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Headfort School
Academic Matters
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Headfort has the luxury of being able to avoid the inflexibility of
larger schools where children are divided into year groups, spending a
year in each class, where there is a defined number of topics in each
subject that should be covered. This approach generally works quite
well, though it can impose strains on both the very clever and the
below-average child. The former may well be held back and the latter
not necessarily able to move according to his or her needs.
At Headfort we operate a system that allows us maximum flexibility. In
the prep school we have six – sometimes seven – forms. The choice
between six and seven is determined by what the Staff feel best meets
the needs of the particular group of children in the school. Our
maximum class size is almost invariably sixteen and frequently fewer.
The bottom form is Form III and the top Upper VI. A rough guide runs
like this.
- Form III: 7/8 year olds
- Form IV: 9/10 year olds
- Middle V: 10/11 year olds
- Upper V: 11/12/ year olds, some of whom may be taking Irish
secondary school entrance exams
- Lower VI: Good entrance candidates to Irish and British secondary
schools
- Upper VI: Possible Scholars to Irish and British secondary schools.
The school offers between two and four entrance scholarships, which
are competed for in April or May. Otherwise, when children arrive in
the school, their Reading and Spelling Ages are assessed, and they are
given a Maths assessment test. Then they are placed in a form
appropriate to their academic and social development. Thereafter they
move up the school as the Staff think fit. This system is completely
flexible and allows us to target each child precisely, irrespective of
age or intellectual development. Individual attention for each child
is Headfort’s greatest academic strength.
Our curriculum has to serve several masters. Common Entrance, Public
Schools’ Scholarships and the Irish Primary curriculum make different
demands, and we adapt ourselves to them all, as well as making sure
that the promotion system does not leave gaps in children’s knowledge.
We deem this considerable extra effort to be worthwhile because it
ensures that we have a completely flexible system that can address the
needs of every child.
As for external assessment, we run the widely respected Educational
Research Centre tests every year in March, without the kind of
preparation that might skew the results. These tests form a useful
guide as to the progress of each child. They tell us precisely how
well we are doing in the areas of reading and comprehension, and
evaluate our children as against other primary school children in
Ireland; results of late confirm that our academic standards are among
the highest.
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For further
information, please contact the Headmaster, Dermot Dix at
headmaster@eircom.net
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