Norwood School for Girls was established in 1958 as a secondary school for girls aged between 11 and 16 by the
London County Council. The school was originally based in Gipsy Road in West Norwood It has always therefore been a quite separate institution from the
Norwood School of Industry which dominated Elder Road,
West Norwood during most of the 19th century. The original school uniform colour was maroon. It became Norwood school for Girls and Boys in 2007. Although the buildings on Gipsy Road were originally designed to hold a large number of pupils (up to 1000) near the junction with Elder Road in West Norwood, opposite
Norwood Park, a relatively short distance from the school’s current site on Gipsy Road, which ran down another side of the same park. In 1971, on 21 April, years three to six moved to the brand new and much
vaulted Upper School, sharing this with a primary school, known as
Norwood Park Primary School. The only piece of furniture allowed in the new building from the old was the
kneehole desk from the Head’s room in Gipsy Road. Eventually, the first and second years moved to the site on Crown Dale in the late 1980s where the school remains to the present day. In September 2005 the school was awarded Specialist Status in Performing and Visual Arts, areas in which the school had a tradition from its earliest times and reflected in the careers of its more illustrious alumni. From September 2007, the school’s admittance of boys as well as girls firmly relegated the
Norwood Girl’s tag as the school changes its status from a single sex girls' school to a co-educational community school. This change has been reported as being in response to the needs and demands of Lambeth parents. ==Education==