Jump to content

Recommended Posts

I read on another thread about reception teachers making home visits to the new children starting in their class and have also heard of this elsewhere.


Is this standard for local schools?


There was nothing in our information pack about this so I wonder if this doesn't happen at our school (Bessemer).

I think it varies - I know for instance Dulwich Village infants hasn't done this in the past (that may have changed)? Teachers I know from other areas are always impressed about the schools which do it here which makes me think it's not something you get in every school.

Pripolla,yes, he did attend nursery there but the teacher is new and she couldn't make the meeting that was scheduled.


Otta, is your little one going to Bessemer in September? I can't remember seeing anything in the information pack or anything being mentioned at the head teacher's talk.

Home visits aren't compulsory, if you don't fancy it just decline. Lots of people are too busy, anyway, if they are at work during the day.


We found it rather lovely, teacher was very friendly and it gave her chance to have a one-to-one chat and for the kids to get to know her on their home patch. Also a chance for me to ask the questions I felt too silly to ask at the public open evening for new parents.

They are doing it at our school but the down side is they are doing it over the first two weeks of term. So the teachers are out on home visits and not in school and consequently the children don't start until the 12th Sept. And on that day they only do 1hr and times are then gradually built up until their first full day on 20th Sept. Mine is desperate to start and was asking me if it is today - heartbroken when I told her it is another 4wks!

womanofdulwich Wrote:

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

> I can't help but think its trying to suss out what

> kind of parents you are - if you are clean and

> have books on shelves etc- but that's just me,



It's all to do with a guy called Bronfenbrenner. He is a theorist who has had a big influence in Early Years education. He suggests that children do better when there are strong links between home and school and the home visit is just one idea from that which allows the teacher to see how the child behaves in their home environment (as Number 2 says).


It's a real shame that schools think they can make it compulsory when it's supposed to build relationships, not regulate them.

  • 5 weeks later...

miss brown Wrote:

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

> hi yh yes home vists are now new to the system all

> schools from now need to do them (I no this as im

> a nursey nurse)there lots of reasons why they do

> this:

checking if you live where you said on application ;0

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 was lucky enough to go to Japan earlier in the year and late one night ended up having to drunkenly navigate my way back to the hotel using my phone. I was briefly nervous, then realised I was in Japan and they don't really do street crime/phone snatching and all was fine. My point being, I don't spend a lot of time worrying about safety in London, but I wonder if I/we have got so used to being on edge (holding bags/phones close) we don't give it much conscious thought. And yes, as mostly a pedestrian if there was less traffic crime my life would be a lot calmer!
    • There’s an interesting discussion to be had on the need for infrastructure generally and on bottlenecks in specific areas, as noted above. However on new houses specifically, I’ve never understood the infrastructure argument. The people to go in the new houses already exist and are already using infrastructure. Thanks to twenty years of under-building we’ve got millions of adults stuck living with parents, living in house shares, paying a fortune to rent cramped flats etc - that’s what a housing crisis is. They’re presumably all using road/trains, showering and weeing whilst doing so. Building them houses doesn’t necessarily increase the need for infrastructure much, if at all. The Abundance Agenda podcast is a great listen if you’re interested in this stuff.
    • Maurice Hinds did a great job fixing my leaking central heating, rebalancing my radiators, and getting my boiler going. Very nice man, highly recommended. Maurice - +44 7720 648273
    • https://thedroneartshow.com/london/?utm_source=google&utm_medium=sc_nbrand&utm_campaign=409326_lon&utm_content=767097562480&utm_term=drone show_p&gad_source=1&gad_campaignid=22858264477&gclid=CjwKCAjw89jGBhB0EiwA2o1On1dk6Gw8zUGNHDgqGvsEDI3eCKZUsRlK-AH8UHi6bxox0TGDaGUs4RoCKI4QAvD_BwE
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

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