by Tootytoots » Tue Apr 26, 2016 11:45 am
Years ago Hillbrook was crap. I moved in to the area 6 years ago and thought we were doomed for schools. Then Hillbrook blossomed into this awesome school and is getting consistent outstanding ratings, Mrs Lamb is a formidable but approachable head, she is ON IT. But it is more than just on paper, it is a place that is more than the sum of it's parts and it's hard to quantify. Teachers greet you every morning at the gates, smiling and welcoming the kids by name. It is big but it feels small.
The school has a very diverse mix of kids almost all I have come across speak English very well as most of them have been born here, which for me is great as I don't want my child going to a cookie-cutter school where all the kids look the same and are from the same background. That is not representative of our area or the world in general. I am from a white middle-class background and there are lots of families like mine at the school and this is increasing in number as the years go on as the area becomes increasingly gentrified and there are also a huge mix of Europeans - Italians, French as well as Indian heritage and middle Eastern and more of course. They have International day every year where the kids look at different countries from around the world and then put on a show doing dances for each of the countries. There are lots of fetes and bake days where everyone hangs out and the kids dance - a lot. It is a fun and inclusive atmosphere and everyone is supported. They really push the kids academically without sucking all the joy out of them with lots of homework. Go, see, feel. Be impressed. I am staying in London until my first needs to go to secondary as I want him to stick there for all his primary years (because then we really are in trouble - Graveney or bust!) and can't wait to get my second in there.
Years ago Hillbrook was crap. I moved in to the area 6 years ago and thought we were doomed for schools. Then Hillbrook blossomed into this awesome school and is getting consistent outstanding ratings, Mrs Lamb is a formidable but approachable head, she is ON IT. But it is more than just on paper, it is a place that is more than the sum of it's parts and it's hard to quantify. Teachers greet you every morning at the gates, smiling and welcoming the kids by name. It is big but it feels small.
The school has a very diverse mix of kids almost all I have come across speak English very well as most of them have been born here, which for me is great as I don't want my child going to a cookie-cutter school where all the kids look the same and are from the same background. That is not representative of our area or the world in general. I am from a white middle-class background and there are lots of families like mine at the school and this is increasing in number as the years go on as the area becomes increasingly gentrified and there are also a huge mix of Europeans - Italians, French as well as Indian heritage and middle Eastern and more of course. They have International day every year where the kids look at different countries from around the world and then put on a show doing dances for each of the countries. There are lots of fetes and bake days where everyone hangs out and the kids dance - a lot. It is a fun and inclusive atmosphere and everyone is supported. They really push the kids academically without sucking all the joy out of them with lots of homework. Go, see, feel. Be impressed. I am staying in London until my first needs to go to secondary as I want him to stick there for all his primary years (because then we really are in trouble - Graveney or bust!) and can't wait to get my second in there.