Jump to content

Recommended Posts

If you look at the context surrounding the trend it very much makes sense. I believe the new head has been in place just about three or four years (people who know the school better can correct me)- he has made radical changes from what I know. However, KS2 results reflect the acheivement of the year 6 cohort. Any changes made to teaching, assessment and culture in any school will have less effect on the year 6 pupils who have (unforuntately) had most of their education in the previous culture. Therefore results from the year 6 students in the first year of a new leadership will not be likely to reflect this new culture/new changes.


As children move up through the school however, the culminative effect of the changes will be become evident as the children are receiving a better education from an earlier age and therefore, will achieve at a higher level in year 6. Those year 6 students at Bellenden who are achieving well now no doubt benefited from having a better culture from learning several years ago when the new head brought in the changes. This also happened at Peckham Park Primary which had very low results several years ago and is now one of the highest performing schools in Southwark - a result of a radical new management.


Often, current year 6 KS2 results actually reflect what was going on in the school several years previously. So it's important to look at trends within the whole context.

Yes, for a one fe school, 30 pupils in Y6, each pupil = 3% approx


If the Y6 isn't full, or some are disapplied, even more

But the previous levels of each group of children, mobility etc vary so much year on year that although the headline figure may drop form one year to the next, esp for a small school, it can still be the case that the school is doing better than before, when you consider the improvement since KS1.


Great store is put by these results by the govt/league tables, and although clearly it's the school and its effectiveness that produces those eventual results, you can't mnake assumptions from a school whose results are not continually improving...


Having said that, for any school to get 100% is impressive, with any cohort!

They are externally marked tests.. so there is little chance for schools to fiddle it... in case that is a worry.


Anyway, i would judge a school on its OFSTED report, your own feelings and esp what is said and what you see in nursery/reception because that's the bit that will have immediate impact on your child. esp if there is a new head, what's going on in Y6 will surely change by the time your child gets there anyway!!


Look at what they do re phonics, how they teach literacy/numeracy, how much of the day is dedicated to that and how much free play, what outside space they have, how many staff in the reception class, that sort of thing. Different schools will suit different children, of course.

Thanks. I seem to recall that bellenden has a disproportionate number of students leaving before year 6. Teacher friends have also said it's possible to teach the test basically and put all resources into a good outcome.


This would have been our local school and we moved to be near better ones so I found the 100% result interesting.

I looked at the school to as we were in the area - although it wasn't our closest and we didn't choose it in the end, I was very impressed with the school. It got a great Ofsted report and many positve things going for it. My impression is that in the last couple years more middle class parents who live nearby have choosen to stay at the school as they have been pleased with the Head and the positve changes. I think in the past many parents of high-achieving children will have simply left the school - now it seems they are re-assured by the leadership and teaching and are staying.


It is great that the school has improved so much. Children who don't achieve Level 4 by the end of primary are going to enter secondary school at a severe dis-advantage - they are likely to be put in lower sets and will start secondary school struggling to keep up. The tests are measuring levels of reading, numeracy and writing - foundation subjects for any further study or career. For a school whose intake isn't primarily middle class, where there is a higher level of children on free school meals, and from disadvantaged backgrounds to be achieving these results are inspiring!

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 a shocking story.  Spurs?  You appear to be lost.  Haringey is very much the other side of the river.  
    • Every year they ask for more and every year it is an exhausting process pushing back on that for local residents and councillors. What annoys me is that at the post event consultation/ feedback this year, I specifically asked them if the rumours around applying for two weekends next year were true. They told me no. So that was a lie. Anyway, we go again. 
    • Double In New or great condition  Or super comfortable air bed Any1 pls
    • Rant ahead: You're not one of them but unfortunately, there's a substrate of posters here that do very little except moan and come up with weird conspiracy theories. They're immediately highly critical of just about any change, and their initial assumption is that everyone else is a total fucking contemptible idiot. For example: don't you think that the people who run the libraries will have considered the impact of timing of reconstruction on library users? (In fact, we know they have - because they've made arrangements at other libraries to attempt to mitigate the disruption). After all, these are the people that spend their whole working week thinking about libraries and dealing with library users (and the kids especially). You don't go into the library game for the chicks and fame - so it's fair to assume that librarians are committed to public service and public access to libraries, including by kids. Likewise the built environment people (engineers, architects, construction managers, project managers, construction contractors, subcontractors or whoever is on this job) are told to minimise disruption on every job they do. The thing that occurs to us as amateurs within 30 seconds of us seeing something is probably not something a full time professional hasn't thought about! Southwark Council, the NHS, TfL, Dulwich Estate, Thames Water, Openreach - they're not SPECTRE factories filled with malevolent chaosmongers trying to persecute anyone. They're mostly filled with people who understand their job and try to do their best with what they've been given - just like all of us. Nobody is perfect or immune from challenge, and that's fair enough, but why not at least start from the assumption that there's a good reason why things have been done the way they have? Any normal person would be pleased that their busy, pretty, lively local library is getting refurbished, and will have more space and facilities for kids and teens, and will be more efficient to run and warmer in winter. But no, EDT_Forumite_752 had kids who did an exam 20 years ago, and this makes them an expert on library refurbishment who can see it's all just stuff and nonsense for the green agenda and why can't it all be put off... 😡😡😡
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

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