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Joyce Frankland Academy
Academy in Newport, Essex, England From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Joyce Frankland Academy, Newport, formerly Newport Free Grammar School, is a school in Newport, Essex, England. It was founded in 1588.[1] The school is a mixed secondary school with a sixth form. It previously existed in different forms including a boarding school and a grammar school. The headteacher is Duncan Roberts and the vice headteacher is Ian Stoneham. As of 2012, there were 987 students, including 160 in the sixth form.[2]
It takes its current name (since 2012) after Dame Joyce Frankland (1531-1588), the only daughter of goldsmith Robert Trappes, who founded it as the "free Grammer Schole of Newport". Dame Frankland also made a number of educational bequests in her will to colleges at the universities of Oxford and Cambridge.
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Specialist and academy status
The school achieved Specialist Language College status in July 2003 from DfES and has been a Language College since September 2003.[3] The school achieved a second specialism in Science, commencing 1 September 2008 but this was later lost.
The school converted to academy status on 1 September 2012.
Academic standards
In 2011, Newport Free Grammar School was ranked 405th out of the 429 institutions supplying A-Level results to the Daily Telegraph's annual league table based on the percentages of A*, A and B grades achieved.[4]
Following an inspection on 15 March 2006, Ofsted rated the school as good, the second-best grade on its four-point scale. Inspectors said teaching was "sometimes outstanding, even inspirational" in languages and the humanities but needed improvement in mathematics and IT.
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Notable former pupils
![]() | This article's list of alumni may not follow Wikipedia's verifiability policy. (March 2022) |
- Max Barrett, morbid anatomist and histologist
- Charles George Broyden, mathematician
- Martin Caton, MP for Gower
- Jimmy Doherty, BBC broadcaster and farmer
- Paul Epworth, music producer
- James Frain, film actor
- Matt Holland, Republic of Ireland footballer
- Kate Johnson, novelist
- Shakila Karim, singer-songwriter and musician
- Jamie Oliver, television chef and author
- J. W. Pritchard, civil servant of the Indian civil service
- Pip Pyle, drummer with Gong and Hatfield and the North
- Laura Sugar, Paralympic athlete
- David Sutton, archivist and local politician
- Peter Warren, journalist
References
External links
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