Parrs Wood High School is a coeducational secondary school in East Didsbury, Manchester, England, located off Wilmslow Road behind Parrs Wood Entertainment Complex. It educates pupils from the age of 11 to 18 years. A-Levels are taught at the Parrs Wood Sixth Form Centre, which is integrated with the main school.
Parrs Wood was the 4th largest school in the UK in 2008, with 2,030 students and 450 in the sixth form centre.
In 2015, the governors of Parrs Wood decided to embark on the process of turning the school into an academy, despite opposition from staff and local politicians.
It converted in 2016, the former school had community school status; its URN was 105556.
After the Manchester Arena bombing, the school's choir recorded the title track from Ariana Grande's My Everything to benefit the victims. The choir then performed the song at the One Love Manchester concert with Ariana Grande herself to further honour and aid the victims.
The original school building, built in 1967, was demolished in 2000 and was rebuilt from scratch on a site behind the original school; the contractors built the school building in exchange for a portion of the school grounds on which to build an entertainment complex.
Parrs Wood Sixth Form Centre is part of the school campus. It opened in 2000 after the rebuilding of the main school. The centre is located in a Grade II listed building independent from the main school.
In 2007, an Ofsted inspection showed the school to be lacking in several areas, particularly in KS3 SAT results, and criticised the school management for failure to act to remedy the situation. The report reflected that this situation was unacceptable and the school was placed in special measures. In February 2010, OFSTED judged the school to be satisfactory and as such no longer required special measures.
In its most recent inspection, the school was graded as Grade 2 - Good.
In May 2007, a canister of CS gas was discharged in the science area of Parrs Wood, which resulted in 58 students and staff being taken to hospital. The incident was described by Greater Manchester Police as an "idiotic prank".
The school is directly opposite a branch of Grosvenor G Casinos in the Parrs Wood entertainment centre complex. Members of Manchester City Council's planning committee originally rejected the plans to build the casino after Didsbury residents objected due to a possible negative effect on the livelihood of pupils at the school: students would have to walk past the casino on a daily basis in order to attend. Despite the original rejection, Grosvenor G Casinos were granted planning permission in March 2011. The Parrs Wood branch has been open as of June 2012.
In 2012, Judge Peeling QC, found against the governing body of the school in a Judicial Review of a decision to suspend one of the governors.
In May 2021, a Year 8 student at Parrs Wood High School got excluded for half a day after yelling "Free Palestine" in a tech class. The schoolâÂÂs letter called it "racist abuse" and warned the parents to stop it happening again. They later explained it wasnâÂÂt just the slogan and the shout was aimed aggressively at a Jewish classmate, and the two already had some beef. The school saw it as targeted bullying based on religion/race, not punishing political speech, and handled it under UK anti-discrimination rules. It got a lot of backlash online. Some Muslim advocacy groups said the school overreacted, was censoring pro-Palestine views, and might scare kids away from supporting Palestine amid Gaza issues. They often ignored the schoolâÂÂs claim it was personal and targeted. Mainstream reports supported the school, saying it was about aggression toward one person, not banning political talk but was just enforcing anti-bullying rules. No further action or changes happened afterward.
In January 2023, a 14-year-old girl suffered serious, though not life-threatening, injuries after being stabbed by a fellow student using a 'sharp instrument'. The perpetrator was arrested by police. The boy was first let out on bail in February 2023 while police continued looking into it. On January 25, 2024, Greater Manchester Police said heâÂÂd been released with no charges after a full investigation showed no further action was needed. Police didnâÂÂt share any extra info about why it happened or if the people involved knew each other beforehand.