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Turnshaws
School has much to be proud of. OFSTED inspectors were very impressed
by everything they saw during their most recent visit to the school
and awarded it the supreme accolade of "excellent" in
11 different areas.
Pupils
with severe and profound learning difficulties from all over the
Kirklees district come to the school. At present there are 49 children
and students, aged between 3 and 19 and ranging from the nursery
class to the post-16 education group being prepared for life beyond
the school. They all have very special educational needs.
Children
from Class 3
at Turnshaws School and musicians from Shelley High School
have got together to produce a song about Voices.
Click below to hear it.
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There
are as many staff as there are students at the school. The school
has its own nurse and experts in physiotherapy, occupational therapists,
speech therapists and members of the education services for the
hearing and visually impaired all regularly visit.
There
is also dedicated provision for pupils with autism including special
classrooms as well as staff.
Gill
Taylor has been headteacher at Turnshaws for the last four years.
She is delighted that, following last yearÂ’s OFSTED report,
the school has become the first of its kind in Kirklees to receive
a special mention from the Chief Inspector of Schools. She thanks
all those who contribute to making the school what it is: "The
report is a tribute to the work of all staff and governors, the
support of parents and carers and the positive attitudes and efforts
made by our pupils."
Like
every other school in the country Turnshaws follows the National
Curriculum but anyone who visits the school will soon realise that
here is a school that is providing much more.
Togetherness,
Unique, Realistic, Nurturing, Stimulating, Happy, Achieving, Welcoming,
Supporting are the qualities listed in the schoolÂ’s vision
statement . Put the first letters of each word together and, of
course, you get Turnshaws!
To
achieve all of this, and more, you need very special teachers. Gill
says: "We need the combination of the fun element in teaching
and the creativity."
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| Gill
Taylor |
"YouÂ’ve
got to need to be in a school like Turnshaws because itÂ’s so
special. I hate the term Turnshaws Special School but it is a special
school for special children and its that element of fun that weÂ’ve
got to get.
"YouÂ’ve
got to extract everything you can out of people and turn it into
something beneficial for them, and also to provide parents with
the pupilsÂ’ successful achievements because they also have
the emotional side of coping with the children. TheyÂ’ve got
to see the success, which sometimes may be hidden, and it is the
teacherÂ’s skill to extract that from the pupil."
Parents
are always welcome at the school where they even have their own
room. The parents group meets regularly, providing a forum to share
problems and get advice from visiting experts.
The
children do not spend all their time in the school. There are visits
to the theatre and to music festivals.There is a weekly gym session
at New Hall Prison. Every Christmas the women there hold a party
for the school.
There
is rarely a dull moment at Turnshaws. On our first visit to the
school the website team met a group of children from Kirkburton
First School, together with their teacher, who were busy making
decorations celebrating the Chinese New Year while a visiting theatre
group was providing plenty of entertainment in another part of the
school.
There
are many active links with other colleges and schools in the district.
For 12 years pupils have been going back and forth between Turnshaws
and Almondbury High School. Now, every Friday, a group of children
put on their Almondbury uniforms and become part of that school
for the day.
Turnshaws
School (together with Highfields School in Huddersfield) is due
to close in 2004 when pupils and staff will be transferred to a
new school, which is to be built on the campus already shared by
Newsome High and Newsome Junior Schools. Gill is looking forward
to the modern facilities the new building will provide.
Voices
will be visiting Turnshaws School between April and June, 2003 and
we will be meeting the pupils and all the staff, taking part in
many of their activities, and bringing you regular reports of all
that is happening.
Go
HERE
to take a look at our Turnshaws Photogallery
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