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New Leeds school takes the modern approach

September 27, 2012 11:44

ByJonathan Kalmus, Jonathan Kalmus

1 min read

Touch-screen tablet computers for every pupil are an intended feature of the first Jewish secondary school in Leeds, parents of 20 prospective students have been told.

The parents were attending the first open day for the Leeds Jewish Free School, which will be based on the site of the local Brodetsky Primary in government-funded buildings. The turnout was significant because the school’s leadership have 25 places to fill when it opens next September. Sixteen parents have already pledged to send their children to the school.

Brodetsky head, Jeremy Dunford, who will also lead the new school, said parents had a “one-off opportunity” to shape their children’s secondary education, including a working group to select the external education provider that will hire teachers.

“The parents will also be involved in designing buildings, an overseas residential trip in the first year, possibly to Israel or Europe, and the school’s IT development. One thing we are looking at is mobile technology instead of computer rooms to provide tablet computers to every pupil for classwork and homework.