Motto |
Libertatem per Probitatem (Freedom by Integrity) |
---|---|
Type | Non-denominational |
Rector | Ruth McFarlane |
Location |
Broomhead Parks Dunfermline Fife KY12 0PQ Scotland Coordinates: 56°04′49″N 3°27′50″W / 56.0803°N 3.464°W |
Local authority | Fife Council |
Students | 1600 as of June 2016[update] |
Ages | 11–18 |
Houses |
Abbey, Bruce, Carnegie and Denmark |
Colours | |
Website | Queen Anne High School |
Abbey, Bruce,
Queen Anne High School is a large secondary school in the city of Dunfermline in Fife. It is named for Anne of Denmark, the queen of James VI, whose former home was the school's original location.
In the 1930s it moved to the former Dunfermline High School building that lay to the north of Priory Lane. In the 1950s it moved again to a new campus at Broomhead, just to the south of its current location. In August 2003 it moved yet again 200 yards to the north, next to and encroaching upon the village of Wellwood.
In July 2014 the school was awarded the TES International Schools Award.
The school is divided into three houses, Abbey, Bruce, and Carnegie (named after Dunfermline Abbey, Robert the Bruce and Andrew Carnegie). Former school houses which are no longer used include Denmark, Erskine and Fordell. Each house has a guidance team who are responsible for the pastoral care of the group of pupils who have been assigned to that particular house. As of 2016, the school's senior leadership team is as follows:
The school's facilities are open for use to the public after the school day finishes, these include a gym, sports hall, gymnastics hall, music studio, tennis courts and football pitches. Use of these facilities is managed by the Community Use Team
During the Festive Season, pupils donate food parcels to Sheltered Homes across Dunfermline and surrounding villages.
Queen Anne also plays a part in The Gambia with charity and fundraising to help fund expansion and improvement to the John Pickering Senior Comprehensive school located in the Gambia. From 2010, much of the fundraising has been put towards building a skills centre in the Gambian village of Jibboroh. The school also maintains a social link with the Gambian school as a number of pupils have formed penpals with those in Gambia. Also in 2006 some pupils went to visit the school in the Gambia and reported the project was a success. In 2007 two members of staff from John Pickering visited Queen Anne and there was a return trip of Queen Anne pupils to the Gambia mid-2008. A group of around ten pupils now visit The Gambia biennially in June for cultural exchange.