Bishop_Luffa_School

Bishop Luffa School

Bishop Luffa School

Secondary academy in Chichester, West Sussex, England


Bishop Luffa School, named after a former Bishop of Chichester, Ralph de Luffa, is a co-educational Church of England secondary school located in Chichester, West Sussex, England. The number of enrolled pupils was around 1,400 in 2010, in eight 'Year' house-forms and the sixth form. The school, formerly a 'Technology College', is now a 'CofE Teaching School', holding Leading Edge status, with national Artsmark and Sportsmark also having been awarded. From its foundation to 2013 the school was a Voluntary Aided establishment, on 1 December 2013 the school successfully converted to Academy status.[1]

Quick Facts Address, Coordinates ...

New classrooms

The school applied for planning permission for a drama studio to form the start of a new £2.5m creative arts centre for the school. The planning application was approved and the school started construction in August 2006. The drama studio was opened in February 2007. The school has also extended their sports hall, adding an extension onto the original facility, where the climbing wall is now kept.[2]

At the end of 2017, over 18 months of work was completed to remodel the former 'K Block', at the southern end of the buildings – forming a newly updated Humanities Block, with additional and remodelled facilities. At the same time, the Main Reception of the school was repositioned into the centre of this new facility, from the Northern site entrance – which also had the effect of amending the postal address of the school – which now (for postal purposes) is located on Westgate (from Bishop Luffa Close).[citation needed]

Sixth form

There is an integral sixth form at Bishop Luffa for students who wish to continue their education after the age of sixteen, with an annual intake of around 160. Although 140 existing pupils are given priority, 20 pupils from other schools are also accepted each year for entry in Year 12.[3] A wide range of subjects can be studied, including Business Studies, Computing, Law and Economics. The school also offers the new AQA Baccalaureate 'Bacc' hybrid qualification, including a 100-hour self-directed project.[citation needed]

A2 level pass rates at Bishop Luffa are above the national average. In 2017, for co-educational State schools in West Sussex, Bishop Luffa pupils achieved the 3rd highest average individual point scores (11th overall).[4]

Academic performance

The school's admission policy is non-academically selective. In 2017, amongst co-educational State Secondaries, the school was rated the highest in West Sussex (4th overall) against the new 'Attainment 8' Key GCSE subject scores per pupil, including English, Maths, Sciences and Humanities.[5]

The (Oct 2008 and November/December 2022) Ofsted reports rated the school as uniformly "outstanding" across all metrics.[6]

In 2008 the school was praised by the Anglican schools inspectorate for its Christian religious character and met minimum standards.[7]

Houses

Years 7 – 11 are split into 8 house groups, each named after former Bishops of Chichester:

Andrewes – Green, Burrows – Blue, King – Pink, Otter – Purple, Ridgeway – Red, Sherborne – Black, Story – White and Wilson – Yellow.

Andrewes was previously Bell which was changed in 2016[8] due to the fall of Bishop George Bell's reputation.

Notable former pupils


References

  1. "Bishop Luffa School :: Sixth Form". Archived from the original on 24 July 2011. Retrieved 22 January 2011. Sixth Form information
  2. "All schools and colleges in West Sussex - GOV.UK - Find and compare schools in England". Find and compare schools in England. Retrieved 9 August 2018.
  3. "All schools and colleges in West Sussex - GOV.UK - Find and compare schools in England". Find and compare schools in England. Retrieved 9 August 2018.
  4. "2008 Ofsted report" (PDF). nationalarchives.gov.uk. Archived from the original (PDF) on 5 May 2010. Retrieved 9 August 2018.
  5. "George Bell: The battle for a bishop's reputation". BBC News. 5 May 2016. Retrieved 4 January 2023.
  6. Bawden, Tom (21 January 2011). "Friday interview: City superwoman fights for boardroom equality". the Guardian. Retrieved 9 August 2018.

Share this article:

This article uses material from the Wikipedia article Bishop_Luffa_School, and is written by contributors. Text is available under a CC BY-SA 4.0 International License; additional terms may apply. Images, videos and audio are available under their respective licenses.