Sir John Leman High School is a coeducational 11–18 secondary school with academy status serving part of the Waveney region in north Suffolk, England. The school is located on the western edge of the town of Beccles and serves the surrounding area, including Worlingham. Pupils from Norfolk villages such as Gillingham and Broome also sometimes attend the school. The school has approximately 1,400 pupils, including a sixth form of around 260 students.[1]
The school was established when locally-born merchant Sir John Leman left money in his will of 1631 which, after his death on 6 March 1632, provided for the education of 44 pupils from Beccles, two from Ringsfield and two from Gillingham. In 1914 it became the County Mixed Grammar School on its present site in Ringsfield Road. The old school has been converted into the Beccles Museum. In 1971 the school became a comprehensive high school and grew in size. In recent years building work has gone on to expand the school.
Until September 2012 the school only took 13- to 18-year-olds. Due to the reorganisation of schools in Suffolk, it now takes 11- to 18-year-olds. Years 7 and 8 temporarily went to the Lower School site on Castle Hill, previously the Beccles Middle School site. This site was occupied by the Beccles Free School in 2014 when it moved from Carlton Colville.
Ofsted reports
In the Ofsted inspection report dated February 2006, it was rated as a 'good' school with a 'good' sixth form. In February 2009 it was again rated as a generally 'good' school, although with some features which were judged 'satisfactory'. The sixth form provision was judged as achieving an overall effectiveness of 'satisfactory', although post-16 curriculum provision was judged 'good'. The school's subsequent inspection reports again graded it as 'good' overall in October 2011 and October 2016.[1][2]
Academic performance
The school's 2016 GCSE results were overall above average for England with a Progress 8 score of +0.32. 65% of students achieved grades A*-C in GCSE English and Maths. The 2016 A-Level results were in line with the national average, with a progress score of +0.05 and an average grade of C.[3]
^Brian McFarlane, ‘Mills, Sir John Lewis Ernest Watts (1908–2005)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, January 2009 (available online, accessed 28 August 2012.
^Pawson.A (2004) ‘Rous, Sir Stanley Ford (1895–1986)’, rev. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press ([1]). Retrieved 20 April 2011.
^‘ROUS, Sir Stanley (Ford)’, Who Was Who, A & C Black, online ed, Oxford University Press, December 2007 (online). Retrieved 20 April 2011.
^"Jennifer Westwood - obituary", The Times, p. 45, 26 May 2008