Hartismere School

Est. 1451. An outstanding coeducational secondary school & sixth form college and England's first academy

Home Login

I Belong: encouraging girls into computer science programme

Hartismere school has been recognised for their commitment to encouraging gender inclusion in computer science by the National Centre for Computing Education (NCCE). 

Hartismere school has completed the national I Belong: encouraging girls into computer science programme, demonstrating a commitment to encouraging girls into computer science and improving the gender balance within the subject. 

The I Belong certificate is awarded by the NCCE, a leading body for computing education in England.

Hartismere school successfully completed all aspects of the programme to achieve the I Belong programme certificate. The evidence-informed programme signposts to a range of activities and approaches most likely to support girls’ engagement with the subject. 

Katherine Ellis, Gender Inclusion Lead at the NCCE, said: 

Congratulations to Hartismere  on this accomplishment! Schools play a crucial part in addressing the gender gap in computer science education and related careers. This school is among others leading the way in understanding the issue and creating change at a local level. This certificate recognises the efforts the school has gone to, to support and empower all students, especially girls, in choosing this path.

Established in 2018 and funded by the Department for Education, the NCCE has been instrumental in advancing computing education across schools in England, providing professional development courses, resources, and guidance to enhance teaching and learning. 


The National Centre for Computing Education (NCCE) is funded by the Department for Education and supporting partners and marks a significant investment in improving the provision of computing education in England. It is delivered by STEM Learning. www.teachcomputing.org

The I Belong: encouraging girls into computer science programme is part of the National Centre for Computing Education’s (NCCE) support to schools and colleges. It is free for teachers in state-funded education and designed to help schools understand the barriers to girls’ participation in computer science and form a plan to overcome them. https://teachcomputing.org/i-belong 

Documents

In this section...

Online Little Man Computer - CPU simulator

Essential programming skills to learn

Sorting Visualiser

A levels: pre-reading and research materials

Careers & Apprenticeships

C# Yellow Book

Programming software

NHS 111 mental health support

My Homework

Coping with exam pressure - a guide for students

See also...

Hartismere Careers on Instagram

My Homework :: Year 10

My Homework :: Year 8

My Homework :: Year 7

My Homework :: Year 9

Apprenticeship Information

My Homework :: Year 11

Students

Useful Careers Websites

InvestIN - Parent Briefings

Explore...

Hartismere U13 girls’ cricket Regional Final

Exposition in Film

Year 8 girls’ cricket team through to the Regional Final

Code.Org - Express computer science course

Theme in Film

A clean sweep for the U12 girls' cricket team!

Taking A Level Computer Science

Avatar Maker

Hartismere: Online since 1997!

TwitBook - Can you spot the problems with this profile page?

New...

Local Governing Body Information

Term dates

January 2026 Examinations

Examinations

Parents Evening :: Year 13

Hartismere Family :: Policy Documents

Pupil Premium Strategy Statement

Completing the Award

Discover...

Hartismere College Belong Computer Science Girls American Cinema Year 12 Online Safety 48 Hour Scare Physics Film Studies Year 7 Roblox Key Stage 3 Documentation Sixth Form Alamanc Cinematography Website School Nurse Competition

Uh-oh - we were unable to load our website on your browser so we're showing you a plain HTML version.

We use many features found in modern browsers and regrettably yours seems incompatible.

However this legacy version contains (very, very nearly) all the same content. Each page is rendered on our server and doesn't rely on any browser features except the odd font. It doesn't even need Javascript or fancy CSS. It's like being in 1995!

Your browser is reporting itself to us as Mozilla/5.0 AppleWebKit/537.36 (KHTML, like Gecko; compatible; ClaudeBot/1.0; +claudebot@anthropic.com). Please consider updating your browser to make the most of our website.

If you would like to try our proper website again - you can do so here...