Jump to content

Recommended Posts

My partner and I have just landed in London from the US with our soon-to-be 7-year-old daughter, and we're very interested in letting a place that is O.2 miles from Bessemer Grange Primary School (0.3 from Goose Green). Until now, my daughter has been home-educated and has never been to regular school (only once-weekly classes, private lessons, etc.), but we want to have her start schooling and are anxious to find one that is child-centered and which cultivates creativity and critical thinking rather than strictly regimenting students or preparing them mainly for test-taking, etc. Do you have experience and insight into Bessemer Grange? Goose Green? If the latter is significantly better, is there any chance of getting her in there rather the closest school?

Well they are both really up and coming schools. I have 2 children at Goose Green and am very happy with the academic standards and the standards of pastoral care and the creative and musical opportunities. I would say go and have a look at both and see the headteachers and speak to parents and then go with your instinct, you are close enough to both for distance probably not to be the deceider. I expect that there may be a space in either school in your child's year group, the school should be able to give you that information pretty quickly.

If you are in ED on 9th July Goose Green school will be holding our annual carnival through the streets around the school and onto the Green for a huge fair so if you are around come along to that.

Good luck, it must feel quite daunting doing the move to another country and starting school but I'm sure that either school will hold your hand through it and this forum is a great way to meet other parents so as to arrange meet ups outside school so that there are friendly faces for you and your daughter when you (i mean she!) starts.

It is a state school and, as such, follows the National Curriculum. Maybe the best thing would be to investigate that and see whether it meets your preferences. The next port of call would be going round the private schools and seeing which of those had headteachers who followed your approach and instilled it into their teaching staff. Or, indeed, whether they are prepared to be flexible. You will find, however, that Britain has move towards exam taking in recent decades and that most schools, whether state or private, will put emphasis on this aspect. I think that is a fair assessment.



Edited to change "traffic" to "teaching"!

Hiya!


I'm also an American living in the UK (I was born near NYC but my family moved to Nova Scotia Canada when I was 10 so I'm also a Canadian). I've been here just over 20 years so I'm not so in touch with the current education system in North America but my brother is a teacher in Canada so I've got some idea of the differences. It is true that the state system in the UK has more of an emphasis on testing and assessment. All state schools have to follow fairly rigid criteria on that - as New Mother points out, all school are required to follow the National Curriculum. My sense of many private schools is that they will also have a focus on academic progress and testing. The exception to this will be private schools such as the Steiner Schools - there is a Rudolph Steiner school in Greenwich. From what you say, the Steiner approach could resonate strongly with your own approach to education.


However, it would be definately worthwhile visiting both Goose Green and Bessemer Grange - talk to the Headteachers, look around etc. I've heard good things about Bessemer - lots of positives around the creative nature of the school and overall school spirit/approach. Our experience at Goose Green has been positive in terms of creativity - this week was Art & Music week at the school where music and art at the school was showcased. I was very impressed with the level of music education at the school (music is sidelined in the National Curriculum so it's true the level of music education can vary from school to school) where all children learn to read music, sing in choir, play in a brass band or samba band and where subidised music lessons are also available. There has also been an artist in residence and all children contributed to an art exhibition which was really great!


Anyway, PM if you do arrive in ED - would be nice to meet up with a fellow North American in the area!

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

    • Eh? That wasn't "my quote"! If you look at your post above,it is clearly a quote by Rockets! None of us have any  idea what a Corbyn led government during Covid would have been like. But do you seriously think it would have been worse than Johnson's self-serving performance? What you say about the swing of seats away from Labour in 2019 is true. But you have missed my point completely. The fact that Labour under Corbyn got more than ten million votes does not mean that Corbyn was "unelectable", does it? The present electoral system is bonkers, which is why a change is apparently on the cards. Anyway, it is pointless discussing this, because we are going round in circles. As for McCluskey, whatever the truth of that report, I can't see what it has to do with Corbyn?
    • Exactly what I said, that Corbyn's group of univeristy politics far-left back benchers would have been a disaster during Covid if they had won the election. Here you go:  BBC News - Ex-union boss McCluskey took private jet flights arranged by building firm, report finds https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cp3kgg55410o The 2019 result was considered one of the worst in living memory for Labour, not only for big swing of seats away from them but because they lost a large number of the Red-wall seats- generational Labour seats. Why? Because as Alan Johnson put it so succinctly: "Corbyn couldn't lead the working class out of a paper bag"! https://youtu.be/JikhuJjM1VM?si=oHhP6rTq4hqvYyBC
    • Agreed and in the meantime its "joe public" who has to pay through higher prices. We're talking all over the shop from food to insurance and everything in between.  And to add insult to injury they "hurt " their own voters/supporters through the actions they have taken. Sadly it gets to a stage where you start thinking about leaving London and even exiting the UK for good, but where to go????? Sad times now and ahead for at least the next 4yrs, hence why Govt and Local Authorities need to cut spending on all but essential services.  An immediate saving, all managerial and executive salaries cannot exceed and frozen at £50K Do away with the Mayor of London, the GLA and all the hanging on organisations, plus do away with borough mayors and the teams that serve them. All added beauracracy that can be dispensed with and will save £££££'s  
    • The minimum wage hikes on top of the NICs increases have also caused vast swathes of unemployment.
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

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