Jump to content

St Anthony's vs Heber


jj1

Recommended Posts

Hi all,

we are starting to think where to move house for primary school applications and East Dulwich seems the best place so far!

The 2 schools we were considering are St Anthony's and Heber: does anyone know how these two schools compare? Being a catholic couple, we would prefer St Anthony's, but Heber catchment are seems so small (about 200m) compared to St Anthony's (about 2 km), so I was wondering why it is like that?

Is it just because of the Catholic requirement or it is because St Anthony's is less good?


Also, which streets / area would you suggest to live in for a family? St'Anthony's is quite far away from the stations, so ideally we would like to move a little bit toward either north dulwich or east dulwich station. However toward North Dulwich looks so expensive, so I guess we will have to look at the triangle Barry Lane / Lordship lane / Wateley road - are there nice 2-3 bed houses there?


thanks in advance for your help!

JJ

Link to comment
Share on other sites

It's tough to aim for a school and join the scramble involved in finding a house w/in the catchment.


Have you considered widening your school choice?


Goosegreen, Goodrich, dvis, bessemer, dog kennel.


All very good schools and potentially more likely to find somewhere to live if you increase your school choices.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Hello jj1,

You have to decide what route you want to take regarding schooling because if you take the state primary schools and nothing wrong with them, then the choice will be limited regarding RC secondary schools, you have to have attended a RC primary school and they ask for references from the priest for church attendence etc. St Anthony's is a very good school they have just or very near to finishing work on extending the school from a 1+1/2 form entry to a 2 form entry. And don't assume when you apply the catchment area will be 2km the closer you live to the school and the priest's reference all play its part.

Heber school has a good reputation and like secondary schools you have to apply to more than one school just incase you don't get your 1st choice, so you can put both down if you are living within both catchment areas.

Look at the bigger picture what secondary school are you looking at because without the RC primary school education most RC secondary schools won't even look at your application.

Good luck

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Like most RC schools - a letter from the priest is essential and you and child must be a regular mass attender. Hubby is RC and I have no religion and our daughter went to St. Anthony's at rising 5. She was christened in St Thomas more when she was about 16 months old and her name was put on the waiting list when she was 2. Hubby went to Mass most weeks (except when ill) and Father o Connor got to know him well so there was no problem in getting a recommendation.

daughter attended mass at odd times but was really too young to sit through a service.Hubby still attends Mass at least once a month.


Friends who have Cof E faith - also state that they had been attending church each week for 2- 3 years before child of school age to also get a recommendation from priest. They also had to keep up attendance (although not every week) at the church to prove their 'religious observance'.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Thanks for your replies! I actually was not thinking yet about secondaries, that's a good point to keep in mind.


@Pugwash, I don't really understand what you mean by 'waiting list since your child was 2'. As I understand there are no waiting lists and applications are simply evaluated in the same way during the application year.


We currently worship regularly in a different Parish (we would plan to move to ED about one year before the child is due to start school), and my plan was to only start speaking with the Priests in the moment we will be preparing applications... am I missign something here?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Hi

St Anthony's regularly is at the top for stats locally. This means that it is very popular. School has recently undergone a massive refurbishment and will increase its intake to cope with demand.


Regarding RC Secondary Schools, if your child is a girl and was christened at 16 months I am sorry to say that she will have no chance of getting into Coloma which has as its criteria that the girl must have been christened with a few weeks (i think) of her birth.


There are other secondary Catholic Schools that admit girls but their performance in stats are not on a par with this school. You of course could send her to Bishop Challoner the nearest independent Catholic school when the the time comes of course.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Thanks for letting me know, I wuold have never told that they would set such a strict requirement on Baptism!

In any case my child got it a couple of weeks after birth, so I guess he should be fine :-)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

It was some time ago the youngest daughter went to St Anthony's( she is now 27 so things obviously had changed. In those days for a church school you had to get child onto 'waiting lists' these lists held all children who would need entry in such and such term and year. You could not just go in to register an interest/apply a couple of terms before starting as all applicants were taken from an approved list and connection with the church re checked
Link to comment
Share on other sites

As far as I am aware (and I do go to St Thomas More, child has just got in to St Anthony's Nursery) You can attend a different parish and still get in but your chances will be lower. In the same way your chances will be lower than say if you attend church buy only once a month as opposed to once a week.


I found Mrs Squires, who deals with the administration of the applications to be very helpful when corresponding over the phone and by email, she always replies to emails very quickly if you did have queries you would like answered more accurately.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • That's a good idea smiley blue , if you or anyone else comes across petitions to end these despicable acts of cruelty to defenceless animals please put on here or start a new thread if you please so we can sign the petition and add our objections to this , I would also like to thank all of you the people for reading these messages and adding your voices to this cruelty,  maybe we can end it 
    • Malumbu, by that measure are police efforts to cut down on anti-social driving by issuing tickets and fines a token effort as well? Surely punitive measures for cyclists breaking the rules will encourage them not to break the rules again? A bit like when you got stopped and taken into the cab of an HGV. The police are currently using that tactic to show those who break the rules cycling that it might lead them to being hit by a lorry due to the driver's having limited vision - the cycling equivalent of a speed awareness course for drivers.    When they stopped you was it because you had broken a rule or was it just more of an education programme and they asked you to take a look and did it change your cycling behaviour in any way? As I said previously there are those who break the rules on cycling out of ignorance (and those out of arrogance) and I am sure they are using HGVs to educate those in the ignorance category and then hitting those in the arrogance category with the PCNs.    
    • Good that PETA is on it but can we add our voices to the fight against this horrible practice? I’m still shocked! A petition maybe? Happy to raise to the RSPCA but don’t want to duplicate efforts. I’ve signed campaigns from RSPCA before which sends it directly to your councillor
    • Yes, I'm aware of that. I believe the brood was five to begin with. However they are almost adult size now so not the prey of rats any longer. 
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...