Eastbury Community School

Eastbury Community School
Established 1931
Type Community secondary
Headteacher

Mr D Dickson ( Secondary )

Ms W Jenkins ( Primary )
Chair of Governors Mr R Patient
Location Hulse Ave
London
IG11 9UW
England
Coordinates: 51°32′28″N 0°05′24″E / 51.54107°N 0.09007°E / 51.54107; 0.09007
Local authority Barking and Dagenham
DfE number 301/4024
DfE URN 101244 Tables
Ofsted Reports
Students 2000+
Gender Coeducational
Ages 3–18
Website www.eastbury.bardaglea.org.uk

Eastbury Community School is a community secondary school with a sixth form in the east London Borough of Barking & Dagenham.

History

Eastbury Secondary School was originally founded at Dawson Ave in 1931. After the implementation of the tripartite system, it became a secondary modern. It merged with South East Essex Secondary Technical School in 1970 and moved to Rosslyn Rd to become Eastbury Comprehensive School when the scheme was abolished.[1]

The school has been renamed to Eastbury Community School because they build a new primary school inside a secondary school, which took over almost half of the Eastbury's playground. The making of Primary School could take more than 1 or 2 years.

And their students population has expected to raise over 2000+. Making them of the biggest in Barking And Dagenham

Campus

The school once covered two locations, a "lower" site in Rosslyn Road, accommodating Years 7-8 and, an "upper" site in Dawson Avenue, for Years 9-13. Eastbury merged the two sites so that it is now solely based in Rosslyn Road, alluding to extensions of the site, modernised buildings and facilities and a general 'revamp' of the premises. Eastbury also has a Sixth Form Centre. In 2006, Eastbury became a Secondary School specialising in Mathematics and Information Communication Technology.

The lower site was used to film the BBC children's TV drama M.I. High.


Use of technology

The school's Sixth Form is the only one in London to have a Cisco Networking Academy.

In 2010 the school was the first in Barking and Dagenham to introduce a cashless payment system using a contactless smart card. The Street Base Connect Card also gives access to youth, health, leisure and library services.[2]

Notable former pupils

References

  1. "Borough Archives - School Records" (PDF). LBBD Archives.
  2. "Swipe card success sees rise in free school meals". Yellow Advertiser, cited at Trust-e.co.uk. 2010-05-26. Archived from the original on 2011-01-08. Retrieved 2011-01-08.

External links

Nawaal Abdallah Said; Year 9 Student Currently aspiring for Harvard Law School

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