Type | Foundation school |
---|---|
Headteacher | Mrs Sammy Crook |
Location |
Bolham Road Tiverton Devon EX16 6SQ England Coordinates: 50°54′39″N 3°29′36″W / 50.91077°N 3.49320°W |
Local authority | Devon |
DfE URN | 113548 Tables |
Ofsted | Reports |
Students | 1300 |
Gender | Coeducational |
Ages | 11–16 |
Website | www |
Tiverton High School is a state secondary school located in the town of Tiverton, Devon, England. The school used to be a specialist visual arts college.
The school is situated on the outskirts of Tiverton, and there is a close working relationship with the nearby Petroc (formerly East Devon College).
The Governors appointed Sammy Crook to succeed Andrew Lovett as the new head-teacher as of September 2016. The school has approximately 1,300 pupils aged 11–16 currently one role.
In 2001 the school won the 'Investors in Education Business Partnership' award.
The school has three main computer rooms that are used for Computing, Business Studies and IT lessons. Two of these are equipped with Intel NUC machines, the third with Apple iMacs running Windows 7. A fourth computer room is used for Art and Photography lessons, equipped with Apple iMacs running Mac OS X. Additional computers are available for ad-hoc use by students in the school library at break and lunchtimes. Classes are also able to book Apple iPads, Apple iPods and PC laptops from the IT technicians. GCSE Computing lessons make use of Raspberry Pi machines running Debian Linux and an additional set of recycled PCs running Ubuntu Linux. Most of the GCSE Computing programming work is performed on the Raspberry Pi and Ubuntu PCs using GNU C++. At Key Stage 3 students also use Microsoft Small Basic, Python 3, HTML, Microsoft Office and Adobe Creative Suite. Students are able to use PCs in one of the main computer rooms at lunchtime during the week. Staff run two additional lunchtime clubs for practical work using the Raspberry Pi and the BBC Micro Bit. The school has hosted several Computing-related workshops and special events in 2016, including the IEEE Faraday Challenge, visitors from Bletchley Park, visitors from a local-web design company and a past-student that now works as a security-consultant. The school has previously hosted hub meetings and training sessions for teachers as part of outreach work in association with Computing At School UK. Students have also taken part in off-site STEM activities organised by the Met Office, the University of Exeter and Exeter College.