Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Hello All,


My family is moving around Christmas to ED and we would be grateful to have other parents' opinions about the following:


*Which areas/roads are the best to find an average-size 2 bed flat to rent long term, near ED train station or Forest Hill train station?


*How close to a decent primary school would we have to be to actually get a place in reception class for our 4 1/2 year old boy, and would you say it would be best to contact Southwark Council or the schools first to check availability?


*And finally which estate agents were helpful to you that you would recommend we contact, as there are plenty of them?


We were very fortunate to meet nice and kind people the times our son went to play at the Goose Green adventure playground so we hope that move is the right choice; we enjoy coffee, books and good food, and were impressed by the relaxed atmosphere and community spirit that seems to be reigning around ED.


We are catholics, resident in the UK for over 12 years, of Brazilian and Polish origin, and too busy working full-time and raising our son so to be honest have not attended church regularly since he was baptised - so we cannot consider applying to St Anthony's school. Our priority is provide a great environment for our son to grow up without breaking the bank.


Looking forward to your responses!

Link to comment
https://www.eastdulwichforum.co.uk/topic/25057-moving-to-edprimary-schools/
Share on other sites

Welcome to the neighbourhood!


If schools are your priority I would suggest Melbourne Grove and its surrounding streets. Melbourne Grove has historically been in the catchment for the Dulwich Village Schools (Village Infants and Hamlet), Bessemer Grange and Heber Primary. The Dulwich Village Schools are rated outstanding by Ofsted and have very high test score results. Bessemer Grange also performs academically and Heber seems to be a very popular choice amongst local parents.


Melbourne Grove is also very near ED station and you can pick up the 37 to Herne Hill Station / Brixton which offers additional options. Denmark Hill Station is also easily accessible from these roads and will soon have the East London Line like Forest Hill.


This area is close to the playground as well as most of the local amenities.

"I would suggest Melbourne Grove and its surrounding streets. Melbourne Grove has historically been in the catchment for the Dulwich Village Schools (Village Infants and Hamlet), Bessemer Grange and Heber Primary." Really??? Is this a joke?? Bessemer Grange perhaps, but this area is near Goose Green, and then I'd say Dog Kennel Hill, two amazing schools. I'd eat my hat if you got into DV or Heber from there.


ETA I rent from Dulwich & Village Residential - they manage my property - and I'd give them 10 out of 10 for a job well done. I recommend them.

This is based on official catchment map information for the schools including those who make it in via the waiting list. You can find out the information if you subscribe to the Good Schools Guide. Again, I emphasize that this is based on recent history (not including this most recent year) and catchments for all of the schools appear to be shrinking as more young families move to the area.


Jessie Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> "I would suggest Melbourne Grove and its

> surrounding streets. Melbourne Grove has

> historically been in the catchment for the Dulwich

> Village Schools (Village Infants and Hamlet),

> Bessemer Grange and Heber Primary." Really??? Is

> this a joke?? Bessemer Grange perhaps, but this

> area is near Goose Green, and then I'd say Dog

> Kennel Hill, two amazing schools. I'd eat my hat

> if you got into DV or Heber from there.

>

> ETA I rent from Dulwich & Village Residential -

> they manage my property - and I'd give them 10 out

> of 10 for a job well done. I recommend them.

Jessie, thanks - it seems to me that, no matter how much information we collect in advance of moving, it is all a lottery. May I ask you, as I am considering the schools our number one priority, and we will rent as close as we can afford to good schools prior to buying a flat (meaning by good schools not necessarily the outstanding ones but local schools where the children are well looked after and there is good behaviour and no bullying) was the council helpful with the allocation, is it worth emailing them or visiting them in advance, as we would have to submit an in-year admission application? I hope I am not being too unrealistic and my question makes some sense. Thanks again.
I personally know people on Melbourne Grove with children in those schools but of course it is up to the OP to decide where they want to live! Tatianadias, of course the closer you are to any of the schools the better chance you have. I suggest if there is one school above all others that you have your heart set on, get as close to it as you can as the school allocation system is becoming more and more competitive each year.

Hi Tatianadis,


I'd check the Southwark council statistics (all published on their website) about the furthest distance from the school for first round offers. I don't think you'd have got into Heber or Dulwich Village Infants if you lived on Melbourne Grove this year - even from a waiting list place.


Dulwich Village Infants (age 4-7) is a Church of England school so has half church places and half "open" places - children who live the nearest as the crow flies, get offered a place. Dulwich Hamlet (age 7-11) is a non faith school so all places offered are on the basis of who lives the closest. The big exception you need to remember for ALL (I think?) schools is that siblings of children already at the school get priority. So, if there is an extra class one year (a "bulge" class) the effective catchment area, for children without a sibling already at the school, often shrinks in the next couple of years (particularly as the "bulge" class is a one off normally).


