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  1. Dame Allan's School is a co-educational school that offers quality education for boys and girls from 3 to 18 years old. It follows the Diamond Structure of education, which combines single-sex education within a co-educational setting, and has a long history of stability and happiness.

  2. Dame Allan's Schools is a collection of private day schools in Fenham, in the west end of Newcastle upon Tyne, England. It comprises a coeducational junior school, single-sex senior schools and a coeducational sixth form. Founded in 1705 as a charity, the original schools are two of the oldest schools in the city.

  3. Dame Allan's Schools, Newcastle upon Tyne. 2,579 likes · 161 talking about this · 813 were here. Est. 1705, the only school in the North East to follow the Diamond Model of education

  4. Dame Allan's School is a girls' school founded in 1705 by Dame Eleanor Allan to provide a 'proper education' for boys and girls in Newcastle. It offers a genuinely caring environment, a fully supported journey, and a high academic standard with a first rate pastoral system and a wide-ranging curriculum.

  5. A group of independent schools in Newcastle upon Tyne offering the 'Diamond Structure' of education, with single-sex and co-educational classes from 11 to 18. The schools have a high academic and social profile, with students who want to pursue careers in medicine, veterinary science, dance and football.

  6. Dame Allan’s Schools were founded in 1705 by local philanthropist Dame Eleanor Allan to provide a ‘proper’ education for 40 poor boys and 20 poor girls in the city parishes of St Nicholas and St John. As such, they are two of the oldest schools in Newcastle upon Tyne and the Girls’ School is believed to be the eighth oldest independent ...

  7. Whilst subjects follow the National Curriculum broadly, as an independent school we enjoy the freedom to extend pupils’ knowledge further. We offer a broad and balanced range of subjects from Years 7 -9, helping our students to develop new skills and prepare them for the challenges of GCSE courses.