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Leeds high school opens with only nine pupils

September 16, 2013 09:56

ByJohn Fisher, John Fisher

1 min read

The Leeds Jewish Free School opened this week with just nine pupils — three of them non-Jews. Yet LJFS chair, Councillor Dan Cohen, professed “delight” at the first intake at the £3.5 million secondary school, which shares its site with the Brodetsky Jewish Primary.

“New schools in general and Jewish schools in particular start small and grow year-on-year,” he claimed. Yet the two Jewish free schools opening in London at the same time reported a full take-up of initial places.
LJFS had been anticipating a first intake of around 15 — the maximum class size is 25. School head Jeremy Dunford attributed the low uptake to delays at the Department for Education.

“We did in fact have 22 applications,” he pointed out. “Those we lost were lost primarily because of the delay in getting the final funding agreement signed. This was beyond our control. We had all our elements in place at the end of February. Obviously, we all wanted more pupils in the first year but the first year is the hardest to sell.”

Mr Dunford said the important thing now was for the community to set aside “its initial doubts and acknowledge that what seemed impossible for many years has now been achieved”.