Heber first round offers this year were to children who lived under 200m from the school gates. I think Dulwich Village Infants was around 450m for the non-church places. So you definitely wouldn't have got a first round offer from either this year if you applied to Heber or Dulwich Village Infants and lived in Melbourne Grove.


You can always go on the waiting list if you don't get a first round offer from the school of your choice. The list operates on the same admissions criteria so, again, children living closest will be higher up the waiting list.


But talk to the people in the Education Dept at Southwark council before you move anywhere!


Good luck!

This is extremely helpful, thanks all. I have checked the statistics and considering them it would be lucky if we get a place at all. I didn't have a particular preference so will probably contact the council first and see what realistic options they would give me before moving, but as mentioned, other parents experiences of the process are very helpful. Thanks.

LondonMix - yes, and Melbourne Grove is quite lengthy. I'm thinking of Grove Vale end.


Tatianadis - the council weren't particularly helpful, in fact the opposite, but the schools themselves were. And so was Tessa Jowell, the local MP, but that's another story... My son is at Goose Green and I can thoroughly recommend it - v happy children and a lovely atmosphere. Bullying is a big concern of mine, too, and the school deal with it quickly and nip it in the bud. And I occasionally pick a friend's children up from Dog Kennel Hill and it seems a very creative and, again, friendly school. Good luck with all your choices and decisions - from what I can gather, all of the schools in East Dulwich are bloody brilliant!

As it will be an in year application, it will depend on which schools have places in their reception intake and then how close you are compared to others on the waiting list? Might be a good idea to check out in particular schools that are bulging in 2012/2013 as spaces may come up more quickly? Eg Bessemer and bellenden (i think bellenden is bulging?)


Bessemer has a bulge class for 2012/2013. My son is entering year 1 and we are all very happy with it and it's doing very well on its results and Ofsted etc. The deputy head does a great tour every tues at 9.30 during term time.


But, definitely, speak to council schools adviser for more guidance.

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

    • As I age, I understand a lot more about community spirit and people’s fear in the current climate of going to the assistance of a person in need. Yes, this might in part be aged related but is also driven by not wishing or wanting to help but a combination of self preservation and yes, fear of what the attacker might do or even worse get stabbed or physically assaulted.  Whilst it would be great to have more police presence to reassure community and hopefully act as a deterrent to people whose aim is to rob people or home and attack people, due to the cutbacks and not sure about my next comment but lack of police officers in general and reduce number of recruits, let’s face it - we as a community should step up to protect our community and assist police. Years ago, I attended one of these evening meeting with the local police officers - turn out was less than a dozen local residents. Yes, was in the evening when a lot of families were dealing with homework, feeding, after school activities and obviously there are housebound people and older members of the community who understandably would not wish to come out. I believe that to address this, the church at the top of Barry Road near the library have over the last couple of years advertised  and organised day time meeting with two local police officers responsible for the area to address issues concerning the local community. What  happened in daylight might as mentioned above been in part caused by an individual with possible mental health problems - the point is we should all feel safe on our streets in London and without doubt if you read the news, seems like stabbing, assault is now just the norm - a reflection of modern day society in any large town in the UK. If memory serves me correctly, not related to assault but was not someone stabbed a couple of years ago near the junction with the organic shop? And I believe mentioned recently someone died in the local community from an assault. Would be good to have an update from the police or someone known to the individual attacked.  I was in East Dulwich just last week talking to a friend in Barry Road and was surprised to see two bobbies walking along the road in broad daylight so now having heard about the assault can only assume police presence has been increased.   
    • Disagree. Where are the police when you need them? People want a police presence, they want to feel reassured by seeing them do what the word suggests, policing, so go catch some bad guys, arrest, charge and get the CPS to prosecute with the evidence to enable this to happen. Stabbing and shootings are so common place they no longer even get reported in the public domain. How many crimes don't get solved? Rather case closed and forgotten. The number of low to high level crimes which remain unsolved is staggering.  The criminal fraternity know this, they know they won't get caught so they just carry on.  Biggest crimes which affect most people, probably are phone and car theft, both are prolific and what do the police do, diddly squat. zilch, nothing, provide a crime reference number and the case is closed. Not good enough, not by a country mile.   Met Engage? I don't think so.
    • https://www.standard.co.uk/news/london/violent-crime-plunges-london-homicide-rate-b1247078.html Worth doing a little checking before making assumptions about violent crimes. Recent data suggests a drop in violent crime. Gang violence will make a significant contribution to the numbers. You are unlikely to be attacked by a stranger   
    • Unfortunately there are plenty of shops which don't care and will sell vapes, alcohol and weed to minors, I'm sure they won't care about selling them fireworks. Or the kids nick them.
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

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