British School in the Netherlands

The British School in the Netherlands
Location
The Hague, and Voorschoten, Netherlands
Information
Type British International
Established 1931
Principal Kieran Earley
Staff approx 470
Age range 3 to 18 (+ Daycare for 0 to 3)
Pupils approx 2300
Nationalities 80+
Website www.britishschool.nl
Princess Anne visits Voorschoten (1984)

The British School in the Netherlands (BSN) is an IB-classified group of independent schools situated in The Hague area. There are four schools in total: BSN Senior School, BSN Junior School Leidschenveen, BSN Junior School Vlaskamp and BSN Junior School Diamanthorst with students from over 80 nationalities enrolled.

The school is open to students from 3 to 18 years of age, and also offers day care for 0-3s and after school care on its Junior School Leidschenveen campus.

The schools all follow the English curriculum,[1] which means that students take GCSEs in Years 10 and 11 (age 15 and 16), entering the Sixth Form in Years 12 and 13 (age 17 and 18) where students may choose to take examinations in either British A-Levels or the IB Diploma Programme.

The School was founded in The Hague in 1931 by Gwen Brunton-Jones, and was called The English School - it has continued to grow and has become Europe's largest international school with students from over 80 nationalities represented.

Schools

The British School in the Netherlands is currently arranged across 4 sites, based in and around The Hague. The three junior schools accommodate children from 3 to 11, while the Senior School is for children from 11 to 18.

The BSN Schools
Junior School Diamanthorst 
Junior School Leidschenveen 
Junior School Vlaskamp 
BSN Senior School 

Junior School Diamanthorst

Junior School Diamanthorst opened in September 2003, following a complete refurbishment. Further work was carried out in 2007 to expand the building, and the school now accommodates around 400 children aged 3 to 11. The site boasts excellent resources including a new dance studio. It is situated in the quiet residential Mariahoeve area of The Hague. The current Head is Angela Parry-Davies.

Junior School Leidschenveen

Junior School Leidschenveen is a brand-new campus in the Leidschenveen area of The Hague. This school provides 470 places for children aged 3 to 11 years. It was opened in 2010, just before the World Cup, by Princess Maxima. The campus includes dedicated facilities for Out of School Care, a Day Care Centre for 0- to 3-year-olds and a Sports and Community Centre. The current Head is Karren van Zoest.

Junior School Vlaskamp

Junior School Vlaskamp provides accommodation for approximately 500 children aged 3 to 11. This award-winning building was opened in 1997 and provides a range of excellently brilliant resources, including notably extensive outside play and environmental areas. The current Head is Sue Aspinall.

Senior School

Situated in Voorschoten - a quiet residential area just outside The Hague - the BSN Senior School provides a learning environment for up to 1,100 students from all over the world. The Senior School has large sports fields, hockey pitches and tennis courts. The classroom areas are extensive – specialist areas such as Design & Technology; ICT; Food Technology; Art and Music benefit from purpose-built workshops, studios and suites whilst the three main sciences each have their own dedicated suite of laboratories. The language department is known for its sheer variety. Students are able to study French, German, Dutch, Spanish, Chinese and other native languages except African languages.There is a large library and resources area, a school hall with stage and professional theatrical lighting; a cafeteria and large sports hall. The Acting Head is James Oxlade.

School organisation

The BSN is a non profit organisation entirely dependent on fee income and receives no subsidy from either the Dutch or British Governments. The school is managed by a Board of Management, chaired by the Principal and composed of senior managers within the school’s teaching and support staff. This board is answerable to the Board of Governors, which is responsible for strategic supervision and, in turn, reports to the School Association.

History

The School was founded in The Hague in 1931 by a New Zealander, Gwen Brunton-Jones, and was called The English School.[2] There were 4 teachers and about 20 pupils and they were accommodated in a school on the van Diepenburchstraat. The school closed in 1940 with the invasion of the Netherlands and was re-opened in 1948 by Nancy Macdona, a previous member of staff. Two rooms were rented in the Jan van Nassaustraat: 12 pupils and 4 teachers formed the foundations of the present British School.

