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Higham Lane School

Higham Lane School
Motto "Helping Learners Succeed"
Established 1939
Type Academy
Headmaster Phil Kelly
Location Shanklin Drive
Nuneaton
Warwickshire
CV10 0BJ
England
Coordinates: 52°31′58″N 1°27′24″W / 52.5329°N 1.4568°W / 52.5329; -1.4568
Local authority Warwickshire
DfE URN 125741 Tables
Ofsted Reports
Students 1,230
Gender Co-educational
Ages 11–18
Colours Red, black and white
Website www.highamlane.warwickshire.sch.uk

Higham Lane School is a secondary school in Weddington, Nuneaton, England. The current headmaster is Phil Kelly, who has been in the role since 2006, replacing former headmaster, Dr. R. Tetlow. The school teaches students aged between eleven and sixteen, (Key Stage 3 and Key Stage 4) in preparation for their GCSEs. The original school building dates back to 1939, with the introduction of new laboratories, a sports hall and a new Business and Enterprise Centre arriving since. In 2003, after a successful bid, the school was granted Business and Enterprise College status, under the specialist schools programme. On 1 January 2012, the school officially gained Academy status.

In the 1970s and 80s, the school became well known for the smallholding established by former teacher, John Terry, which he went on to write about in several books. Queen Elizabeth II visited Nuneaton for the first time in December 1994, and when visiting the school, she presented a calf to the school farm and opened the school's new science block. The school farm continued to operate until Terry's retirement in 1998, where it has since struggled due to lack of funding.

The area where the school farm was located became a school garden that included two ponds and an aviary of budgies. Teacher, Alex Faulds, ran the garden with the help of a small group of students. The garden won the Secondary school category for Nuneaton's Britain in Bloom, five years in a row, but closed at the end of the school year, in 2008.

The two main sections of the building are Coombe to the east, and Chine to the west (both of which take their names from types of geographical feature found on the Isle of Wight, continuing a theme found in the street names in the vicinity of the school). The school was originally three different schools, with no physical link between Coombe and Chine. Chine initially housed Higham Lane Infant School, whose assembly hall is now the library, and Higham Lane Junior School, whose assembly hall is now Chine Hall, while Coombe housed a secondary modern school Higham Lane High School. These three schools closed and were then combined to form one Comprehensive school, following a major re-organisation of schools in Warwickshire in the early 1970s.


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