Charterhouse Square School A GSG School
- Charterhouse Square School
33-40 Charterhouse Square
London
EC1M 6EA - Head: Tushi Gorasia
- T 020 7600 3805
- F 020 7600 2957
- E admissions@charte…squareschool.co.uk
- W www.charterhou…areschool.co.uk
- An independent school for boys and girls aged from 3 to 11.
- Boarding: No
- Local authority: City of London
- Pupils: 272
- Religion: Not Applicable
- Fees: £23,091 pa
- Open days: Thursday 26th September
- Review: View The Good Schools Guide Review
- Ofsted report: View the Ofsted report
- ISI report: View the ISI report
What The Good Schools Guide says..
This is a school that breaks the mould in many ways – children address teachers by first names (more friendly), there’s no uniform and there’s not much going on in terms of prayers or assembly, just a weekly ‘reflection time’. Academic rigour is the stand out point, and it’s delivered with a soft touch – or, as one father put it, ‘They get them ahead by stealth’ - with children working a year ahead of their peers. This is rooted in full days from nursery instead of the usual half day (where we found junk modelling in full flow with some suitably Islington-esque packaging – lots of champagne and Nespresso boxes). Nursery and reception forms are served by...
What the school says...
Charterhouse Square School, located in the historic Barbican area and overlooking Charterhouse Square, offers a unique and nurturing educational environment for children aged 3 to 11. Our school is dedicated to fostering a culture where every pupil is celebrated and nurtured, preparing them for both academic and personal success. We pride ourselves on a holistic approach that balances academic rigour with a strong emphasis on wellbeing and development.
At the heart of our school is a genuine family atmosphere, where every pupil and staff member feels supported and valued, creating a close-knit community in which individuals thrive both academically and personally. This nurturing setting empowers our pupils to embrace challenges, push their limits and grow into confident, articulate, and self-motivated individuals. We maintain exceptional continuity among our staff, avoiding the use of supply teachers and external supervisors. This approach allows us to provide a secure environment where pupils are cared for by a familiar team throughout the day, promoting stability and belonging.
We prioritise happiness alongside academic achievement, believing that a relaxed and positive school atmosphere is key to effective learning and personal growth. Our unique approach includes addressing teachers by their first names and opting out of a school uniform policy, allowing pupils to express their individuality. This fosters an inclusive and supportive environment where pupils feel comfortable to be themselves and explore their potential.
Academically, our pupils consistently achieve results that are well above the national average at every school stage. We aim to instil a love of learning and intellectual curiosity, with a focus on developing oracy and critical thinking through activities such as debating, philosophy, and discussions on current affairs. From year 3 onwards, each pupil has access to a personal device, seamlessly integrating technology into their learning experience and equipping them with essential digital literacy skills.
Our school offers a wide range of extracurricular activities, enabling pupils to explore their interests and develop new skills, from the arts and music to sports and coding, catering to a variety of passions. We also prioritise mental health and wellbeing, providing mindfulness and yoga sessions, daily check-ins, and 'worry boxes' where pupils can confidentially share their concerns. To support the wellbeing of our pupils, we have invested in resources such as designated mental health first aiders, a part-time counsellor, and staff trained in the Drawing and Talking Programme, who support pupils facing social and emotional challenges, ensuring that every child receives the support they need to thrive.
Charterhouse Square School is committed to providing an enriching education that goes beyond academic excellence. We celebrate diversity and foster a sense of global citizenship through participation in events like Black History Month and International Women's Day. Our pupils are actively involved in shaping our school's initiatives, ensuring that their voices are heard and their experiences are enriched. With a strong emphasis on values such as courage, honesty and kindness, we prepare our pupils not only for the next stages of their education but for a lifetime of success and fulfilment. ...Read more
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What The Good Schools Guide says
Head
Since September 2024, Tushi Gorasia. With a BEd from Homerton College, Cambridge, and a master’s from King’s College London, she brings over 20 years of educational expertise including five years as head of Hendon Prep.
Entrance
Non-selective, with entry by lottery on 8th May (apart for children with siblings already at the school). With the new expansion, the nursery now has two forms instead of one, however, so it’s less of a lottery than it was. A hefty deposit secures a place, non-refundable until your child leaves the school. Applications dropped a little post-Covid – the City was eerily quiet for a long time. Intake more international than it used to be as the school works with Cognita’s own international agents – with Russians, Americans and more.
Exit
Most to Queen's College, others to City of London, City of London School for Girls, Highgate, South Hampstead High, St Mary Magdalene Academy and Wetherby. In previous years, Belmont, Francis Holland Regent's Park and Mill Hill have also featured. Some take up the exam-free offers that come from sister Cognita schools North Bridge (at Canonbury and Hampstead). One scholarship in 2024.
