Set in the heart of North Nottinghamshire’s stunning rural landscape, we are a community with an extraordinary history and an exciting future.
We want our students to be the best they can be. If destined to join one of the world’s finest universities, here is where they will flourish. If an outstanding sportsperson, here is where they will hone their skills, a talented artist or musician, here is where they will perfect their craft – and if these talents are yet to be revealed, here is where they’ll be discovered.
At our school, what matters is the individual, their aspirations and their future. Come and visit us, we are looking forward to meeting you and your family.
With specific programmes to stretch the most able, and to inspire independent learning - we produce outstanding results, enabling an increasing number of pupils to enter the top 20 UK universities, including six students joining Cambridge and Oxford in 2017.
Equally, in a school that chooses not to be harshly selective, we are proud of our record of bringing out the best in every student, measuring ourselves against pupils' progress, not meaningless league tables.
Community, belonging and a deep-seated sense of friendship play a major role in each pupil’s time at Worksop College and Ranby House. And whether your child is a day, flexi or full boarding pupil, from the moment of joining us, house-life will support them every step of the way - providing a point of continuity throughout their time at school.
Ranby House has four houses, while Worksop College has eight houses in total. Although each is slightly different, each inspires a loyalty within its members that lasts for years, maybe decades, after leaving school. And so we always strive for better. We question and we’re curious, we’re bold and ambitious - and we make sure we challenge ourselves, every day.
Our vision and values are woven onto the fabric of what we do. From the boardroom to the classroom, our values are a roadmap for the way we operate.
Our story dates back to the 19th century when the school was founded by Victorian Educational Reformer, Canon Nathaniel Woodard. After his death in 1891, it was left to Henry Meynell to ensure that Woodard’s vision was realised, and the College opened in September 1895, with just five Masters and 44 boys.
A generous gift of land from the Duke of Newcastle’s Clumber estate has been extended over the years to provide the 330-acre estate on which the College stands today.
Success led to rapid expansion, and within two years the College consisted of four dorms, Cross, Fleur de Lys, Lion and Crown, which became the foundations of the first four Houses, Mason, Pelham, Mountgarret and Talbot. In the years leading up to the First World War much building took place, the crowning achievement being the creation of St. Cuthbert’s Chapel between 1909 and 1911.
Under Headmaster Canon Fred Shirley, the College underwent significant change in the 1920s and 1930s – many of the buildings around the cloisters were added, two new Houses opened, School House and Shirley, football was replaced with rugby – and the College developed a national reputation.
Rapid growth occurred in post-war years, initially with the acquisition of Ranby House School which allowed the Prep School to move off site and its buildings to be taken over by a seventh House, Portland. Further development saw the adding of many facilities, amongst them the indoor swimming pool, Churchill Hall, the Chemistry laboratories and more classrooms. In the 1970s girls were admitted to the College for the first time and by the mid-1980s the College was fully co-educational, the girls housed in Gibbs and Derry which replaced two boys’ Houses, Mountgarret and School House.
Since the centenary celebrations in 1995, constant re-development has seen the addition of a new Music School, two new computer centres, a Sports Hall, two flood-lit Astroturfs pitches, an 18 hole golf course, two completely new departments, Modern Languages and Food & Nutrition, and the building of a new girls’ boarding house. The growth in numbers has enabled the re-opening of School House, a third house for girls.
The College is part of the Woodard Corporation which owns some 23 independent schools, amongst them Lancing, Bloxham and Ellesmere, which form a core of a much larger group of schools that includes two Academies, many independent schools, grammar schools, comprehensive schools and schools across the world – all of them linked by the Anglican ethos centred on Nathaniel Woodard’s vision of a Christian education for young people.
In December 2010, Worksop College joined with its sister Woodard Prep School, Ranby House, to become a single, co-educational, independent day and boarding school for 3 to 18-year-olds.
It has been a busy few years. In late 2014, we started work on Mason House, a brand new £4.1 million project – and since it opened in January 2016, the stunning building has supported a growing boarding community, as well as creating space for additional library, study and classroom spaces. Moving boarders to the new purpose-built facilities enabled us to reconfigure the main building, spending £750k on modernising boarding facilities, classrooms and break-out spaces across the school.
Over at Ranby House – a refurbished library, new ICT suite, upgraded tennis courts and pre-prep classroom has created exciting spaces for our younger learners.
Fast-forward to present day, and in September 2016 we welcomed Years 7 and 8 to their new home at the College – Portland House, adding an exciting dynamic to our growing and thriving school.
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The dedication of the staff here truly shines, as my child's confidence and skills have soared to new heights, making learning an absolute joy!
By Sarah Mendes (Sep, 2024) |