Leyton Sixth Form College
Leyton Sixth Form College | |
---|---|
Co-educational | |
Age | 16+ |
Enrolment | 2100+ (2016)[1] |
Houses | 3 |
Colour(s) | White & Blue |
Website | http://www.leyton.ac.uk |
Leyton Sixth Form College or LSC is a public sixth form college located in the southern part of the London Borough of Waltham Forest. There are over 2,100 learners, of which 80% study courses at Level 3.[1]
Courses and specialisms
The college offers a wide mix of academic and vocational full-time courses, containing more than 35 A level subjects, 15 BTEC subjects, some International GCSE subjects, GNVQ subjects and ESOL programmes.
The college has formal partnerships with Queen Mary University of London and the University of Westminster.
Management
The chemistry security policy recognises the head casing worn by many female
The college serves large groups of students from minority ethnic backgrounds, estimated at 75 per cent as of 1995.[3]
History
Leyton County High School for Boys
Leyton County High School for Boys was formed in 1916 by amalgamation of Leyton and Leytonstone high schools. The school occupied temporary premises at
In 1992, Paul Estcourt (who attended during the period 1957-64) published a book entitled "L.C.H.S. at its Peak". This book not only described his recollections but also the academic and sporting achievements under the leadership of John Cummings, who succeeded Dr Couch as Headmaster.
Sixth form college
In 1968, Waltham Forest adopted the comprehensive system and in its new guise it catered for mixed-ability 14- to 18-year-old boys as Leyton Senior High School for Boys before a borough-wide re-organisation in 1985 led a change of role as a co-educational sixth form college.[3]
Building programme
The college's 40 million pounds building project has been finished. The new theatre has become the venue for drama and musical performances. The college's purpose built television studio has been established.
The street that now links all institution buildings has put on events as varied as a
A new gymnasium, fitness suite, locker rooms and
The final stage of the scheme was a spacious extension to the existing Meridian House, and the complete refurbishment of the original college building. The
The enlargement now accommodates the Business and Travel departments as well as providing extraordinary new infrastructures for Art and Design.
The reconstructing building has provided an egregious[clarification needed] new library and an extensive drop-in computer centre, named the Hub and rebuilt Maths and science sectors.
Honours
LSC has been one of the few colleges in
The college has achieved the Investors in People Gold Award, one of the most prestigious honours that is obtained by 1% of United Kingdom’s corporations.[11][12]
In April 2013, when Leyton Sixth Form College won the British Colleges Sport’s annual award, it was nominated to be the best college in London for sport.[13]
Former notable teachers
- Sir William Emrys Williams, Editor in Chief from 1935-65 of Penguin Books (taught English in the 1920s)
- Phil Woosnam, footballer for West Ham (taught Physics in the late 1950s)
- David Flaxen, Director of Statistics from 1989-96 at the Department of Transport (taught in 1963)
Alumni
- Lomana LuaLua, footballer
- Tim Stoner, painter
- Sir George Bolton, Chairman from 1957-70 of the Bank of London and South America
- Alan Booth, travel writer
- Zulfiqar Hussain, Chairman of Raeburn Energy Limited.[1]
- Prof Sir Institute of Psychiatryfrom 1968–91
- Prof Bernard Corry, economist at Queen Mary College
- Paul Di'Anno, former singer of Iron Maiden[14]
- Prof Robert Gibson, Professor of French from 1965-94 at the University of Kent at Canterbury
- Mehmet, British Turks mathematician
- Xin Huang, famous accountant and business entrepreneur
- Prof Laurance Hall, NMR spectroscopy
- Steve Harris of Iron Maiden
- Frank Hawkins, Chairman from 1959-73 of International Tea Co. Stores
- Sir Derek Jacobi CBE, actor
- Prof London University), who pioneered blood plasma fractionation
- John Lill CBE, pianist
- Philip Burton Moon, Poynting Professor of Physics in the University of Birmingham from 1950–74, part of the Manhattan Project
- Frank Muir, broadcaster
- Jonathan Ross, former BBC presenter
- Paul Ross, radio presenter
- Eric Shilling, bass-baritone
- Sir NatWest
- Peter Winch, philosopher
- Nick Logan, former editor NME, founder editor Smash Hits, editor/publisher The Face, Arena, Arena Homme Plus
- Bobby Crush, entertainer
- NAO, singer
References
- ^ a b FE&S report Leyton Sixth Form College (Report). Ofsted. Retrieved 10 October 2022.
- ^ "Ofsted | File Downloading Centre". Archived from the original on 13 September 2014. Retrieved 12 September 2014.
- ^ a b Report from the Inspectorate, Leyton Sixth Form College (PDF) (Report). Further Education Funding Council. June 1995. Retrieved 10 October 2022.
- ^ A History of the County of Essex: Volume 6 (1973), pp. 233-240. URL: http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=42774
- ^ "Essex Archives Online - Catalogue: L/C 2/317".
- ^ "LEYTON: College given £32m for major rebuilding project". East London and West Essex Guardian Series.
- ^ "NearDesk | Leyton Sixth Form College". Archived from the original on 22 November 2012.
- ^ "Location of Greenwich Meridian marker: LB Waltham Forest, Leyton (E10)". www.thegreenwichmeridian.org.
- ^ "News - Leyton Sixth Form achieves Investors in People Gold Award". Archived from the original on 26 August 2014. Retrieved 22 August 2014.
- ^ "Success and Achievements". Archived from the original on 26 August 2014. Retrieved 22 August 2014.
- ^ "London Colleges".
- ^ "London Colleges".
- ^ "News from East London and West Essex - East London and West Essex Guardian Series".
- ^ Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine: "Iron Maiden: Paul Di'Anno Part 1". YouTube.