^ Bishop, Rachel (31 March 2012). "Marathon man returns to Orleans Park school". Local Guardian.
  29. ^ "The king of Rock'n'Roll". standard.co.uk. 10 April 2012. Retrieved 19 August 2018.
  30. ^ Staff (26 October 2017). "Is Fionn Whitehead Gay? The Actor Who Keeps His Age, Sexuality, Possible Dating Affairs And Girlfriends At Bay". Liverampup.com. Retrieved 30 January 2018.
  31. ^ "Prize Giving and Reunion Celebration". www.orleanspark.richmond.sch.uk. Orleans Park School.
  32. ^ The Richmond and Twickenham Informer Fri, Apr 24, 1998 ·Page 27
  33. ^ a b Forsyth, Paul (4 June 2016). "Potter trusts in magical mix of power and perseverance" (PDF). Scottish Athletics. p. 16. Retrieved 31 July 2024.
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