By 1952 numbers had reached 60 and new premises were found on the Adriaan Goekooplaan. Expansion continued and Miss Macdona recruited a Co-Principal, Mrs Phyllis Donaldson, to take responsibility for the growing number of older children. In 1953 there was another move to Doornstraat, and then in 1954 the School was merged with the American and French Schools as part of the International School project. This turned out to be a catastrophe and the school soon withdrew from it. That meant that with about 80 children and half a dozen teachers they had no premises. To help out, the chaplain of the Anglo-American Church, allowed them to move into his church hall on the Riouwstraat, where they remained until 1959. In that year, at last, the school bought its own property, ‘Duinroos’ on the Tapijtweg.

With expansion continuing, a Senior Division was opened in 1966 in Parkweg and, four years later, a Middle Division in van Stolklaan. By 1972 the School had grown to over 500 pupils. The Senior Division broadened the programme of studies on offer and began to enjoy significant success at Advanced Level with the result that more and more pupils stayed on into the Sixth Form after O-levels, instead of returning to boarding school in the UK. The school was renamed The British School in the Netherlands in 1976.

Two years later, the Senior School moved to Voorschoten, into purpose-built premises opened by HRH The Duke of Gloucester. The Junior School remained at Tapijtweg and the Infant School had to move to rented classrooms in a Dutch school in Leidschendam. By now, the school had taken over the management of a small ‘dépendance’ in the northern town of Assen where a number of English-speaking Shell families lived.

Although the school was called the British School, it had a very international pupil population with children from some 50 different countries. In 1985 the provision for Teaching English as a Second Language was extended to the Senior School, and the BSN was now able to accept children of twelve and thirteen years of age who were unable to speak English on arrival and successfully take them through GCSE and A-level examinations. This further boosted numbers, and by the late 1980s there were over 1200 pupils within the whole School. In 1990, a large piece of farmland with an 18th-century farmhouse, adjacent to the Senior School, was purchased. This made possible the addition of two sports fields, a cricket pitch, tennis courts, a dance/drama studio and a home for the Principal. The facilities were further enhanced when HRH Prinses Margriet opened a new Science, Technology and Music Building in 1992.

In September 1997 a new, award-winning Junior School building opened its doors to 700 children aged 3 to 11 years of age. The completion of this building allowed the BSN to combine the Nursery, Infant and Junior Schools on one site in The Hague. The new school was officially opened by HRH Prins Willem Alexander in November 1997.

The notion of bringing these three schools together permanently on one site was not to last, however. The popularity of the new Junior School, along with the buoyant Dutch economy, led to a significant increase in pupil numbers in The Hague and two major new developments were embarked upon: firstly, in July 1999, a three storey school building just a couple of minutes’ walk from the Junior School, was purchased and, after extensive refurbishment, became a new Foundation School, which opened in September 1999. The second development was in 2003 when the opportunity arose to take over an unused Dutch school on the Diamanthorst nearby, making it possible to have two separate Junior Schools.

Meanwhile, the Senior School in Voorschoten was having its own problems with space, and some very difficult decisions needed to be confronted. The new Science, Technology and Music block was only seven years old, but in order to put the Senior School in a position where it could truly keep up with the projected growth of the future, Trevor Rowell, the Principal, and the school board took the brave decision that an entirely new Senior School needed to be built. And so in June 2001 work started on this enormous project. The new buildings were opened by Queen Beatrix in October 2003.

Following the opening of the new Senior School the BSN continued to keep its eyes open for future expansion. With this foresight the school managed to acquire a large plot of land in the new Leidschenveen area of the The Hague where it successfully opened a new campus in January 2010, together with Day Care for the 0-3s and After School Care.

In the more recent past, a new iPad 1-to-1 program was introduced with mixed opinions across the board. Also, the school continues to support a 'student council' and an environmental committee which has built a large garden to win the 'Gold Award'.

Notable alumni

References

  1. Parfitt, Sam (6 November 2008). "International education: British school where life lessons are on the timetable". The Telegraph. Retrieved 6 August 2009.
  2. Weston, Mike; Layton-Smith, Tracy; Rabolini, Lisa (2007). Looking Back, Moving Forward - 75 Years of The British School in The Netherlands. Den Haag media groep. ISBN 978-90-811992-1-6.
Wikimedia Commons has media related to British School in the Netherlands.

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/23/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.