Does St.Bernard's selection criteria
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Does St.Bernard's selection criteria
I am trying to understand - if RC child got low score, will that child be in priority order compare to Other faith who got a higher score?
Also, is there 13+ formal entry to St.Bernard's?
Thank you
Also, is there 13+ formal entry to St.Bernard's?
Thank you
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Re: Does St.Bernard's selection criteria
this might be helpful https://stbernards.s3.amazonaws.com/upl ... 1567320082" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
and this https://stbernards.s3.amazonaws.com/upl ... 1567320163" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false; - have a look at the oversubscription section
and this https://stbernards.s3.amazonaws.com/upl ... 1567320163" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false; - have a look at the oversubscription section
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Re: Does St.Bernard's selection criteria
thank you, I see it is 111 qualifying score
Re: Does St.Bernard's selection criteria
You can see here how St Bs has allocated places in the past.
https://www.elevenplusexams.co.uk/forum ... =10&t=9313" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
https://www.elevenplusexams.co.uk/forum ... =10&t=9313" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
Re: Does St.Bernard's selection criteria
I'm assuming you mean a low score of at least 111?computer123 wrote:I am trying to understand - if RC child got low score, will that child be in priority order compare to Other faith who got a higher score?
Also, is there 13+ formal entry to St.Bernard's?
Thank you
I don't believe there is a formal 13+ entry, it's a case of whether or not a place is available in the year group, if there is, the child would take an in-house exam, the exception would be if the child has previously sat the 11+ and not achieved the qualifying score, in that case they won't be considered again until Y12.
Re: Does St.Bernard's selection criteria
hermanmunster wrote:this might be helpful https://stbernards.s3.amazonaws.com/upl ... 1567320082" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
and this https://stbernards.s3.amazonaws.com/upl ... 1567320163" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false; - have a look at the oversubscription section
Hi,
I'm sorry but even after reading the above link is not very clear for me if the RC child who has gets the eligible standardised score of 111 get priority to another child non RC who achieves a higher score?
Thank you in advance
Re: Does St.Bernard's selection criteria
This is the oversubscription criteria https://stbernards.s3.amazonaws.com/upl ... 1567320163" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;Hi,
I'm sorry but even after reading the above link is not very clear for me if the RC child who has gets the eligible standardised score of 111 get priority to another child non RC who achieves a higher score?
1.Catholic Looked After children.
2.Practising Catholic children.
3.Catholic children.
4.All other Looked After children.
5.Children from other Christian Churches.
6.Children from Other Faiths who attend a Slough Catholic Primary School within St Peter’s Pastoral Area, (Holy Family Catholic Primary School, Our Lady of Peace Catholic Primary School, St Anthony’s Catholic Primary School, St Bernard’s Preparatory School and St Ethelbert’s Catholic Primary School) and live in Slough with a permanent home address.
7.Children from Other Faiths who attend a Slough Catholic Primary viSchool within St Peter’s Pastoral Area (Holy Family Catholic Primary School, Our Lady of Peace Catholic Primary School, St Anthony’s Catholic Primary School, St Bernard’s Preparatory School and St Ethelbert’s Catholic Primary School).
8.Children of Staff
9.Any other children.
Those at category 1 have the highest priority of an offer and those at category 9 have the lowest priority. So all qualified RC children will be admitted before non RC children regardless of score.
According to this document St B made the following offers last year. https://stbernards.s3.amazonaws.com/upl ... 1567320082" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
All eligible Roman Catholic & other Christian applicants admitted; those practising children of other faiths achieving an average score of 114 or above living within a distance of 6.49 miles to the school
Re: Does St.Bernard's selection criteria
Is St Bernard’s Preparatory School what it sounds like? Or just a quaint old Slough name for a kind of state primary school? Looks perilously close to contravening the Admissions Code (the bit prohibiting the naming of indies as feeder schools for state secondary schools) to the casual observer.
Outside of a dog, a book is a man's best friend. Inside of a dog it's too dark to read.Groucho Marx
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Re: Does St.Bernard's selection criteria
It is a private prep school - was part of the whole St Bernard's / St Joseph's setup by the look of it. Inclusion of it in the list of schools was probably agreed in the dark agesToadMum wrote:Is St Bernard’s Preparatory School what it sounds like? Or just a quaint old Slough name for a kind of state primary school? Looks perilously close to contravening the Admissions Code (the bit prohibiting the naming of indies as feeder schools for state secondary schools) to the casual observer.
Re: Does St.Bernard's selection criteria
So was the previous definition of being in catchment for our local grammar schools - attending a(any, including the 5 private ones) primary school within the unitary Borough of Southend on Sea. But with the change in the law on admissions, the legal advice to the grammar schools was a) that they couldn't keep it as it was, b) they couldn't change it to 'living within the borough' and c) they could change it to having named feeder schools, but d) the indies could not be included. So we ended up with a priority admissions area which includes the postcodes wholly within the borough, but also the neighbouring ones, which are administratively not in Southend.hermanmunster wrote:It is a private prep school - was part of the whole St Bernard's / St Joseph's setup by the look of it. Inclusion of it in the list of schools was probably agreed in the dark agesToadMum wrote:Is St Bernard’s Preparatory School what it sounds like? Or just a quaint old Slough name for a kind of state primary school? Looks perilously close to contravening the Admissions Code (the bit prohibiting the naming of indies as feeder schools for state secondary schools) to the casual observer.
Outside of a dog, a book is a man's best friend. Inside of a dog it's too dark to read.Groucho Marx