Part of the Oxford bypass where three teenagers and a motorist lost their lives will be sealed off to allow school friends and relatives to visit the crash scene together.

Oxford Community School and Peers Technology College, where all seven of the schoolboys killed or injured in the May 28 crash were or are pupils, have been working together in the aftermath of the tragedy.

Tributes near the site, which did not have a barrer Among the tributes being planned is a weekend visit to the scene of the crash on the Eastern Bypass so that pupils, staff and family members can gather to remember those who died.

The spot has already become a shrine of flowers, banners and messages of love and friendship.

The two headteachers are also inviting the families of the victims to visit the schools, talk to pupils and take home the many notes and cards that children have pinned to special memory boards.

Peers school lost one pupil in the crash -- Marshall Haynes, 13. Two other boys from the school who were injured -- Conor Hunt, 12, and Aiden Wood, 13 -- are now out of intensive care.

At Oxford Community School, two pupils died and two were injured.

The boys who died -- Josh Bartlett and Liam Hastings, both 13 -- were in the same tutor group.

Jake Proper, 13, has been removed from the critical list at John Radcliffe Hospital and is now stable, but Anton Dublin, who was celebrating his 13th birthday on the day of the crash, remains in a critical condition in intensive care.

Steve Lunt, head of Oxford Community School, said the visit to the crash scene would take place on a Saturday or Sunday after the funerals and not during school time.

He said: "We haven't formally visited the scene yet and we are hoping to arrange this so that people can quietly reflect on what happened.

"We are still working on the arrangements and don't know when it will be. It was not a typical car crash and there has been a delay in the grieving process for the families, who haven't been able to plan the funerals yet."

Insp Steve Bridges of Thames Valley Police, said: "We are working closely with the schools and are more than willing to help facilitate a scene visit to help friends of the boys come to terms with the incident."

The crash happened at about 7.30pm on May 28 when a Citroen Xsara crossed the grass reservation of the Eastern Bypass.

The car collided with a Honda car driven by Howard Hillsdon, 21, from Yarnton, who was killed in the accident.

The driver of the Citroen, Angela Dublin, is critical but stable at Great Western Hospital in Swindon.