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The site off Parsonage Lane and Berwick Way, Strood was purchased in 2020, after Medway Council unwrote the costs of overage. [5] [6] The construction consists of an all-through school with a 1150 place secondary school and sixth form with sports hall, parking, playing fields and hard-surfaced courts. [7] They currently only have Year 7 & 8 ...
Leigh Academy Rainham is situated on Otterham Quay Lane, on the eastern border of Rainham, following successful consultation and planning approval from Medway Council building works began and the school opened for September 2021. There is a single point of vehicular access from a roundabout on Otterham Quay Road.
Medway Council is the co-sponsor. [8] From 2017, Chatham Grammar School for Girls and Brompton Academy's sixth-forms have merged into one big sixth-form named the University of Kent Academies Trust (UKAT). Both schools are a part of the newly formed Academies Trust, of which the CEO is Mr. A. Osborne. [9]
The school is also the home to the Medway Netball League and Junior Netball League. Its large netball centre has eight floodlit courts (which are also suitable for tennis). [8] In 2013, the school football team reached the final of the Npower Football League Girls Cup in Wembley Stadium. They played against a Derby County school. [9]
The Howard School became a grant-maintained school in 1994 when it left the control of Kent County Council. Following a change of central government it became a foundation school in 1998. Although a foundation school, the school works closely with Medway Council, which, since becoming a unitary authority in 1998, oversees education in the ...
The school was designed by Richard Sheppard, Robson & Partners and opened in the late 1950s. [3] It was a community school administered by Medway Council, however the school was converted to academy status on 1 April 2012. Walderslade Girls' School continues to coordinate with Medway Council for admissions. [4]
The school was designed by Richard Sheppard, Robson & Partners, and opened in the late 1950s. [3] Medway, as a former part of Kent retains selection, so Walderslade Boys School opened as a Secondary Modern. It had the status of an 11-18 community school [4] school converted to academy status on 1 April 2012 and was renamed Greenacre Academy. [5]
Before 2011, this was a foundation school with Kent County Council and then Medway Council. After being put in special measures in 2009 it joined The Williamson Trust and reopened as an academy on 1 September 2011. The Williamson Trust merged in January 2019 with Leigh Academies Trust as part of the Medway Cluster. [11]