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London state school secures 41 Oxbridge offers!!

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Dorcas has been in care since she was 14 and has just received an offer to study Law at Oxford university.

She is one of 41 students at Brampton Manor, a state school in east London, to have secured an offer to study at either Oxford or Cambridge this year.

The school is based in Newham - one of the poorest boroughs in London.

However, its success rivals the admission rates of some of the top-performing private schools across the UK.

Nearly all of those who received offers are from ethnic minority backgrounds, while two-thirds will be the first in their family to attend university.

Half of them, like 17-year-old Dorcas, are on free school meals.

"When I was put in care because of family difficulties all I knew was that statistically care leavers don't do very well," she says. "But I wanted to prove that it's not the end of the world and show my foster-sister that you can change the outcome of negative experiences."

Only 6% of young people leaving care attend university.

"I nearly didn't apply because I was scared of leaving London and figuring out where I'd live during half-term and after I graduated," she adds.


Lydia Khechine, 18, travels for up to two hours a day to the school.

The journey is "worth it", she says, smiling at her offer to study history and politics at University of Oxford.

Fleeing Algeria, she arrived in the UK alone when she was 12, unable to speak English; she now lives with her older sister.

Emotional, she doesn't want to go into details of her childhood in Algeria.

But she says participating in inter-school debating competitions has helped boost her confidence.

"A lot of people filter themselves out of the Oxbridge process because they don't think they belong," she says.

"But the truth is people from unconventional backgrounds like mine do have the potential and it's about reassuring ourselves that we have a voice."


Rama Rustom, who came to the UK as a refugee from Saudi Arabia in 2013, agrees.

"This offer sets my family on a new path," the 17-year-old says. "In my culture, women are traditionally told not to pursue education."

She now holds an offer for English at St Hilda's College, Oxford.

"My first language is Arabic - lots of people outside of school said I couldn't do it, but my teachers always believed in me."

Brampton Manor opened its sixth form in 2012, with the aim of transforming the progression rates of disadvantaged students to the UK's top universities.

Part of their motivation, the students say, is seeing the faces of former Brampton pupils who received Oxbridge offers on the school walls.

At the entrance of the school, on bold laminated plaques, are lists of names of every former student to have attended university.

The photos of its Oxbridge students are also displayed in multiple places across the school.

In 2014, only one student received an offer.

Last year, 25 students received offers from Oxford and Cambridge.

This year's 41 offers, which are conditional on the students getting the grades, is a new record.

"Every student here goes to university," says Sam Dobin, the director of sixth form, who has worked at Brampton Manor since it opened. "We have a very traditional approach with no gimmicks or shortcuts."

Mr Dobin says there is "no secret formula" to its success. The school buys every student their own textbooks to encourage independent study, he says.

It does not rely on supply teachers and has an in-house team of five Oxbridge graduates solely dedicated to university access.

The school also has a study centre open from 06:00 until 19:30.

Mr Dobin says it is always staffed and many students choose to work there until the school closes.

"This is where we choose to invest the money we receive from the pupil premium," he adds, referring to the additional funding given to state schools in England to help bridge the attainment gap between disadvantaged pupils and their peers.

"But the key is to keep telling your students that they're capable, that they're good enough.

"We need to shake off the idea that Oxford and Cambridge are just for an 'elite' couple of students and encourage everyone to apply."

The sixth form, which is oversubscribed, annually accepts 300 students, who are interviewed before being offered a place.

Mr Dobin predicts at least 100 of the current cohort will apply to Oxford or Cambridge this September, and expects at least 50 offers.

One student who will leave before then is 17-year-old Jeffery Maya.

He joined Brampton Manor from a local comprehensive with a mixture of A and B grades and is now working hard to make good on his offer at Pembroke College, Cambridge to read natural sciences.

He says he's "defied the odds".

"You don't see a lot of people around Newham going to college," he says. "A lot of people get into illegal stuff."

His advice? "Don't doubt yourself. The only way you won't get into Oxford or Cambridge is not applying in the first place."

https://www.bbc.com/news/education-46900154
 
Well done Oxford for making more effort to pick on merit.
 
Danger of reverse discrimination now?

The trouble with inequality in education is that it perpetuates itself. The old grammar schools of the sixties and seventies were a ladder for working class kids to get into university. But the ladder has been pulled up.

I believe that Oxbridge have a responsibility to help those who are disadvantaged to climb the ladder. Harvard and Yale give scholarships to the brightest kids from Haarlem and similar communities.
 
