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Assistant Headteacher

Assistant Headteacher

Chapel-en-le-Frith High School

Derbyshire

  • £58,105 - £64,224 per year
  • Expired
Salary:
L12 - L16
Job type:
Full Time, Permanent
Start date:
01/09/2023
Apply by:
19 April 2023

Job overview

Would you like to join a vibrant, happy and successful school in a key leadership role? 

 

We are looking for a leader who has a genuine interest in developing people, both students and staff, an absolute belief in inclusive education and a real desire to make a difference. In return we offer a highly supportive environment and brilliant professional development. 

 

As one of the school’s four assistant headteachers you will take responsibility for key areas of our work. We have the flexibility to determine these areas on appointment. However, we are especially interested in candidates who can contribute to the development of classroom practice, curriculum and assessment, students’ personal development, or provision for disadvantaged and vulnerable students. 

 

We are lucky to be based in a relatively new building, with great facilities, on a beautiful site on the edge of the Peak District National Park. We offer a highly supportive environment, well-motivated students and the chance to join a brilliant staff team. We are within easy commuting distance of Manchester, Sheffield, Chesterfield and East Cheshire.


Application deadline:     3.00pm on Wednesday 19th April 2023

Interview Dates:              Tuesday 2nd and Wednesday 3rd May 2023


Full details of the post can be downloaded from this website. For an informal discussion of the post, please contact Simon Grieves, Headteacher (sgrieves@chapelhigh.org.uk).


The school is committed to safeguarding and promoting the welfare of children and expects all staff to share this commitment. This post is subject to an enhanced DBS check.


Chapel-en-le-Frith High School

Long Lane

Chapel-en-le-Frith

High Peak

SK23 0TQ


01298 813 118

dhibbert@chapelhigh.org.uk

www.chapelhigh.org.uk

 

 

 

Attached documents

About Chapel-en-le-Frith High School

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+44 1298 813118

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Our school is an 11-16 mixed, community, comprehensive school of around 950 students. We are lucky to be based in a relatively new building, with great facilities, on a beautiful site at the edge of the Peak District market town of Chapel-en-le-Frith. The Peak District National Park is quite literally on the school’s doorstep and provides endless opportunities for walkers, cyclists, mountain bikers, climbers, cavers and other outdoor enthusiasts.

The nearest big towns to the school are Buxton and Stockport but good transport links mean that the school’s staff travel from a wide area with many commuting from Manchester, Sheffield, Chesterfield and the towns of East Cheshire. A sizable contingent of staff live in the villages of the Peak District. For anyone considering relocating it is a wonderful area in which to live, with a good mix of housing, decent schools, easy commutes and a good quality of life.

We believe that our school is unusual in many ways. Perhaps the most obvious of these, which may even make us unique, is structural. The current school was formed by merging, in a new building, the local area special school with the existing high school. The special school became the current 35 place enhanced resourced SEND provision, always referred to simply as ‘Learning Support’ in school. To meet the moderate to severe special educational needs of its cohort, Learning Support operates as a ‘school within a school’. The Learning Support department runs a full independent curriculum with significant dedicated SEND trained staffing. Whilst Learning Support can provide an independent, tailored, learning experience for students, in every other way this cohort is fully integrated into the life of the school. This arrangement makes for a wonderfully inclusive school with young people who are very accepting of difference. Our inclusive approach spreads more widely too and we often buck local and national trends by accepting students with difficult and complex backgrounds.

This inclusivity does however make the school’s published data rather tricky to interpret. The DfE data effectively merges the results of an average sized comprehensive school with that of a special school. In short, though we think our 2022 performance table outcomes look quite respectable, we are rather better than the raw numbers make us look. Some years ago, we set ourselves a challenge; “to achieve results ranking alongside the best schools nationally; whilst remaining a highly inclusive, friendly, community school”. We have not achieved this yet, but it is a mantra that has guided us since. Undoubtedly, the balance between inclusivity and excellence is a difficult one, but both governors and staff are fully committed to making it work, despite its undoubted challenges in the current educational environment.

We think that we are different in other ways too. Our governors value the arts and creative subjects and we retain high uptake in these areas. We are not a top-down organisation; we are a team, and we work together to do the best we can for the young people in our care. If you join us, you can become involved in developing the future of our school community. Perhaps most importantly, we recognise that happy, committed staff make for a successful school; we work really hard to look after and develop our staff.

Visitors to our school notice these differences. People frequently comment on the sense of community, the calm atmosphere, and the fact that our staff smile, joke and enjoy what they do. At the start of our most recent Ofsted inspection the lead inspector commented, after meeting the staff in briefing, that he had never met such a welcoming, smiley and relaxed staff team at the start of an inspection. The report from that inspection, in May 2019, gives a very good picture of the organisation that we are.

Like most schools, we have our strengths and weaknesses. We are proud of the work we have done recently on curriculum development, on teaching and learning and on research-based practice, with many staff now engaged with research and further professional qualifications. Our challenges remain those of many rural schools, getting our results to be clearly above average requires that we better engage disadvantaged students and that we raise aspirations of some boys in particular.

We are in the minority of secondary schools that remain local authority run. This is by choice after careful research and consideration. We are not, however, an isolated school. We have good links with other local schools, with local further education providers and with universities. We are a member of the Peak Edge Group of local primary and secondary schools.

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Applications closed