Meet the Other Phone. Flexible and made to last.

Meet the Other Phone.
Flexible and made to last.

Buy now

Please or to access all these features

Secondary education

Connect with other parents whose children are starting secondary school on this forum.

West London Free Secondary... we're probably going to leave...

30 replies

DaintyDish · 19/01/2015 18:57

Anyone else want to share their experiences, good and bad, to try and talk us out of moving DD? The bullying is a huge issue. The teachers are a mess. The changes are non-stop. Some kids love it, others can't stand it. DD used to be so happy there but this year has just been a total wash out. New head, new teachers (who cannot control the classroom and are, by all accounts, boring her to tears). She was so applied and excited last year. But she can't concentrate in class on account of all the jokers. She gets hassled all the time. She cries every day. :-(

Words o' widsom, anyone?

OP posts:
Aquadoodle · 27/04/2015 23:11

Bump for more opinions.
I've heard some extremely worrying things about the school as well.

Blueberry14 · 04/12/2015 15:00

I'm a parent of year 8 girl, and have no agenda except to share my view on wlfs secondary school. I was so stressed when having to apply for schools a few years ago. We looked at usual local options, HA, Chiswick, and WLFS, Holland Pk (long shot), and private. I was looking at mumsnet a lot during this time, reading every single different opinion... very confused.

So here's my view, but each child is different so this may be helpful or not.

DD got offers at private schools (v.reluctant to do that). Art would have been good at Holland Park. But for her, HP would be far too serious, slick and corporate, even if academic grades are good, I don't think it's much fun there as a pupil.

Had concerns about WLFS because it was a risk and unknown, but since she started last year, we are very pleased with it. With all its teething growing pains, she's def in the right school for her, and pleased that my younger, very different and more sporty child will be joining her in a few years. We also really like the Headmaster, and think he has made strong positive changes, as well as being an approachable, likeable man. Can't have been an easy job to go into... and he seems settled and leading in right direction. They set high standards, and communicate well. Only been a few comms issues, but they deal with it. I feel like I'm informed, and can email questions or concerns if needed.

The small buildings was actually an advantage to my year 7 child moving to bigger secondary school. She liked Cambridge grove building, and is now in Pallingswick house. I don't think the buildings have been a problem and next year will be different and better.

WLFS, for all it's faults, is great and we are very pleased she eventually got in (we were on the waiting list for a few months even though we live nearby). My child has made really great new friends, studies hard, and wants to do well. She's doing well academically, and progressed. Teachers seem good, dedicated, and haven't had any mid term changes. There were a few teachers last year who weren't so good, but they didn't last for long thankfully, which is a great sign that the school will manage the teachers. She hasn't got any teachers now that seem to be poor, that's not to say she likes them all. They seem to be stricter in year 8, and she's not keen on that, but her grades are progressing.

She doesn't complain about disruption, any more than her outstanding state primary school. Of course there are some naughty kids, but you could get that anywhere, and they seem to be tougher on discipline now with a new system. This was also discussed at PSA, and parent gov meet. Some parents think its gone too far now (personally it hasn't affected us).

She's not sporty at all, but really enjoys music piano lessons and bands and is more confident with singing out loud. She's has a reserved personality and the small friendly school suits her.

We went to watch the Sweeney Todd production. So impressed and incredibly high standard, and it felt like a performing arts school with lots of talented kids, not all music scholars.

Very encouraged with majority of children staying on for new 6th form. They must have looked around other schools, and decided to stay at WLFS. This will also bring in more experienced teachers teaching A levels.

She loves art, and has really taken to classics (including latin). I was worried that there wasn't going to be much Art, and it would be too theoretical art history. However, I see her enjoying and learning about Art history and getting so much out of it. The Art teacher is really great, and looks like Art is going to get stronger. She's also likes the Classics...Completely new to her, and we were very cynical about it before she joined. But now that I see her enjoying the learning, (more the Classics history more than the language).I'm pleased that she likes it. Anyway lots other local schools teach Latin, so don't think much different if she gone elsewhere.

Lots of active and engaged parents at PSA and Parent gov meetings which is a good sign that the school will be challenged and can't get complacent. Good changes that seemed well thought out, and considered... although perhaps a bit different to usual convention, which is fine if it makes sense. One of reason why I liked WLFS, is because I thought our state primary (even though outstanding), was too relaxed with stretching bright kids, and not encouraging them to aspire higher. So I don't mind if WLFS changes the system... about time to shake things up, and offer alternatives.
I would recommend it, but obviously it depends on child and what parent wants. I think it is under such scrutiny and certainly is not popular with everyone. They do try to improve things, and therefore have to make changes and do things a bit differently.

Hope this helps someone out there, but it's just my personal view. I'm sure there are many other different perspectives on WLFS.

ingok · 25/08/2016 18:15

Finally some data and overall it is good news!! the West London Free School, has posted its first set of GCSE results this year and they are good. 76% of pupils got 5A–C. The school did well at the top end, with 37% of all GCSEs being marked A or A. The pupils performed particularly well in Maths, Science, Art, Music and Religious Education. In Music and Art, for instance, 100 per cent got 5A–C, as did those pupils who took Biology, Chemistry and Physics as separate subjects. In Maths, 85% got 5A–C, while in English Literature it was 78%.

Starlight77 · 27/08/2016 19:17

Great result for WLFS...well done!! My ds attends Hammersmith Academy and we received an email informing us about their first GCSE results and they too are similar. Infact the A-C % in Eng. Lit is 82% ! Its good to know that good results are down to hard work by teachers and students no matter if its a fee paying or a free school.

HarveySchlumpfenburger · 27/08/2016 22:59

In Music and Art, for instance, 100 per cent got 5A–C, as did those pupils who took Biology, Chemistry and Physics as separate subjects.*

So essentially 100% of high attaining students in science got above a C grade in science? That's not particularly surprising. What proportion of the entire cohort is that and what was the attainment on entry of the cohort.

I could be wrong, but that science statistic is the sort of stat that gets used when you are trying to hide results somewhere else. I think it's a bit early to be saying they are great results for the school. IIRC the current year 11 had a very very high attainment profile on entry, so it's possible those results aren't as good as they look. I think they needed about 85% in English to make expected progress, slightly less in maths.

New posts on this thread. Refresh page