Stanmore College
Stanmore College | |
---|---|
Address | |
Elm Park , , HA7 4BQ England | |
Information | |
Type | Further Education |
Established | 1969 – sixth form college 1987 – tertiary college |
Local authority | Harrow |
Department for Education URN | 130440 Tables |
Ofsted | Reports |
Chairman of the Governors | Rabbi Gideon Schulman |
Principal | Annette Cast |
Gender | Mixed |
Age | 16+ |
Enrolment | 2,500 (2020)[citation needed] |
Colour(s) | Cyan, Magenta, Pear Green, Golden Yellow |
Website | http://www.stanmore.ac.uk/ |
Stanmore College is a small college for further education in the London Borough of Harrow. It was established in 1987 as one of the borough's three tertiary colleges, originally called Elm Park College. In 1994 it was renamed to its present name to facilitate closer representation to the local community of Stanmore.
The college was rated 'Good' by Ofsted in 2017[1] and its self-assessment rated it 'Outstanding' in 2020.[citation needed] Students are recruited locally and beyond including a significant amount from Brent, Barnet and Hertfordshire.[2]
As of 2017 there were 1,800 learners, of which just under 1,000 were on full-time 16-18 study programmes.[1] It forms part of the Harrow Sixth Form Collegiate.
History
[edit]The college started in 1969 as Harrow Junior College, built in a residential area between Elm Park, Old Church Lane and The Ridgeway. It was notably the first purpose-built sixth form college in the country.[3] It was soon renamed Stanmore Junior College and by 1974 became Stanmore Sixth Form College.[4]
Following the borough's restructuring of post-16 education in 1987, Stanmore Sixth Form College was replaced by a new tertiary college named Elm Park College. It was one of three created by Harrow, the others being Greenhill College and Weald College (both later merged into Harrow College). Elm Park College was renamed Stanmore College on 1 January 1994.
In January 2000 the institute became legally divided between Stanmore Sixth Form College and Stanmore Adult College, for sixth form and adult students respectively. The two merged back into one organisation in 2007.[5] At the time, the college self-styled itself as “the Small College for Big Achievers”. Its A-level pass rate was 99.8% that year.[6]
Stanmore College was one of 16 colleges chosen in the country to receive funding through a programme launched by Boris Johnson, meaning the college will undergo refurbishment.[7]
Former Principals
[edit]- Mr John Day (1967-1987)
- Mr John Mitchell (1987–1989)
- Mr Russell Woodrow (1989–2006) [8]
- Mrs Jacqui Mace (2006–2016)
- Mrs Sarbdip Noonan (2016–2022)
- Mrs Annette Cast (2022-)
Curriculum
[edit]The college offers a range of vocational programmes and A levels. It has links with industry.
Recent years have seen Stanmore College operate with a sharpened focus on five areas, namely:
- 16- to 18-year-olds
- adults
- workplace learning
- job seekers
- community learners
Facilities
[edit]The college has a newly refurbished Learning Resources Centre.
Notable alumni
[edit]- Tony McNulty - Politician
- Sushil Wadhwani - Economist
- Taio Cruz - Musician
References
[edit]- ^ a b "Stanmore College - 2017 Inspection Report". Ofsted.
- ^ "About Us". Stanmore College.
- ^ "Report from the Inspectorate - Stanmore College" (PDF). August 1995 – via Digital Education Resource Archive.
- ^ Hewlett, Geoffrey (15 September 2012). Stanmore Through Time. ISBN 9781445631110.
- ^ "MONITORING VISIT: MAIN FINDINGS". Ofsted. 13 December 2007.
- ^ "Stanmore College Further Education Corporation". Archived from the original on 17 October 2007.
- ^ "Stanmore College to have major refurbishment under new funding". Harrow Times. 14 April 2021.
- ^ "Births, marriages and deaths: June 14, 2021". 14 June 2021.