Cedar Mount Academy is an academy in Gorton, Manchester, England. The school caters for boys and girls aged 11–16 years and is located in the East of the city of Manchester.

Cedar Mount Academy
Location
Map
,
United Kingdom
Information
TypeAcademy
Established2012
Department for Education URN138097 Tables
OfstedReports
HeadteacherK. Hodgeson
Staff58[1]
Age11 to 16[1]
Number of students824[1]
Colour(s)Green, Yellow, Black
   
WebsiteCedar Mount Academy

The school has moved into the new building with Melland High School called Gorton Education Village. They moved into this new state-of-the-art building in 2008. The school has its own website in which parents can visit in which to gain information, make inquiries and read about upcoming events.

Academy Status edit

In late 2011/early 2012 it was announced that Cedar Mount High School would be transformed into Cedar Mount Academy.[citation needed] On 1 August 2012 Cedar Mount had officially gained its academy status.[2]

House System edit

Cedar Mount has a house system which is incorporated in the school life. There are four houses which the system offers, each of which is named after a gem:

House Name House Colour
Sapphire Blue
Ruby Red
Emerald Green
Diamond Yellow


History edit

Cedar Mount High School was founded in 2000, after the merger of Ellen Wilkinson High School and Spurley Hey High Schools on the Mount Road site in Gorton

During the Conservative Party conference which was held in Manchester in 2011, Prime Minister David Cameron visited the school on 4 October 2011.[citation needed] There he met the staff from Cedar Mount High School along with a handful of Year 11 pupils. He did a live video call to the conference from the school where he described the school as "absolutely inspirational" and congratulated the headteacher, stating that "It's not rocket science. It's about good leadership." Cameron also praised the schools future ambitions and rise in standards.[citation needed]

On 1 June 2012 Cedar Mount had officially turned into an academy.

Joining of schools edit

The school's decision to join with Melland High School was made between Judith O'Kane, headteacher of Melland's High School, and former headteacher of Cedar Mount High School, Guy Hutchence. They believed that "inclusion was priority", and as a result, both shared a dream of the two schools joining, where SEN and mainstream students could mingle, and work in the same school.

In the words of O'Kane, the joining was a "complete success" and "had went better than we could have hoped".

Notable former pupils edit

Spurley Hey High School edit

Spurley Hey Secondary Modern School edit

Cedar Mount High School edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c "Cedar Mount Academy - GOV.UK". Find and compare schools in England. Retrieved 6 October 2020.
  2. ^ "Cedar Mount Academy". education.gov.uk. Retrieved 14 May 2017.[permanent dead link]

External links edit

53°27′07″N 2°10′54″W / 53.4520°N 2.1817°W / 53.4520; -2.1817