Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Pre-school are supportive and advised me today that my daughter is able to do an extra term there if needs be but there will be no place for her past the January term. I didn't know this, so feel a little more relief now but still really frustrated at the situation. Calling Southwark now - eek!

Well now I don't know if I'm more confused or not!


Admissions say I can reject the place, my daughter will remain on waiting lists for all preferences. When questioned about the obligation to find another place after rejecting a offer the lady said she will definitely remain on school lists that were originally on the 6 preferences. She has passed me to homeschooling to chat to them about everything to see if it helps me clear my mind and rest a little. I need to let southwark know by email if I'm rejecting my place by Thursday.


I explained to her I don't want to homeschool long term just as a short term arrangement until a place is found within a better distance to our home, or on a direct bus route. She completely understood and was sympathetic with the situation.


Getting 8 buses a day - to school for drop off, back again then to school for pick up and back again is ridiculous. In the winter if it snowed (but school was open) I'd barely be able to get my child in to school. Let alone the cost to me, and the travel times to and from school.


So now what would happen if I never got a place from my positions on the waiting lists and was homeschooling on the basis that it was short term? Will southwark just leave me high and dry and tell me to get on with it?

Hi GinaG3,

Your short term home schooling idea does carry the risk that you might not find a suitable school place in the timescales you need or want. If I were you I'd ask the schools you're most interested if places typically come up much later than this September from people moving etc. And thewn base your decision on the probabilities.

Not an easy decision.


US friend who home school rate the experience for kids and parent highly but it is very demanding.


I hope this helps.

My mother homeschools my brother and I've been out of mainstream education since I was 14. It is something I wouldn't like to do for the whole of primary years, but is something will mean I have family members a phone call away that can advise me easily on the 'ways'. This is a really tough decision. I am completely, 110% against the school I have been selected and have found the process completely unfair and illogical. I should be on 7 waiting lists now, but know I'm hoovering around 40-70 on all southwark lists, still waiting on Lewisham wait list release on Thursday. Heres to hope, and luck!


Can I just ring the school reception directly to ask about probabilities?

Southwakr Admissions have updated me on the numbers who didnt get one of the preferences - instead of 138 it's actually 145:


Brunswick Park 3

Camberwell Green 4

Cathedrals 1

Chaucer 3

College 31

East Dulwich 7

East Walworth 1

Faraday 2

Grange 7

Livesey 8

Newington 6

Nunhead 7

Oval 2

Peckham 6

Peckham Rye 27

Riverside 6

Rotherhithe 4

South Bermondsey 5

South Camberwell 2

Surrey Docks 1

The Lane 5

Village 7

Total 145


For our East Dulwich area 72/145.

Gina, you probably researched all your transport options but journey planner site doesn't seem to show a lane that goes from Dulwich Woodhouse pub to Sydenham hill station. You can take bus 363 to Wellspark road, then walk down the lane, to the left along the path near the church and Langbourne is just inside the estate.

Harris Academy Peckham Park - places available.

Harris Free School Peckham - places available.


This says to me that these schools are unpopular in their local area.


If the plebs of Peckham dont want their kids at an 'Arris primary school, it's a pretty safe bet that the "mummy groups" of East Dulwich wouldn't be rushing to enrol the darling sons & daughters at one.


Perhaps it would make more sense to look at over-subscribed schools and find out why these are popular.


Heber, Goodrich, Fairlwan, Horniman, Ivydale seem to be the names coming up. I havent heard anyone say, "I want my child to go to a Harris school."

The involvement of academy chains in prinary education is rather unproven.


http://m.guardian.co.uk/education/2013/mar/25/education-harris-academies-curriculum


'The only two Harris primaries to have had inspection verdicts published as of last week were Harris primary academy Peckham Park, in south London, and Harris primary academy Chafford Hundred, in Essex. Both have received "requires improvement" judgments from inspectors.


The Peckham Park school is the only one of Harris's five primaries to have been open last academic year and therefore to have Sats data to report. Yet its results fell sharply compared with the year before Harris took over, from 90% of pupils achieving level four in both English and maths to 65% after a year under Harris.'

Hi Renata,

No, the number has been revised because of an error. They had 11 people not allocated to a ward. In resolving that the numbers changed.


Hi Fuschia,

Yes, those Ofsted verdicts arent inspiring. The "requires improvement" grade replaces the Satisfactory grade. But their Director of Primary Schools is Sir Robin Bosher who led the Fairlawn success but more importantly led the London Challenge programme for school improvement http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/education-18459553 - that's what he got the Sir for. So they should be great once they've established themselves.

I wouldn't choose for my child to be part of a politically motivated experiment of the scale currently underway in education. More places are urgently needed in a number of areas, and local councils can no longer open new schools - it's left to the likes of Harris and the various free school groups. None of it inspires confidence. Even the academies commission is incredibly cautious.


I am so unhappy with the whole Harris edifice, and likely to get place only at Harris boys, we are moving ou if the area this summer, hopefully.


It shouldn't be necessary.


Every child should gave access to a nearby prinary and secondary place, planned in a coordinated fashion

I agree with Fuschia.


We are 'Peckham plebs' and the open evening that we went to for the Harris Free school was one of the most uninspiring and depressing evenings I've had in a long time. I suspect that many of the supporters on James' previous threads for a Harris school in ED are actually saying that they support a Harris Free school so that other people's kids go there to free up more places at the popular community schools rather than that they actually want their own kids to be part of this experiment which 'should be great once they've established themselves'. That's just not good enough.


