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Lampton School

Coordinates: 51°28′38″N 0°22′05″W / 51.47709°N 0.36793°W / 51.47709; -0.36793
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(Redirected from Sue John)

Lampton School Academy
Address
Map
Lampton Avenue

,
TW3 4EP

England
Coordinates51°28′38″N 0°22′05″W / 51.47709°N 0.36793°W / 51.47709; -0.36793
Information
TypeAcademy
Established1959
Department for Education URN136341 Tables
OfstedReports
Head TeacherStephen Davis
Age11 to 19
Enrolment1389
Former nameSpring Grove Grammar School
Websitehttp://www.lampton.hounslow.sch.uk

Lampton School is a secondary school and sixth form with academy status located in Hounslow, west London, England.

Admissions

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Lampton is a Leading Edge school, and is a training school which currently has around 1,358 students on roll. Lampton borders the A4 (Great West Road) in Hounslow, and is next to Lampton Park. This is about one mile west of Spring Grove, and a mile south of the M4 near Heston. Osterley Park is a mile to the north-east. Its ethnic mix reflects that of the local area, with most students being of South Asian heritage. The school has a wide range of ethnicities, including white British, Polish, and many more from across the world. Around 30% of students receive free school meals.

Lampton also offers a 6th Form for pupils aged 16 and over, which takes the majority of its intake from Lampton GCSE students, but is also open to applicants from outside the school. The headteacher is Stephen Davis. He was preceded by Sue John, also known as Dame Susan Elizabeth John (born 1953), who was knighted in 2012 for her service to education.

History

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Lampton School used to be known as Spring Grove Grammar School, a grammar school before being converted to a comprehensive. The school gained its Humanities Specialist status in 2003, a designation which enabled the building of the Language and Learning Zone (LLZ), a multi-media and Information and communication technologies suite situated at the western end of the Spring Grove building.

In recent years an ultra-modern Sixth Form Block resembling a barn was constructed on what used to be a hockey gravel pit.

Murder of Lynne Weedon

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The site of Lynne Weedon's murder, pictured in May 2022. Her unidentified attacker hit her on the head with a blunt instrument as she walked down the alleyway, before lifting her over gates into the grounds of the electricity substation, where he then raped her

One of Britain's most high-profile unsolved murders occurred outside the school in September 1975. At approximately 11:20pm on the evening of 3 September 1975, a 16-year-old schoolgirl named Lynne Weedon was hit over the head with a blunt object by an unidentified attacker in the 'School Walk' alleyway (also known as the 'Short Hedges'), which provides access to the school from the Great West Road.

The site of Weedon's murder remains largely unchanged today.[1][2][3] The electricity sub-station where she was found remains next to the School Walk alleyway, as does the original fence she was thrown over by her attacker.[1]

Academic performance

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The last OFSTED inspection, in 2013, found the school to be "outstanding".[4] In 2009 Ofsted highlighted Lampton as one of 67 good schools serving disadvantaged communities.

Prime Minister's Global Fellowship

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The school has a good record of students attaining places on the Prime Minister's Global Fellowship programme. The school achieved its first student in the inaugural year of the programme, 2008, and in 2009 had two more successful applicants.[5]

Notable former pupils

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Spring Grove Grammar School

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References

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  1. ^ a b Crimewatch (26 September 2007). Crimewatch, 26/09/2007 (Television programme). BBC One. Event occurs at 29:30-43:00.
  2. ^ Crimewatch (23 April 2015). Crimewatch, 23/04/2015 (Television programme). BBC One. Event occurs at 43:00-56:00.
  3. ^ "School walk, Hounslow". Google Maps. Retrieved 21 May 2022.
  4. ^ OFSTED Report, Lampton School
  5. ^ British Council website "Fellows" Archived 12 September 2011 at the Wayback Machine accessed 10 November 2009.
  6. ^ Had Me a Real Good Time: The Faces Before During and After, Andy Neill, 2016, Omnibus Press.
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