Our School Community
Micklefield CE Primary Academy is situated in the centre of the village. Community links are an important part of life at Micklefield CE Primary Academy. The school is a vital part of the community and endeavours to take part in as many village events and traditions as possible. As a school, we are also keen to learn from our local community and we incorporate this into our teaching and learning when we can.
Staff Team
The Teaching Team
Mrs Emma Cook |
Headteacher Designated Safeguarding Lead Whole School Curriculum Lead Art / DT Lead Assessment Lead Worship Lead |
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Mrs Caroline Loring |
Assistant Headteacher Deputy Designated Safeguarding Lead Inclusion Lead (SENCO) Music Lead RE Lead Eagles Teacher |
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Mrs Sally Sanders |
Educational Visits Coordinator Science Lead PSHE Lead / RSE School Council Lead Eagles and Robins Teacher |
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Mrs Heather Slater |
English and Phonics Lead History & Geography Lead Languages Lead Hawks Teacher |
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Mrs Mandy Brodrick |
EYFS Lead Maths Lead Robins Teacher |
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Mrs Sheree Hardacre |
Nursery Nurse Nightingales Room Leader |
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The Teaching Assistant Team |
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Mrs Jane Walton |
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Miss Helen Bellard |
Mental Health First Aider |
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Miss Jeanette Orr |
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Mrs Claire Heffron |
ELSA/Mental Health First Aider |
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Mrs Linda Roberts |
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Mrs Laura Fairburn |
HLTA |
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Miss Kerry Horner |
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Mrs Maddie Spears |
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Office / Admin Team |
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Mrs Clare Fell
Mrs Tanya Nicholls |
Office Manager Deputy Designated Safeguarding Lead Administration Assistant |
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Midday Supervisor Team |
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Miss Nicola Lodge |
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Miss Karen Taylor |
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Miss Rachel Hiley |
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Kitchen Team |
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Miss Maggie Heptonstall Miss Lorraine Stanyon |
LCC Catering LCC Catering |
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Maintenance & Cleaning Team |
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Mr Andy Tomlinson |
Maintenance |
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Miss Maggie Heptonstall |
Cleaner |
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Miss Nicola Lodge |
Cleaner |
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Local Governing Committee
Information about our Local Governing Committee can be found here.
Friends of Micklefield
Our parents’ support group, the 'Friends of Micklefield' is run by Tanya Nicholls and Joanne Davis. The team are currently very busy re- establishing the group, working on ways we can raise funds and planning how they can introduce some activities for the children.
The Friends of Micklefield group have a history of raising and securing very significant funds previously which has been hugely beneficial to the school and the children, delivering some wonderful events and being able to buy some really fantastic resources which have been very well used. With the support of all of us we are sure they can continue this fantastic work.
To join our monthly raffle, please join our Facebook raffle group https://www.facebook.com/groups/1171527829939858
Amazing prizes to be won each month and all proceeds go directly into school funds!
Please keep checking here for ways you can help and for information about upcoming events.
School Council
Why do we have a School Council?
The School Council was established as a means to give our children a voice. We care about what our children think and want to take their opinions in to account when we are looking at making changes or developing aspects of our school. We want our children to feel valued and involved in the decision making process as much as possible. The children are also great at coming up with ideas and suggestions the adults in school hadn’t even thought of!
The school council also take the lead on our fund raising activities and non-uniform days. They have raised money for a range of national charities eg Red Nose Day, Children in Need as well as local charities like the Selby Food Bank.
How do you become a member of the School Council?
Our School Council elections happen at the start of each school year. Children who would like to be on the council deliver an election speech to their class and then each class elects 2 children to represent them by voting in a secret ballot – living out our British Value of democracy.
The School Council is supported by Mrs Sanders and they hold a meeting every other week.
You can easily spot our School Councillors out and about around school with their badges on.
Church Links
Everyone who spends time learning and growing at Micklefield CE Primary School, becomes a successful individual with the courage, compassion and creativity to make a difference in the future. We are respectful of God’s world, working together to create a loving and caring community. We live out our school’s Christian ethos through our daily interactions which model our Christian values.
Although we are committed to Christian beliefs and practice, we strive to inform about, and empathise with, all faiths in our world, particularly those represented in school. We promote tolerance, respect and democracy through our teaching of Christian values. All children throughout the school take part in daily Collective Worship, whether in class or as a whole school. Collective worship is an important part of our daily life and enables us to learn about and explore our key Christian values.
Links between Church and School are strong with the clergy leading regular collective worship in school and members of the congregation and clergy serving on the Governing Body. As a school we also regularly visit church for services including Christmas, Easter and school leavers at the end of the summer term, as well as other major events in the Christian calendar.
The teaching of Religious Education is compulsory, and important to us as a church school. We follow the Leeds Agreed Syllabus. The clergy participate in and support curricular activities in school which are exploring areas of RE and church life, for example baptism. We also use the church building as a resource both in children’s direct learning and in their spiritual, cultural and social development.
We are proud to be an integral part of the St Mary’s Church Community.
We also have close links with the Diocese of York.
What is a Church School?
Church schools have Christian beliefs and values at their heart. This means that every child and adult associated with the school is not just important because they are members of the school but because they are seen as unique individuals within God’s creation.
