Carlton le Willows Academy

Carlton le Willows Academy
Address
Map
Wood Lane

,
Nottinghamshire
,
NG4 4AA

England
Coordinates52°58′31″N 1°04′13″W / 52.9753°N 1.0702°W / 52.9753; -1.0702
Information
TypeAcademy
MottoLatin: Nihil Nisi Optimum
(Nothing but the best)
Established1953 (1953)
Local authorityNottinghamshire County Council
TrustDelta Academies Trust
Department for Education URN136627 Tables
OfstedReports
Chair of GovernorsP. Brown[1]
HeadteacherJas Mehat
Staff135 (2016–2017)
GenderMixed
Age range11–18
Enrolment1,590 (2019)[2]
Capacity1,445[2]
Campus size32 acres (13 ha)
Houses
  • Ash
  • Birch
  • Cedar
  • Oak
PublicationLe Willows Life
Websitewww.clwacademy.co.uk

Carlton le Willows Academy is an 11–18 mixed, secondary school and sixth form with academy status in Gedling, Nottinghamshire, England. It is part of the Delta Academies Trust.

Recruiting its first pupils in 1953, on-site teaching was introduced in the following year and the school was officially opened in 1956. Consequently, the modern school speculates Carlton le Willows to have been founded as the first post-war grammar school in England. Its campus was split from 1962 when a separate secondary technical school, Carlton le Willows Technical Grammar School, was established. The schools unified in 1973 and converted to a single comprehensive school; two local secondary modern schools, both founded in the early 20th-century, were also implicated in the merger. Carlton le Willows was granted specialist Technology College status from 2002 until 2010, became a foundation school in 2007 and converted into an academy in 2011.

It operates on a single, 32-acre (13 ha) campus and its teaching follows the National Curriculum. Pupils generally sit examinations for around eight General Certificate of Secondary Education (GCSE) qualifications, or equivalent diplomas, in Year Eleven (aged 15–16). Pupils have a choice to study three or four GCE Advanced Levels (A Levels) if they are admitted into the sixth form, though more vocational courses remain available.

  1. ^ "Governance". Carlton le Willows Academy. Archived from the original on 12 June 2018. Retrieved 12 June 2018.
  2. ^ a b "Carlton le Willows Academy". Get information about schools. Government of the United Kingdom. Retrieved 29 May 2019.