Jump to content

Recommended Posts

I know that the primary school allocations are out today online and should arrive tomorrow for those of you with a postal application.


I know that all Southwark children have been offered a primary school place, but there may be parents who are unhappy with the school they have been offered.


Good Luck!

Renata

Dear Kp;igsaw, steveb and JennyI,

This is the first year of the pan London system.

The information I got today was that no Southwark child is without an offer of a school place.

The message you received means that unfortunately you were unsuccessful in obtaining a place for your child at the schools you applied to at the moment,

and therefore, you have been offered a place at a primary school which is the closest one to you where places were available. You will find out tomorrow by post which school you have been allocated.

At the moment I don't have much more information available, except that the number of applicants is up a bit from last year. I hope to get more information tomorrow.

I will post again when I know more.

Renata

HI Renata, we just heard this morning that the place we've been offered is being withdrawn as it was offered incorrectly due to a mistake by Southwark Ed. We're now on a waiting list for that school but where does this leave us should we not get a place there? I guess officially now we are without a place at all? How do we go about securing a place somewhere else? Incidentally, I'm talking about a year 3 - Junior place not reception.

Hi Renata,


Could you tell me what happens if we defer our place at goodrich. My son will be 5 on the 1st August 2012 so legally we could keep him out until then. Would he still go into reception or would he join the 1st year with the children that go this September?

Thanks

I have some more information on bulge classes, I believe the info I got yesterday was on potential ones-

These are Goose Green and Dulwich Village Infant and additionally, St Anthony's Catholic has gone up to two form entry from 1.5 form.


I have an enquiry in for you sharls, to confirm how the new system would work and please contact me, sillywoman with more details ie, name, address, child's details and I will look into this for you.

thanks,

Renata

Hi Renata


I had St Anthonys, Dog Kennel Hill School and Lyndhurst on my list. My son is already at DKH nursery and our house is 237 yards from the new entrance. It takes me three minutes to walk there.


However, we got the "no offer possible" response yesterday, which I am absolutely stunned by. St Anthony's I can understand, but we are under 300 metres to DKH school. That means the catchment must be miniscule. Can you shed any light on this?


Also, I did not receive the letter explaining the situation further today and as such, as it stands, we have no idea where he has been allocated.


Please can you help clarify.


Many thanks

Dear smb12, I am sorry to hear this,

the catchment for DKH was indeed under 300m this year, 286m. The pan London system uses a specific GPS system and therefore the distance calculation may be slightly different to yours.


That you live so close to the school means that you are close to or at the top of the waiting list. If you email me your details, I can find out for you. The letters were sent out yesterday, and therefore yours must still be in the postal system.

many thanks,

Renata

Sorry Chantelle,

not to hand, is there a particular school that you are interested in?


If you didn't apply this year, but are enquiring for next, this years results will be published in the new application brochure.


Renata

thanks anyway. I am indeed looking at the 2012/13 year, and am a bit alarmed because we are moving house specifically to get into a better catchment area, though it appears that may be a misguided effort if catchments are shrinking so dramatically from year to year.

Mrs Lotte,

I don't yet have the ward breakdowns, but here are the overal stats:


79 % 1st choice

93 % one of their top 4 choices

94% one of their choices

6 % were allocated a school


all Southwark children were offered a primary school place. These stats are very similar to last years, even with a slight increase in applicant number. The council staff have had a month less time to do this as the 2010 school allocations were out in May, immediately after the elections.


Renata

Hi Renata

In response to the following posted by you:


"Mrs Lotte,

I don't yet have the ward breakdowns, but here are the overal stats:


79 % 1st choice

93 % one of their top 4 choices

94% one of their choices

6 % were allocated a school"


I have just received my letter from Southwark stating "congratulations on being given one of my preferred schools "Peckham Park Primary"", with a table on the next page showing this with my three other choices. I only put three schools down (all of which my son failed to get into) and until yesterday when I emailed Southwark to find out the results, had never heard of Peckham Park Primary which is 1.5miles away.


So besides my complete horror at this and the fact that its inclusion has potentially jepordised the allocation of a place at much closer (and better) schools, I would seriously question these stats.


I really would like a clear explanation as to why this has happened. I am incredibly upset and frustrated by the whole process.






the stat that 94% had received one of their

I think this is a lesson for all of the parents to this next year.


If you don't put down all of your choices for schools and only put two or three choices what happens is that you are then allocated whatever spaces are left after everyone else is allocated their choices - so people who are getting their 5th or 6th choice will get those allocated before those that only put down two or three schools (that end up being full because the families are nearer or have sibling places). This happened to several people I knew two years ago - I had put down my four choices (at the time we only had 4 choices) and I made sure that on my list was my nearest community school where I had the most chance getting into to. And we got allocated that school which I'm very happy with! Whereas a friend round the corner put down two schools which were very popular thinking she would either get one or those OR they would allocate her to Goose Green which was their nearest school. Because Goose Green filled up with people who had choosen it (even people who might have been further away got preference because they had put the school down on their list of preferences) she was then allocated a school very far away - near the Old Kent Road! Luckily, she put her son's name down on the waiting list for GG and her son got in after the shake down.

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

    • Thankyou so so much tam. Your def a at angle. I was so so worried. Your a good man, we need more like your good self in the world.  Thankyou for the bottom of my heart. Pepper is pleased to be back
    • I have your cat , she’s fine , you can phone me on 07883 065 076 , I’m still up and can bring her to you now (1.15 AM Sunday) if not tonight then tomorrow afternoon or evening ? I’ve DM’d you in here as well 
    • This week's edition of The Briefing Room I found really useful and impressively informative on the training aspect.  David Aaronovitch has come a long way since his University Challenge day. 😉  It's available to hear online or download as mp3. https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m002n7wv In a few days time resident doctors -who used to be known as junior doctors - were meant to be going on strike. This would be the 14th strike by the doctors’ union since March 2023. The ostensible reason was pay but now the dispute may be over without more increases to salary levels. The Government has instead made an offer to do something about the other big issue for early career doctors - working conditions and specialist training places. David Aaronovitch and guests discuss what's going on and ask what the problem is with the way we in Britain train our doctors? Guests: Hugh Pym, BBC Health Editor Sir Andrew Goddard, Consultant Gastroenterologist Professor Martin McKee, Professor of European Public Health, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine Mark Dayan, Policy Analyst, Nuffield Trust. Presenter: David Aaronovitch Producers: Caroline Bayley, Kirsteen Knight, Cordelia Hemming Production Co-ordinator: Maria Ogundele Sound Engineers: Michael Regaard, Gareth Jones Editor: Richard Vadon  
    • That was one that the BBC seem to have lost track of.  But they do still have quite a few. These are some in their 60s archive. https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m0028zp6
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

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