Priestley Sixth Form and Community College is a sixth form college in Warrington, Cheshire, England. It also offers adult courses and professional training on another site, and is an associate college of the University of Salford. The college offers a range of courses, including AS/A2 Levels, BTECs, Advanced Diplomas, functional skills, and pre-university foundation courses.[1]
History
The college opened in 1979, though it was originally a female-only grammar school called Warrington Girls' High School (and later Warrington High School for Girls) until 1974, and was administered by Warrington Education Committee. It was addressed as being on Menin Avenue until 1998, when it became administered by Warrington borough, previously being under Cheshire Education Committee. The college's current name is in honour of clergyman, chemist, and educator Joseph Priestley (1733–1804), a pioneer in teaching modern history and the sciences who is perhaps best known for discovering oxygen in 1774. A statue of him now stands inside the main entrance of the college.
Structure
It is a single campus college with seven buildings:
The Priestley Building houses the Viola Beach Café, administrative facilities, the finance department, and classrooms for graphics, biology, chemistry, physics, performing arts, and foreign languages. The Viola Beach Café, formerly known as the Wicked Café, was renamed following the death of the members of the rock band Viola Beach and their manager (all former Priestley students) in a car accident in the Swedish city of Södertälje during their 2016 tour.[2]
The Art Centre, completed in 2013, provides spare classrooms for creative art, textiles, and computer graphic design.
The Design Centre holds classrooms for 3D design and woodworking.
The Sports Centre has sports halls and resources for sports and physical education.
The Learning Resource Centre houses offices, the library, communal computers, and open-plan teaching areas.
The Crescent Building, completed in 2007, holds student services, a cafe, reception, and personnel, as well as classrooms for the departments of humanities, English, public services, law, business studies, religious studies, accounting, geography, and geology.
The Lewis Carroll building, completed in 2014, holds rooms for ICT.[3]
Academic performance
In 2007, the college was ranked "Outstanding" after an Ofsted inspection.[4]
In 2016, 89% of those graduating stayed in education or employment for at least two terms after studying at A level or level 3 vocational courses. 3.5% of students achieved AAB or higher in at least two facilitating subjects at A level, 12.7% below the national average.[5]
In 2018, the A* to B pass rate at the college was 38.2% and 68% of vocational grades were Distinction or Distinction*.[6]
Transport connections
The college is an approximately 20 minute walk from the town centre.
Services 18, 19, and 25 are regular passenger services that see their routes extended at certain times so that they originate or terminate at Priestley College rather than Warrington Interchange. From the 2018/19 academic year, services P3 and P4 were removed. The P4 was replaced by services 19 and 25.
Notable alumni
Viola Beach, a rock band whose members all attended the college.