Camden School for Girls

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The Camden School for Girls
Motto Onwards and Upwards
Established 1871
Type Voluntary aided
Headmistress Elizabeth Kitcatt
Chair of Governors Janet Pope
Founder Frances Mary Buss
Location Sandall Road
Camden Town
London

NW5 2DB
England
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Local authority Camden
DfE number 202/4611
DfE URN 100054 Tables
Ofsted Reports
Students 1,006
Gender Girls; coeducational sixth form
Ages 11–18
Colours      Camden green      White
Publication Friday News, Sixth Sense
Affiliations Camden Consortium
Website CSG

The Camden School for Girls (CSG) is a comprehensive secondary school for girls, with a co-educational sixth form, in the London Borough of Camden in north London. It has about one thousand students of ages eleven to eighteen, and specialist-school status as a Music College.[1] The school has long been associated with the advancement of women's education.

History

Founded in 1871 by the suffragist Frances Mary Buss, who also founded North London Collegiate School, the Camden School for Girls was one of the first girls' schools in England. A grammar school for much of the 20th century, it became comprehensive in 1976, although only year by year. It was not fully comprehensive until 1981. The school was damaged in the war but rebuilt in 1957, the architect being John Eastwick-Field OBE.[2]

Academic performance

A 1999 Office for Standards in Education (Ofsted) report called it "a unique and very effective school in many ways." Another, written in March 2005, said it was an "outstanding school with excellent features," and the most recent report said that it "rightly deserves the outstanding reputation it has among parents and in the community." Its GCSE results are excellent, and its A-level results are the best in the Camden LEA outside the private sector.[3]

Notable former pupils

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The following people were educated at the Camden School for Girls. Some of them only attended the sixth form.

Fictional pupils

Notable former teachers

Further reading

  • Doris Burchell, Miss Buss' Second School, 1971.

References

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  4. Gaby Hinsliff "Lady in waiting", The Observer, 2 October 2005, Retrieved on 30 March 2008
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 5.3 Max Davidson, Town vs gown: north London, The Daily Telegraph, 6 September 2008
  6. "Obituary: Charlotte Coleman" Daily Telegraph, 17 November 2001
  7. Valentine, Penny; "Obituary: Charlotte Coleman" The Guardian, 19 November 2001
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  16. G. R. Crone, 'Obituary: Professor E. G. R. Taylor, D. Sc.', The Geographical Journal 132:4 (1966), pp. 594–596
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External links