Highfields Newsletter Issue 25

Page 3

Highfields School

Issue 25: 20 March 2020

Newsletter Message from the headteacher Quite often at the moment I ask the deputy headteacher the same question: ‘Is this really happening?’ He always looks at me patiently and reminds me, ‘yes, it is’. It is truly astonishing to look at emails from last week which now seem as if they were from another era. They refer to visits, meetings, events which are now cancelled. We learnt on Tuesday morning that around a third of our staff would not be able to attend school for the foreseeable future. And we realised that we were unable to run a full school with that many staff missing, so we started making plans to reduce our provision. We met with the vast majority of students on Monday and Tuesday and we talked about the crisis we face together. We explored a bit of history and thought about how crises have usually revealed the best and the worst in humanity. We talked about how they could reveal their best side over the coming days, weeks and months. Some of them agreed to ‘call out’ students who make tasteless jokes or who are still not behaving hygienically. Many of them committed to be mindful of their parents’/carers’ concerns and frustrations if they end up in family self-isolation. Others decided that they would call their grandparents to avoid them feeling remote or lonely. And so we limped through the week, making the best decisions we could. On Thursday morning we re-evaluated in the light of government announcements and eventually agreed to close on Friday to give staff time to come together and make plans for Monday’s provision of children of keyworkers and vulnerable children. By this time Y11 and 13 had no curriculum no work to and Y7 attendance was at 55% and falling. So, when students arrived on Thursday morning we met with Y11 and 13 and told them the news as we understood it. It was the very lowest point in my career and one of the lowest in my life. We gave the students plenty of time to say goodbyes and to sign each other’s shirts. We offered them the chance to stay with us all day but many of them agreed with their parents/carers to be collected or make their own way home. They were a model of grace under pressure. Thoughtful, appreciative and kind to those around them. Later in the day we waved ‘au revoir’ to Y7 students to strains of ‘we’ll meet again’. Through all of this we have received a constant stream of praise and warmth from families and from staff. I could fill many pages with examples but here are just a few: “Thank you for all that you and the Highfields community are doing in these uncertain times. Can I

also congratulate the language team, the quiz they have is certainly keeping my child and a group (all on FaceTime) entertained. It is quite lovely how the kids are adapting to these changes. I have 2 kids, one sat on a laptop in the kitchen and the other in the lounge, both working through their tasks, with their friends helping in the background.” “I just want to thank you all for the incredible job you are doing under such immense pressure and such difficult circumstances.” “Dear Mr Marsh and all your staff, just wanted to thank you all for all your hard work in these strange and difficult times. Whether you close or open you will have our full support and we are grateful for the sensible approach you have taken and the way you have communicated this to the pupils and their families… we are immensely grateful.”

Be the best you can

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Highfields Newsletter Issue 25 by Highfields School - Issuu