In Church schools the spiritual aspects of life will be recognised, and nurtured alongside the academic and emotional needs of all.
As a pupil, parent, visitor or member of staff you should find that your church school is as good as any other good school but you should feel that the way the school works is different and distinctive. That distinctive difference will be rooted in Christian values that affect the way everyone is respected.
Church schools are encouraged to:
- ensure that the school is led by a headteacher who is committed, with the help of staff, to establish and maintain the Christian character of the school in its day to day activities and in the curriculum
- engage meaningfully in a real act of Christian worship every day
- offer a school life that incorporates the values of the Christian faith
- ensure that religious education is taught and that the character and quality of religious education are a particular concern of the headteacher and the governing body
- observe the major Christian festivals and in schools which other faiths are present ensure that those faiths are able and encouraged to mark their major festivals with integrity
News from St Mary’s Church
Easter
This year the last week of term was Holy Week so this was an ideal time for everyone to learn about the last week of Jesus’ life and his resurrection on Easter Day. There were lots of activities in school and the 4 daily Assemblies focussed on Palm Sunday, Maundy Thursday, Good Friday and Easter Day. On Tuesday 5, Y5 pupils created an outdoor Easter Garden at church. They used stones to build the tomb and the hill where 3 empty crosses stood. They placed small flowering plants around them and laid gravel paths. It looks lovely! They enjoyed eating their ‘thank you’ eggs!
St Mary’s has been part of the Micklefield Easter Trail so there have been lots of visitors to look at the story of Holy Week shown by figures and objects in the windows.
Finally a big ‘thank you’ to everyone who has donated tins etc towards the work of Selby Food Bank. You started doing so before Christmas and every month the amount gets bigger. What a wonderful example you are giving to the children about sharing with others and showing the importance of caring for everyone.
Christingle
Christmas 2020 was quite different for all of us as we couldn't have our usual service in St Mary’s due to Covid, but during the last week of school every class had an individual Christingle Collective worship. Each child bought their Christingle home and we hope you enjoyed lighting these again at home (safely!). The Christingle candle collecting boxes raised a wonderful £97.82 for the Children’s Society. Thank you for all of your donations.
Nativity Trail at St Mary’s
Our Christmas windows were enjoyed by many. Our windows told the Christmas story, from Mary learning she was to give birth to Jesus, to the visit of the Wise Men. Somewhere amongst the figures were 19 sheep – did you see them all?
Advent Calendars
All Class 1 were given sticker calendars with a small book telling the Christmas Story. We hope they enjoyed them!
Local Community
Community Garden
This community project at the heart of our school brought local people together in a touching memorial to the lives lost in a historic tragedy. Our Community Memorial Garden commemorates the lives lost in the Peckfield Pit disaster.
On 30th April 1896, the flame of a collier’s candle came in to contact with a pocket of Black Damp gas, causing an explosion that swept through that district of the mine, resulting in the deaths of 63 men and boys and 19 pit ponies.
“Though this tragedy brought the community to its knees, it also created a resilience and determination in the survivors, which in turn created a strong unbreakable bond and community spirit that is still with us today. Coal mining has always been a large part of our heritage and we do all that we can to preserve this with love and pride. 2021 was the 125th anniversary of the pit disaster and, though Covid 19 limited what we could do, everyone did their best to honour the day and our little group of volunteers, who strive to keep our heritage alive, created a monument to the disaster. Our village school took a lot of interest in the remembrance events and we have joined with them to create the Peckfield Pit Disaster Memorial Garden at school. I also have to give a big thank you to my great little team of volunteers who work with me to keep our community heritage, history and traditions alive.” said Dennis Best, local resident, who has worked as part of the group to create the garden.
“As the local primary school at the heart of our Community, we have always been part of this heritage, but this project has given us a real opportunity to join with our community to create something really special. The children will get a great deal of value out of the opportunity to reflect on our history. We are on a very exciting and positive journey as a school, moving forward in to a future as part of the Collaborative Learning Trust, and to be part of such a lovely community project seems particularly fitting.” said Emma Cook, Interim Headteacher.
The Peckfield Pit Disaster Memorial Garden was officially opened by the Ward Councillors for Kippax and Methley, Councillor Mary Harland, Councillor James Lewis and Councillor Mirelle Midgley on Saturday 19th March 2022. The Garden was made possible by generous donations from Lumby Nursery’s, the LCC ward Councillors, Persimmons Home Builders, Brecks Scaffolding and Graham Wood’s Top Soil with help from the local community and school parents.
History of Micklefield
Micklefield is a village of two halves. One road - the Great North Road or "the old A1" - links the two with a distinctive S bend surrounded by fields giving a fair indication of when moving from one half to the other.
The southern part is known as "new Micklefield". It contains the railway station, landfill site, industrial park and allotments. Housing consists mainly of late 19th century/early 20th century terraced cottages built for miners, some larger pre-war semi-detached houses, and the Garden Village housing estate. In recent years, new flats have been built next to Pit Lane. The old fire station is used as a community centre. Nearby is a sandwich bar, and a small independent shop. There is now also significant new building around this area, expanding the village considerably.