Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective
St Ninian's High School, Kirkintilloch
Comprehensive school in Kirkintilloch, East Dunbartonshire, Scotland From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Remove ads
St. Ninian's High School is a Roman Catholic co-educational comprehensive secondary school, located in Kirkintilloch, East Dunbartonshire, on the banks of the Forth and Clyde Canal.
This article needs additional citations for verification. (June 2011) |
Remove ads
Remove ads
Admissions
There are currently over 900 students in attendance with an average of 5/6 classes in each year. Each class has no more than 30 pupils. St Ninians is a Roman Catholic School.
School roll
Remove ads
Academic performance
The school has consistently proved to be successful in a number of different areas – SQA results, the Charter Mark award, Investors in People recognition and the Scottish Education Award for “Raising Basic Standards”. In 2008, David Miller, an English Teacher, won the UK Secondary Teacher of the Year at the National Teaching Awards, and, in 2009, Headteacher Paul McLaughlin won the Scottish Secondary Head Teacher of the Year.[7]
History
St Ninian's opened in 1874 in the town centre on Union Street. The school then moved to a new site in 1931 on the sight of the former Westermains House on Bellfield Road. It then moved from Bellfield Road to the former Thomas Muir campus in Bishopbriggs during the demolition and complete rebuild of the Bellfield Road Campus. As of August 2009, is back in Bellfield Road.[8]
Celtic Youth Academy
St Ninian's High, in partnership with Celtic F.C., allows the Celtic Academy players, who are pupils in S1 to S5, to combine intensive coaching sessions with a programme of studies based on continental methods, where everything is monitored including behaviour and homework.[9][10][11]
Feeder schools
- Holy Family Primary School, Lenzie.
- Holy Trinity Primary School, Kirkintilloch.
- St Nicholas' Primary School, Bearsden.
- St Machan's Primary School, Lennoxtown.
Notable former pupils
- Theresa Breslin (born 1947), author[12]
- Peter Capaldi (born 1958), actor[12]
- Stephen Crainey (born 1981), footballer[12]
- Karamoko Dembélé (born 2003), footballer[13]
- Bishop Joseph Devine (1937 – 2019), Bishop of Motherwell[14]
- John Hendrie (born 1963), footballer
- Aaron Hickey (born 2002), footballer[15]
- Des McKeown (born 1970), footballer[12]
- Charlie Mulgrew (born 1986), footballer[12]
- Bishop Ian Murray (born 1932), Bishop Emeritus of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Argyll and the Isles[12]
- Katie Sutherland, musician (Pearl and the Puppets)[12]
- Kieran Tierney (born 1997), footballer[12]
- Paul Wilson (born 1950), footballer[12]
Remove ads
References
External links
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Remove ads