Jump to content

Thoughts on Hollydale


Recommended Posts

Great school in many ways. Daughter is in reception and loves it. Sons went there too and did well. Small and has family atmosphere. Astonishingly supportive to families if the chips are down, for which I am hugely grateful as this year has been a tough one for our family due to sudden serious illness of my partner. New head is doing good things there, responding positively to rather less than glowing ofsted report in her first fortnight at the school. She is really focussing on further improving teaching and there are some dedicated parents putting in lots of effort and time into extra-curricular clubs. Amazing jewellery club last term for eg and gardening club starts next term. Has better than average wrap around care- breakfast and after school club. There are very good things happening at Hollydale and my perception is that children and parents are very happy with it.
Link to comment
Share on other sites

I have two friends with children in reception and they are really happy in lots of ways. It was the school we were offered too but we ended up at St. John's and st Clements. I still wonder if we should have stayed put. I was a bit concerned about the space there, but the aforementioned friends don't seem to feel that's a problem now their kids are Ther. As Skegness says, it seems like good things are happening there.
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Hello. I went to an open day and liked Hollydale. I was encouraged by the new head, small class sizes and the children I met. It really seemed on the up. The only reason I didn't put it on my list is because it was a bit far away, but I don't think I'd have been unhappy to have got it. Good luck.
Link to comment
Share on other sites

I have another question. How does the 1.5 form entry work? I think that they split the classes into the youngest half and oldest half of the year. They then stream the children as they get to the older end of the school My son would be in the youngest half of the year.


Practically, how does it work? I don't really understand! Also, what are the downsides, particularly if you have a child in the younger half of the year?


I will call the school and ask them too, but was wondering if anyone with children at the school can shed some light on things in the meantime.


Thanks

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Basically it works like this in theory:


reception 1: 23 rising 5s

reception 2: 22 rising 5s

year 1 = 30 youngest year 1 students

year 1/2 = 15 oldest year 1 students and 15 youngest year 2 students

year 2 = 30 oldest year 2 students

year 3 = 30 youngest year 3 students

year 3/4 = 15 oldest year 3 students and 15 youngest year 4 students

year 4 = 30 oldest year 4 students

year 5 = 30 youngest year 5 students

year 5/6 = 15 oldest year 5 students and 15 youngest year 6 students

year 6 = 30 oldest year 6 students.



So if you have a spring/summer born child they would go through the school as follows:

reception, year 1, year 1/2, year 3, year 3/4, year 5, year 5/6


And a autumn/winter born child would go:

reception, year 1/2, year 2, year 3/4, year 4, year 5/6, year 6


There is some mixing/joint teaching and streaming across classes, especially in SATs years (eg my twins, one of whom was in the yr 6 class and the other in 5/6, were taught together a lot in the same ability groups for literacy, maths and science during year 6 SATS. They also both starred in the year 6 leavers play- pride, pride!) and a system is in place so that children don't study the same stuff 2 years running.


On the whole it works well- child travels through school with 14 permanent classmates but there is new blood every year so there is a wider range of potential friends. None of the children is always the oldest or always the youngest in their class.


hth!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I have be dropping and collecting children from Hollydale for the past 13 years:-). My daughter, now 17, attended Hollydale , and really liked it, made lovely friends she is still close to. She had great teachers and left with the highest possible results:-), we never worried about the outside space. I have, as a childminder, continued to come to the school every morning and afternoon:-)

The new head is lovely, very welcoming and friendly. Met the new deputy head this week, who is very lovely, too.

I would not hesitate sending my child there if I had another (which I am not:-)).

Link to comment
Share on other sites

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

    • Charging VAT on private schools is totally out of step with other countries in Europe.  Here is picture in the Europe:- . Germany: Private education fees are usually exempt from VAT. France: Private education fees are typically exempt from VAT, especially if the institution is recognized by the state. Spain: Private education services provided by recognized educational establishments are exempt from VAT. Italy: Educational services provided by recognized institutions are exempt from VAT. Netherlands: Private education services are exempt from VAT if the institution is recognized by the government. Belgium: Educational services provided by recognized institutions are exempt from VAT. Sweden: Private education is generally exempt from VAT. Denmark: Most educational services are exempt from VAT, but there are exceptions depending on the type of service. Ireland: Private education fees are exempt from VAT. Portugal: Private education is generally exempt from VAT. Austria: Private education services are generally exempt from VAT if they are recognized by the state. Finland: Private education services are exempt from VAT if they are provided by recognized institutions. Norway: Although not an EU member, Norway exempts private education services from VAT. Make of that as you may!  
    • Lambeth has closed two secondary schools this year and plans to close 2-4 primary schools in the coming years because they can’t fill up the spaces, local schools are not oversubscribed and can accommodate new wave of students and they will be very welcome. Vacancies are across all years. It will really help schools to get full funding once full so public schools will benefit from this.
    • One of the headline Starmer kept talking about is charging VAT for private schools. This would make private school fees unaffordable for many who are not mega-rich, pushing more students back to the state education system. Would the state schools be able to take in the extra students? Many schools are already over-subscribed, are there enough schools, classrooms and teachers to take on the extra students? My fear is that the extra VAT they get is not going to be enough to provide education for more students under the state system, as well as the additional 6500 specialist teachers they claim they will provide.
    • Sorry to hear your puppy has been attacked - very unusual in DP. Having said that, Recall is the most important thing to teach your pup & dogs. Try a long line in an area that people can see you - 
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

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