A range of stories from CLF academies have featured in this month’s Voices newspapers. Please see below.
The Cabot Learning Federation is delighted and proud to announce that following a Section 5 inspection by the education watchdog Ofsted in November, Digitech Studio School Bristol (DSSB) has been judged to be a ‘Good’ school in all areas. This represents a jump from its previous judgement of requires improvement.
Inspectors noted that pupils, staff and parents are proud of their unique school and the positive impact it has on students’ lives. Recognising its unique offer, DSSB was also praised for its partnerships with other providers, with inspectors also visiting Boomsatsuma sites in Bristol, and the way its students are prepared for future learning and employment in creative industries.
This is how the Kingswood Voice reported it.
A campaign to support people struggling to buy food over Christmas and beyond has been a tremendous success. Caring students at Bristol Metropolitan Academy donated items to East Bristol Foodbank in the week before Christmas. In just two weeks before Christmas this whole school effort collected a whopping 700 items!
This is how the Fishponds Voice reported it.
Andrew Marshall- Aherne, an Assistant Principal at King’s Oak Academy, who lost his mother to Covid is running from Bristol to Chippenham to mark the anniversary of here passing. Full story here in the Kingswood Voice.
The Cabot Learning Federation is extremely proud to announce that Snowdon Village, after a rigorous two-day assessment, has become the first Trauma Informed School’s (TIS) group of schools in Bristol.
Snowdon Village is the term used to describe the family of alternative provision schools that sits within the Cabot Learning Federation. The four schools are The Nest, Engage, Bristol Futures Academy and City School.
Full story below in the Kingswood Voice.