Kilmarnock Academy Acadamaidh Chille Mheàrnaig | |
---|---|
Current badge (left, 2018–) Former badge (right, 1898–2018) | |
Address | |
Sutherland Drive , , KA3 7DF | |
Coordinates | 55°36′32″N 4°29′35″W / 55.609°N 4.493°W |
Information | |
Type | 11–17 co-educational state-funded secondary school |
Motto | Aspire Together, Achieve Together (2018–) Do Justly, Love Mercy, Walk Humbly (1898–2018) |
Established | c. 1630 (as Kilmarnock Burgh School) |
Founder | Kilmarnock Burgh Council |
Local authority | East Ayrshire Council |
Head Teacher | David Rose (2015–present)[1] |
Staff | 148 Teaching and non-teaching [2] |
Gender | Boys and girls |
Age | 11 to 17 |
Enrolment | 1,357[3][4] |
Houses | Fleming, Burns, Orr, Wallace |
Colour(s) | |
Publication | The Goldberry, 1888–1954, 2018 |
Affiliated schools | James Hamilton, Loanhead, Whatriggs and Onthank primary schools |
Blog | Kilmarnock Academy Blog |
Kilmarnock Academy (Scottish Gaelic: Acadamaidh Chille Mheàrnaig), formerly Kilmarnock Burgh School, is an 11–17 co-educational state-funded secondary school in Kilmarnock, Scotland, currently serving in its third location on Sutherland Drive in the New Farm Loch area of the town.[5] Previous sites for Kilmarnock Academy include College Wynd, erected during the 1680s–1690s, Green Street, erected in 1752, and Elmbank Drive, erected in 1898.[6]
The school can be traced back to the 1630s when it was established by the Kilmarnock Burgh Council as 'Kilmarnock Burgh School',[7] making it one of the oldest schools in the United Kingdom and Scotland. The current head teacher is David Rose who was appointed in June 2015 on an acting basis,[8] and was made permanent Head Teacher of Kilmarnock Academy (the newly formed school following merger with James Hamilton Academy) in April 2017.[9]
Kilmarnock Academy is one of a few schools in the UK, and the first school in Scotland, to have educated several Nobel laureates: Alexander Fleming, discoverer of penicillin, and John Boyd Orr, 1st Baron Boyd-Orr, for his scientific research into nutrition and his work as the first Director-General of the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO). Kilmarnock Academy thus matches Eton College in the number of Nobel laureate graduates.[10]