Bispham High School was formerly an all girls' school, founded in the 1950s. Bispham was initially called Arnold High School for Girls, a girls' grammar school, having been split from local public school Arnold School by the local council. Arnold Girls' amalgamated with local girls' secondary modern Claremont to become Arnold-Claremont in 1975, before changing its name to Greenlands in 1976. The school had an 11 to 18 age range until 1989, when Blackpool Council separated from Lancashire County Council and moved A Levels to Blackpool Sixth Form College. The school became Bispham High School, a co educational secondary school, a specialistPerforming Arts College and a Centre of Excellence for Performing Arts in 2000. At the last arts college redesignation, the school was judged exceptional in every criterion. Plans to merge Bispham and Collegiate High School were under discussion from 2012 to 2014. The new merged school was formally created in September 2014, and is sponsored by the Fylde Coast Academy Trust. The school was temporarily housed at the former Bispham High School campus, but has now been relocated to new buildings at the Collegiate site during November 2015.
Academic subjects and achievements
In 2011, 86% of the school's students achieved a GCSE equivalent pass rate of five or more A to C grades. This was the best result in the school's history. The school was acknowledged by the Specialist Schools and Academies Trust at that point as one of the country's most improved schools. The final two percentages for GCSE 5 A-Cs including English and Maths were 47% and 43%. The school held the ICT Mark, the Eco Silver Award, the Geography Quality Mark and the Specialist Schools and Academies Trust's Cultural Diversity Quality Standard Gold Award. The school offered French, Spanish and German on the Modern Foreign Languages programme. It offered Food Technology, Resistant Materials, Graphic Design and Textiles as Design Technology options. It also offered a variety of BTEC course subjects to 14 to 16 year olds as well as the usual GCSE programme. The school had firm links with most Further and Higher Education establishments in The Fylde.
Building and refurbishment project
A £6M project was completed in the beginning of 2007. The project included -
A two-floor unit housing a Learning Resource Centre and library on the first floor and a computer suite, Recording Studio and Video/Film/Media editing suite on the ground floor
A 14 classroom block for Humanities and English Faculties
The school worked with the Royal Ballet School, London and possessed an Arts Council EnglandArtsmark Gold. It was regarded as a centre of excellence for Dance and was widely acclaimed for its high grades in the subject and work within the community. Mrs Deborah Hanlon-Catlow took second place in School and Community Involvement at The Teachers Awards 2004. The school also had a successful gospelchoir, Bispham High School Gospel Choir, under the direction of Margaret Adereti, Neill Oldham-Campbell and Sarah Bagot. In March 2007, the choir recorded a cover version of Crazy by Gnarls Barkley for the BBC 6 Music Hardchoral competition in which they reached the top ten. The choir made its national debut when the song was played on the BBC 6 Music Breakfast Show over the Easter Weekend in April 2007. On 17 April 2007 the choir sang their version of Crazy on BBC 6 Music during a live broadcast from the school hall, as part of the Hardchoral competition. The choir released two successful CDs, with performances and contributions from current and former students of Bispham. They also completed two tours in Europe. The French tour involved several performances around the capital city, including an exclusive concert in the Disneyland Paris resort.