Our view
In beautiful buildings on a historic square, the school does a brilliant job of helping you forget what minute amounts of outdoor space they actually own. Situated on Charterhouse Square, the site of an ancient plague pit, the school looks out towards the Charterhouse itself, one of London’s ‘best historical gems’, a monastery turned Tudor mansion, turned school (the original Charterhouse before it relocated to Surrey) and most recently an alms-house. The leafy square serves as the school’s unofficial school yard, but during our January visit was carpeted only in mud.
No wonder the expansion into two adjacent buildings has caused such excitement – including a semi-covered rooftop for outdoor winter play (albeit with ball sports forbidden). The school is expanding gradually towards two form entry, and has a gleaming new library, art/science room (‘We used to have to spread newspapers out in our main classroom for art,’ explained our approving guides), better meeting room, reception, first aid and SEN spaces - and best of all, a cracking basement dining room complete with restaurant-style open kitchen. Everyone is effusive about the meals - we’d happily have gobbled the whole menu (but stuck to half). The new conversion also has a custom-made lift, and the whole school now has an air cleaning system (which parents were keen on as air quality readings for this part of London aren’t great). All this helps explain why fees are higher than at competitor preps with smaller classes. Here, they max at 26, allowed for by generous room sizes.
This is a school that breaks the mould in many ways – children address teachers by first names (more friendly), there’s no uniform and there’s not much going on in terms of prayers or assembly, just a weekly ‘reflection time’. Academic rigour is the stand out point, and it’s delivered with a soft touch – or, as one father put it, ‘They get them ahead by stealth’ - with children working a year ahead of their peers. This is rooted in full days from nursery instead of the usual half day (where we found junk modelling in full flow with some suitably Islington-esque packaging – lots of champagne and Nespresso boxes). Nursery and reception forms are served by two teachers each plus a TA. Younger year groups use a system of ‘gems’ given as rewards to children – leads to golden time treats at the week’s end.
Homework from an early age. Mostly optional in nursery, ‘though we ask parents to do sounds and numbers with them.’ More formal from reception, though none set on Wednesdays. It is highly personalised and usually tests things learned weeks ago rather than earlier in the day – thus testing recall, and ultimately readiness for exams – with parents asked to mark it, plus nightly reading. It’s also set in the summer (but not Christmas) holidays. ‘It’s quite a lot compared with state schools but when children move on they find they’re well prepared for secondary school life,’ reflects deputy head. ‘You’re expected to be involved, but they’re quite flexible,’ said one parent. ‘But it’s chicken and egg – if you want to get children into competitive schools you have to prepare them to do some exams.’
Some parents would like more language provision, but there is Spanish for all, and there are further specialist teachers for music, drama, dance and sport. Scratch coding is taught in a bright ICT suite from year 1, and in year 3 children have their own devices. No Latin but there is RS, and oracy is now timetabled too from year 1. Starting as show and tell in nursery, it develops to explore speaking skills, presenting and debating – extremely useful, one imagines, for school interviews. A by-invitation maths club stretches the most able: 'Our core areas are English, maths and sport,’ says school. No setting, but children are subtly grouped into different ‘desk islands’. Staff sit on the floor with them and bob between desks. Some classrooms are colour coded according to year group, with green painted corridors that feel as fresh as a newly picked Granny Smith. A packed ground floor scooter depository testifies to a pretty large number of children arriving on foot.
No weak links among teaching staff, say parents and pupils, and the children rave about lessons – ‘maths especially.’ Science also praised – they told us of a recent experiment measuring the weight of gasses in fizzy drinks. ‘In our view, the teaching is flawless,’ said one parent. Low staff turnover - ‘I’ve been here 10 years but there are others who have been here 20 or 30,’ said one. ‘It’s just a happy place.’
Learning support is known as POD (Pupils of Determination) ‘to make it positive and welcoming’. Staffed by two part-time specialists, one a counsellor, it provides group and one-to-one support for everything from behaviour and friendship to specific learning challenges (for no extra charge). Currently works with just over 10 per cent of pupils. Roughly a third of pupils speak a second language and a small number receive EAL support. An active buddy system gets older children reading with nursery and reception pupils, resulting in much waving during our tour.
Children can audition for the choir from year 4; open entry to year 6s. Close involvement with Christmas service and the annual show, both hosted in borrowed facilities nearby eg City of London School For Girls’ theatre. Given school’s proximity to the Barbican, children are taken sometimes to lunchtime concerts. But current space constraints mean only private piano lessons are offered (on a keyboard), so those wanting to study other instruments must make arrangements outside school. Some parents would like to see more offered in terms of music – school says this is on her agenda. A few children have LAMDA lessons. Each year group goes on a school trip a term, with a residential in year 6 with a bushcraft company – ‘The children come back stinking of smoke’, says one approving mother.
