Education
Primary:
- Abbey CE Infant School (ages 4–7)
- All Saints CE Primary School (ages 4–11)
- Camp Hill Primary School (ages 4–11)
- Chetwynd Junior School (ages 7–11)
- Chilvers Coton Community Infant School (ages 4–7)
- Croft Junior School (ages 7–11)
- Galley Common Infant School (ages 4–7)
- Glendale Infant School (ages 4–7)
- Michael Drayton Junior School (in nearby Hartshill; ages 7–11)
- Middlemarch Junior School (ages 7–11)
- Milby Primary School (ages 4–11)
- Milverton House School (independent; ages 0–11)
- Nathaniel Newton Infant School (in nearby Hartshill; ages 4–7)
- Oak Wood Primary School (special school; ages 4–11)
- Our Lady of the Angels Catholic Infant School (ages 4–7)
- Park Lane Primary School (ages 4–11)
- Queen's CE Junior School (ages 7–11)
- St Anne's Catholic Primary School (ages 4–11)
- St Joseph's Catholic Junior School (ages 7–11)
- St Nicolas CE Primary School (ages 4–11)
- St Paul's CE Primary School (ages 4–11)
- Stockingford Infant School (ages 4–7)
- Stockingford Junior School (ages 7–11)
- Weddington Primary School (ages 4–11)
- Wembrook Primary School (ages 4-11)
- Whitestone Infant School (ages 4–7)
Secondary:
- Etone College (ages 11–18)
- The George Eliot School (ages 11–16)
- Hartshill School of Science and the Arts (in nearby Hartshill; ages 11–16)
- Higham Lane School, Business and Enterprise Academy (ages 11–16)
- The Nuneaton Academy, resulting from the merger of Alderman Smith School and Manor Park School (ages 11–18)
- Oak Wood Secondary School (special school; ages 11–16)
- St Thomas More Catholic School and Technology College (ages 11-16)
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Famous quotes containing the word education:
“We have not been fair with the Negro and his education. He has not had adequate or ample education to permit him to qualify for many jobs that are open to him.”
—Lyndon Baines Johnson (19081973)
“Law without education is a dead letter. With education the needed law follows without effort and, of course, with power to execute itself; indeed, it seems to execute itself.”
—Rutherford Birchard Hayes (18221893)
“Institutions of higher education in the United States are products of Western society in which masculine values like an orientation toward achievement and objectivity are valued over cooperation, connectedness and subjectivity.”
—Yolanda Moses (b. 1946)