Archbishop Blanch School

Archbishop Blanch School

Archbishop Blanch School

Archbishop Blanch School is a Church of England secondary school for girls located in Liverpool, England. The school is named after Baron Stuart Blanch who was Bishop of Liverpool from 1966 to 1975, and Archbishop of York from 1975 to 1983.

It is a voluntary aided school administered by Liverpool City Council and the Anglican Diocese of Liverpool. Archbishop Blanch School was formed in 1981 from the amalgamation of two grammar schools, St Edmund's College and Liverpool Girls' College. The school moved to a site in 1993, before moving to its current site in September 2015. The school was awarded specialist Technology College status in 1995 and became a Training School in 2007.

Archbishop Blanch School offers GCSEs and BTECs as programmes of study for pupils. The school sixth form is part of the Faiths Partnership with fellow member schools Bellerive FCJ Catholic College, St Hilda's Church of England High School and St Margaret's Church of England Academy. Together, the schools offer a range of A-levels and further BTECs.

Ofstead rates the school as 'Good'.

制服介紹 | Uniform Intro

校園 | Campus

上傳校園照片
本校尚無照片,歡迎提供照片上傳