The fact the school has no sports hall, theatre, courts etc (though there is room to host table tennis club in the basement ‘Jungle’) is resolved by walking children 15 minutes away to rented facilities where there is weekly tennis, plus swimming from year 2, along with football, netball. Fixtures from year 2 (mostly football and tag rugby, with girls playing football now too) roughly five times a term. 'We only play local schools as I do have issues with children sitting on coaches all afternoon for a 40-minute match,’ says the head. Any other sporting opportunities – such as the City of London’s athletics event for local schools – also taken up. A dance teacher runs classes for nursery to year 2, and then year 6s.
With Cognita ownership comes much useful back-office support and some sharing of best practice across schools, but also use of ‘net promoter score’ software to measure customer satisfaction of pupils, parents and staff, which sounds a tad overbearing in an educational setting. Cognita’s early Covid experience on other continents was a definite plus, though parents find the latest app for booking clubs etc ‘clunky’, and the Cognita-supplied website we find really short on detail.
Families come primarily from around Islington and the Barbican, and many work for local legal and financial firms or St Bart’s hospital, with the school’s position backing on to Barbican tube a huge plus. The intake may be non-selective, but it’s clear after a lunch in their company that there’s a ton of talent here: we’ve never met sparkier year 4s. School understands that her parents have packed diaries and full plates, and keeps communications to the essential – which they appreciate.
Wraparound care (chargeable) available from 8am until 6pm and staffed by the teachers. Only downsides is there aren’t enough staff left to run many after-school clubs, which some families lament. Only football, chess and art remain (and are sometimes over-subscribed). However, each day is themed – with STEM activities on Mondays, arts and crafts Wednesdays, and so on. Since the same staff are in charge, they’ll adapt the plan if, for example, a nursery teacher knows her children have worked hard during the day and are just itching to run around.
Money matters
No bursaries or sibling discounts
The last word
A much-loved and slightly quirky school entering a new phase of growth, while retaining its character. Yes, it has space constraints, but for those living and working nearby it’s a godsend – first-class teaching and immensely happy children just a stone’s throw from the office.
Special Education Needs
We aim to provide every possible opportunity to develop the full potential of every child. Children with special educational needs must be valued as individuals and should be encouraged to integrate with their peers, both socially and academically. They should have access to the whole school curriculum. At all times, consideration will be given to maintaining and enhancing the self esteem of children with special educational needs. In our school we aim to offer excellence and choice to all our children, whatever their ability or needs. We have high expectations of all our children. We aim to achieve this through the removal of barriers to learning and participation. We want all our children to feel that they are a valued part of our school community. Through appropriate curricular provision, we respect the fact that children have different educational and behavioural needs and aspirations; require different strategies for learning; acquire, assimilate and communicate information at different rates; and need a range of different teaching approaches and experiences.
Condition | Provision for in school |
---|---|
ASD - Autistic Spectrum Disorder | Y |
Aspergers | Y |
Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorders | Y |
CReSTeD registered for Dyslexia | |
Dyscalculia | Y |
Dysgraphia | Y |
Dyslexia | Y |
Dyspraxia | Y |
English as an additional language (EAL) | Y |
Genetic | Y |
Has an entry in the Autism Services Directory | |
Has SEN unit or class | |
HI - Hearing Impairment | Y |
Hospital School | |
Mental health | |
MLD - Moderate Learning Difficulty | Y |
MSI - Multi-Sensory Impairment | |
Natspec Specialist Colleges | |
OTH - Other Difficulty/Disability | |
Other SpLD - Specific Learning Difficulty | Y |
PD - Physical Disability | |
PMLD - Profound and Multiple Learning Difficulty | |
SEMH - Social, Emotional and Mental Health | Y |
SLCN - Speech, Language and Communication | Y |
SLD - Severe Learning Difficulty | |
Special facilities for Visually Impaired | |
SpLD - Specific Learning Difficulty | |
VI - Visual Impairment | Y |
Leavers' destinations
School | Year | Places | Scholarships | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|
Queen's College London | 2024 | 6 | 1 | 1 Drama scholarship |
City of London School | 2024 | 2 | ||
City of London School for Girls | 2024 | 2 | ||
Highgate School | 2024 | 1 | ||
South Hampstead High School | 2024 | 1 | ||
St Mary Magdalene Academy | 2024 | 1 | ||
Wetherby School | 2024 | 1 |
Who came from where
School | Year | Places |
---|---|---|
King's House School | 2023 | 2 |
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