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Stapleford and Sandiacre railway station

1847 establishments in England1967 disestablishments in EnglandBeeching closures in EnglandDisused railway stations in DerbyshireEast Midlands railway station stubs
Former Midland Railway stationsPages with no open date in Infobox stationRailway stations in Great Britain closed in 1967Railway stations in Great Britain opened in 1847Use British English from July 2017
Stapleford & Sandiacre 3 Station geograph 2158380
Stapleford & Sandiacre 3 Station geograph 2158380

Stapleford and Sandiacre railway station served the towns of Stapleford, Nottinghamshire and Sandiacre, Derbyshire, England from 1847 to 1967 on the Erewash Valley Line.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Stapleford and Sandiacre railway station (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Stapleford and Sandiacre railway station
Station Road, Erewash

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 52.922 ° E -1.283 °
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Address

Station Road
NG10 5AS Erewash
England, United Kingdom
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Stapleford & Sandiacre 3 Station geograph 2158380
Stapleford & Sandiacre 3 Station geograph 2158380
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George Spencer Academy

The George Spencer Academy (informally George Spencer; formerly George Spencer Foundation School and Technology College) is an English academy in Stapleford, Nottinghamshire encompassing both a secondary school and sixth form on the same campus. First opened in 1960, it was named after George Spencer–headmaster of the Church Street Boys School from 1889 to 1927. The school specialises in design and technology with its sixth form being a Technology College established in 2004. The school is situated in Stapleford near the Toton boundary. Able to be seen from Stapleford's Bardill's roundabout, it has a lower and upper site over the A52 and is consequently the only school in England to have a footbridge over an A-road. Students begin to educate at George Spencer at the age of eleven. The school has three feeder schools: Fairfield Primary School, Chetwynd Road Primary School and Bispham Drive Junior School, however children from other primary schools are able to apply. At the end of Year 11 (aged 16), around half the students choose to stay on at the academy's sixth form for further education. Year groups 7 to 8 are dubbed the "r-phase" and study "Learning to Learn" lessons until the end of Year 8, focusing on reflectiveness, resourcefulness and resilience, the three aspects which are intended to help the students use their lesson time more effectively. In addition to most of the students' things, some students in years 9 to 11 are dubbed the "i-phase" and at the Technology College study between three and four A-levels. Each year group is split into the P-half and S-half due to the school's large pupil intake to allow for easier lesson co-ordination. Students' forms are split into George Spencer's four houses: Armstrong, Hubble, Loxley and Socrates. These houses are named after academic pioneers, save for Loxley (the place named after the accepted birthplace of Robin Hood). George Spencer Students Strive to be the Best they can be.