St Paul's School For Girls is a voluntary aided, comprehensive, girls' school in Edgbaston, Birmingham, UK, founded on October 7, 1908. It is a Roman Catholic school, and became a specialist school in maths and computing in September 2005. It is ethnically diverse, with a mixture of Black and White English/Irish pupils. It has relatively high GCSE pass rates for similar schools in the Birmingham LEA and in England. The School is high in the top s...
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St Paul's School For Girls is a voluntary aided, comprehensive, girls' school in Edgbaston, Birmingham, UK, founded on October 7, 1908. It is a Roman Catholic school, and became a specialist school in maths and computing in September 2005. It is ethnically diverse, with a mixture of Black and White English/Irish pupils. It has relatively high GCSE pass rates for similar schools in the Birmingham LEA and in England. The School is high in the top schools for academic excellence and is very good.
As part of the fact that the school's foundation stone was laid in 1907, and it was founded in 1908, St Paul's plan to hold a number of various events and activities in and outside of school hours, including playing tug-of-war and lacrosse in PE lessons, and role-play focusing on how World War II affected St Paul's. There is also a new building currently being built in place of the prefab (portacabin) style classrooms that existed in the school grounds as temporary classrooms since 1973.
Julie...
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