The Dukeries Academy | |
---|---|
Address | |
Whinney Lane , | |
Coordinates | 53°12′33″N 1°00′01″W / 53.2093°N 1.0004°W |
Information | |
Type | Academy |
Local authority | Nottinghamshire |
Department for Education URN | 139062 Tables |
Ofsted | Reports |
Gender | Mixed |
Age | 11 to 19 |
Website | http://www.dukeries.attrust.org.uk/page/default.asp?title=Home&pid=1 |
The Dukeries Academy (formerly The Dukeries Comprehensive School and then The Dukeries College and Complex) is a secondary school, community college situated in Ollerton, Nottinghamshire.
It offers education for students aged 11–19. ATTFE College, the school's sixth form, also offer a range of level 2 and 3 courses, including GCSEs and BTECs. Opened in September 1964 as, with Kirkby in Ashfiled Comprehensive School, the first Nottinghamshire County Comprehensives - Fairham Comprehensive School in Nottingham had preceded them, then the School immediately proved to be a high quality "Community Provision" at a time when the village and neighbouring Edwinstowe and Bilsthorpe - who provided young people as pupils at the school - were thriving mining communities. The School/College/Academy therefore celebrates its 49th anniversary in 2014.
The Dukeries has been visited by Ed Balls,[1] Sebastian Coe[2] and Gordon Brown.[3]
Balls described it as "a school of the 21st century".[citation needed] The school received a "satisfactory" grade after an OFSTED inspection.[4] The school became an academy on 1 January 2013, and was renamed The Dukeries Academy. The Dukeries offers, a theatre, horse riding, on-site counselling, a construction block (opened in 2008), an astro-turf pitch, a youth club and a fire service training centre.
In 2009, The Dukeries was included in controversial plans to cut funding. Nottinghamshire County Council proposed to cut £380,000 of the schools budget to save money.[5] There is a current campaign underway to stop these cuts from happening.
The attached Leisure Centre (owned by NSDC) received an extension to include a new swimming pool in 2020, and the structure was built and completed in 2021. The pool was officially opened by Olympic gold medalist Rebecca Adlington.
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