I also didn't like the fact that in the Harris propaganda for their new free school they implied that because the school was starting from scratch there would be a higher ratio of staff to pupils. When I questioned them about this they acknowledged that this wasn't really the case. They would employ new teachers as the school grew and the school wouldn't get its own head teacher until it reached critical mass. So in face the pupils would have the same number of teachers as any other school but no head so if anything less and not more. This is very dishonest.


James, you continue to manipulate figures for political point scoring rather than to provide any helpful information. The number that you give for the children in the ED area who didn't receive any of their choices presumably includes parts of Peckham, Camberwell and Nunhead, when in another post you suggest that Peckham is a long way from ED. And then when you talk about the plans for new schools and school expansions you only mention the ones in ED itself and not the wider area. I find this very misleading.

Has anyone called Lewisham today to find out where they are on waiting lists? Also, has anyone offered Langbourne rejected their offer?


Edited: I was informed Lewisham wait lists were due to be released today, now they are saying not until after the bank holiday. This is all so frustrating. Emailing southwark to keep the advice I was given yesterday is correct, and update on my wait positions.


Should I be appealing to every school in my preference? Appeals deadline is 17 May?

gina i would say that 14th sounds hopeful in a school with a big intake like that. fingers crossed.

hmmm, we've gone down the ivydale waiting list :( soooooo not happy. i bloody well hope whoever has overtaken us has a good reason other than just forgetting to apply!!

James Barber Wrote:

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

their Director of Primary

> Schools is Sir Robin Bosher who led the Fairlawn

> success but more importantly led the London

> Challenge programme for school improvement

> http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/education-18459553 -

> that's what he got the Sir for. So they should be

> great once they've established themselves.


..and very good at creaming off the best Lewisham teachers for Harris primaries....I would bite my right arm off for a place in one of his 'undersubscribed' classes for Sept with the teachers he's put there.

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

    • I've never got Christmas pudding. The only times I've managed to make it vaguely acceptable to people is thus: Buy a really tiny one when it's remaindered in Tesco's. They confound carbon dating, so the yellow labelled stuff at 75% off on Boxing Day will keep you going for years. Chop it up and soak it in Stones Ginger Wine and left over Scotch. Mix it in with a decent vanilla ice cream. It's like a festive Rum 'n' Raisin. Or: Stick a couple in a demijohn of Aldi vodka and serve it to guests, accompanied by 'The Party's Over' by Johnny Mathis when people simply won't leave your flat.
    • Not miserable at all! I feel the same and also want to complain to the council but not sure who or where best to aim it at? I have flagged it with our local MP and one Southwark councillor previously but only verbally when discussing other things and didn’t get anywhere other than them agreeing it was very frustrating etc. but would love to do something on paper. I think they’ve been pretty much every night for the last couple of weeks and my cat is hating it! As am I !
    • That is also a Young's pub, like The Cherry Tree. However fantastic the menu looks, you might want to ask exactly who will cook the food on the day, and how. Also, if  there is Christmas pudding on the menu, you might want to ask how that will be cooked, and whether it will look and/or taste anything like the Christmas puddings you have had in the past.
    • This reminds me of a situation a few years ago when a mate's Dad was coming down and fancied Franklin's for Christmas Day. He'd been there once, in September, and loved it. Obviously, they're far too tuned in to do it, so having looked around, £100 per head was pretty standard for fairly average pubs around here. That is ridiculous. I'd go with Penguin's idea; one of the best Christmas Day lunches I've ever had was at the Lahore Kebab House in Whitechapel. And it was BYO. After a couple of Guinness outside Franklin's, we decided £100 for four people was the absolute maximum, but it had to be done in the style of Franklin's and sourced within walking distance of The Gowlett. All the supermarkets knock themselves out on veg as a loss leader - particularly anything festive - and the Afghani lads on Rye Lane are brilliant for more esoteric stuff and spices, so it really doesn't need to be pricey. Here's what we came up with. It was considerably less than £100 for four. Bread & Butter (Lidl & Lurpak on offer at Iceland) Mersea Oysters (Sopers) Parsnip & Potato Soup ( I think they were both less than 20 pence a kilo at Morrisons) Smoked mackerel, Jerseys, watercress & radish (Sopers) Rolled turkey breast joint (£7.95 from Iceland) Roast Duck (two for £12 at Lidl) Mash  Carrots, star anise, butter emulsion. Stir-fried Brussels, bacon, chestnuts and Worcestershire sauce.(Lidl) Clementine and limoncello granita (all from Lidl) Stollen (Lidl) Stichelton, Cornish Cruncher, Stinking Bishop. (Marks & Sparks) There was a couple of lessons to learn: Don't freeze mash. It breaks down the cellular structure and ends up more like a French pomme purée. I renamed it 'Pomme Mikael Silvestre' after my favourite French centre-half cum left back and got away with it, but if you're not amongst football fans you may not be so lucky. Tasted great, looked like shit. Don't take the clementine granita out of the freezer too early, particularly if you've overdone it on the limoncello. It melts quickly and someone will suggest snorting it. The sugar really sticks your nostrils together on Boxing Day. Speaking of 'lost' Christmases past, John Lewis have hijacked Alison Limerick's 'Where Love Lives' for their new advert. Bastards. But not a bad ad.   Beansprout, I have a massive steel pot I bought from a Nigerian place on Choumert Road many years ago. It could do with a work out. I'm quite prepared to make a huge, spicy parsnip soup for anyone who fancies it and a few carols.  
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

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