Plantsbrook School

Summary

Plantsbrook School, (formerly Riland Bedford High School), is a secondary school with academy status located in Sutton Coldfield, Birmingham, England. The school achieved an "Outstanding" Ofsted status once in 2012. The most recent rating was “Good” and the preceding one in which it was rated as REQUIRES IMPROVEMENT.[3] The school was a Technology College and a Music College before the Specialist Schools initiative was made defunct.

Plantsbrook School
Address
Map
Upper Holland Road

, ,
B72 1RB

England
Coordinates52°33′31″N 1°49′07″W / 52.5587°N 1.8187°W / 52.5587; -1.8187
Information
TypeAcademy
MottoBe The Best That You Can Be[1]
Local authorityBirmingham City Council
Department for Education URN137053 Tables
OfstedReports
Chair of GovernorsP Arkinstall
HeadteacherMr Ian Barton (Acting)[2]
GenderCoeducational
Age11 to 18
Enrolment1,519
Websitehttp://plantsbrookschool.co.uk
The school in November 2006

The school has recently undergone a £20 million refurbishment with the gradual demolition of the formerly used 1940s building.[4]

History edit

Built on the land where Holland House in Upper Holland Road once stood, the original Riland Bedford building was constructed in 1939 with later building work being undertaken by American soldiers who were using the school as a base during World War II at the temporary named Holland Road Barracks. After the war, building works on the school were completed and Riland Bedford School was opened in 1946.

When the school first opened, male and female students were kept on different sides of the building.[5] One half was named Riland Bedford High School for Boys and the other, Riland Bedford High School for Girls. The original building's symmetry provided exactly the same facilities and space for both schools.

The school's first incarnation, was so called as a result of the union of the prominent Riland and Bedford families of Sutton Coldfield. The school officially changed its name in 1986, choosing to rename itself Plantsbrook School, from Plants Brook which is a stream that flows through Sutton Coldfield and passes the school.

The school officially adopted academy status on 1 August 2011. Thereby ceasing to be a state comprehensive.

Admissions edit

The school begins holding open days in the September, the year before students would be starting to attend. The new intake of students begins in early September, with the academic year finishing July of the following year.

The school goes from years 7-11, with the opportunity of joining the school's own sixth form college. Each year is broken down into P,L,A,N,T,S,B,R, and now K, with the entire year group split in three with P,L,A or N,T,S or B,R,K, resulting in different subject scheduling for each third. Students remain in their form groups for the entire 5 years, with only the year changing e.g. 7S will later become 8S and so on. Whole years are under the leadership of an Achievement Co-ordinator and an Assistant Achievement Co-ordinator who deal with both support and discipline within their year, they too remain with the year's intake for the 5 years, often forming close professional bonds. Weekly assemblies and other year events/inter-form competitions involve all 8 form groups.

Subject classes are broken up mainly into ability based subjects such as English, Maths and Science. All other school subjects are taken as a form group, until GCSEs in Year 9-11 when individual subject options are chosen and the eight year groups are then mixed up to find matching timetable patterns.

The school regularly achieves a 100% pass rate at A Level.

Activities edit

The school hosts a yearly school musical which is the high point of the year for most students and involves the entire Performing Arts faculty.

The student-run radio station, PB Radio, formerly known as PBR FM and Plantsbrook School Radio, was broadcast internally and on the internet[6] from its studio on the site.[7] The station is currently inactive.[citation needed]

Rebuild edit

The school and the surrounding grounds are currently being completely rebuilt as part of the Priority Schools Building Programme. The school was one of only a few select schools to win the highly sought after government grant to completely rebuild the school and its grounds. It was awarded £20 million with the first phase of building work commencing in Summer 2015. At present, the entire former West and East wings of the school have been demolished, with the former vacant areas now being landscaped. The new school building was due to be completed and opened in Easter 2017. The official handover took place in August 2017 predominantly to avoid disruption to students and staff during the summer exam months . At present, the school grounds and a new Sports Hall are aimed for completion by Spring 2019.[8]

On Saturday 11 July 2015, the school held an open day where students and teachers past and present of Riland Bedford and Plantsbrook had the opportunity to have one last look at the existing building before the demolition began in the summer. Classrooms were opened and activities were organised allowing visitors to tour the building they once worked in.

Wednesday 19 July 2017, marked the last official school day in the original school building, with the school closing two days earlier than most local schools in order to allow two days for staff to put all their classroom equipment into storage ready to be transferred to the new school building when it opened in September 2017.

Notable former pupils edit

Riland Bedford School edit

Plantsbrook School edit

  • Mathcore band Blakfish met and formed at the school in 2000.

Former teachers edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Plantsbrook Sixth Form - Be The Best That You Can Be". plantsbrookschool.co.uk. Retrieved 2 December 2020.
  2. ^ "Plantsbrook School". Retrieved 28 April 2023.
  3. ^ "Find an inspection report and registered childcare". 2 January 2021.
  4. ^ "Plans unveiled for £20 million Sutton Coldfield school rebuild set to open in 2017 | Sutton Coldfield Observer". Archived from the original on 3 July 2015. Retrieved 3 March 2015.
  5. ^ Wilkins, Ena; Kemble, Mike. "Sutton Coldfield - Its History & Images". Mike Kemble. Archived from the original on 15 April 2010. Retrieved 5 April 2010.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  6. ^ http://198.100.146.224:20026/stream
  7. ^ "PB Radio - Community radio from Plantsbrook School". 12 July 2012. Archived from the original on 12 July 2012.
  8. ^ McCarthy, Nick (3 February 2015). "Plantsbrook School reveals £20m rebuild plans". Business Live.

External links edit

  • Plantsbrook School