I didn't bother applying to Oxbridge. I don't think I'm made for the rigouros lifestyle students have to adopt at these wonderful universities.

I did receive offers from Kings college, London School of Economics and University of Manchester though. Studying in the UK is very expensive already and the costs of living in London may push me towards opting for Manchester, if I go to the UK at all.
 
I didn't bother applying to Oxbridge. I don't think I'm made for the rigouros lifestyle students have to adopt at these wonderful universities.

I did receive offers from Kings college, London School of Economics and University of Manchester though. Studying in the UK is very expensive already and the costs of living in London may push me towards opting for Manchester, if I go to the UK at all.

Applying​ to Oxbridge is a once in a lifetime opportunity and if you had a chance, you should have applied. After much persuasion, My nephew is about to start the preparation to apply to Cambridge to do Maths next year. He may not get a place but as the saying goes, if you don't ask, you don't get.
 
Applying​ to Oxbridge is a once in a lifetime opportunity and if you had a chance, you should have applied. After much persuasion, My nephew is about to start the preparation to apply to Cambridge to do Maths next year. He may not get a place but as the saying goes, if you don't ask, you don't get.

You're right. I agree. I also felt that I would be rejected, but you're right, now I may never know.

Maybe in a different part of life, or in a different life!
 
I advise any student I teach, that has even a small chance, to go for it.

You're right. The only problem was, I didn't meet the grade requirements and I felt as though I'd be wasting my time even trying and spot, especially since you're only allowed to apply to 5 Unis.

Nonetheless, studying Politics at LSE or UoM shouldn't be too bad.
 
You're right. The only problem was, I didn't meet the grade requirements and I felt as though I'd be wasting my time even trying and spot, especially since you're only allowed to apply to 5 Unis.

Nonetheless, studying Politics at LSE or UoM shouldn't be too bad.

LSE is a hell of Uni but London is, as you know very expensive. Manchester is also an excellent Uni
 
LSE is a hell of Uni but London is, as you know very expensive. Manchester is also an excellent Uni

I think I'm going to end up going to UoM because I have family in the city and that's always an advantage when you're so far away from the motherland.

Being a teacher, would you recommend UoM?
 
I think I'm going to end up going to UoM because I have family in the city and that's always an advantage when you're so far away from the motherland.

Being a teacher, would you recommend UoM?

I have heard good things but tbh I don't know enough to give a recommendation, what I do know is the LSE is rated very highly and that does help when it comes to getting a good job after graduation.
 
I think I'm going to end up going to UoM because I have family in the city and that's always an advantage when you're so far away from the motherland.

Being a teacher, would you recommend UoM?

I have some background in this field.. I will suggest LSE.
 
I have heard good things but tbh I don't know enough to give a recommendation, what I do know is the LSE is rated very highly and that does help when it comes to getting a good job after graduation.

I have some background in this field.. I will suggest LSE.

Thanks guys! LSE is a dream Uni for many and if I end up going to the UK, I suppose it'll be my first choice.

Much appreciated.
 
Typically English response to reports of discrimination - ott


The bullingdon soc better watch out
 
Applying​ to Oxbridge is a once in a lifetime opportunity and if you had a chance, you should have applied. After much persuasion, My nephew is about to start the preparation to apply to Cambridge to do Maths next year. He may not get a place but as the saying goes, if you don't ask, you don't get.

My daughter didn’t apply to Oxbridge...
She got her first choice to study medicine but Oxford or Cambridge were just not on her list...
As a proud father I would have loved for her to have applied but she did her research and stuck to her guns and I suppose that’s why she’s in the field she is in..
 
My daughter didn’t apply to Oxbridge...
She got her first choice to study medicine but Oxford or Cambridge were just not on her list...
As a proud father I would have loved for her to have applied but she did her research and stuck to her guns and I suppose that’s why she’s in the field she is in..

From what i know Oxbridge is not suitable for top Medical students and that respect she was right. But just to be in a position of not wanting to go to Oxbridge is just amazing. IA she does well, we are definitely short of Women Muslim Doctors.
 
'Oxbridge' which encapsulates Oxford and Cambridge were set up by monks who'd learned at Colleges in what was then Muslim Spain so it is apposite that more people from 'minority' and particularly Muslim minority communities attend such Universities.

My own time there taught me not to take anything people from 'Oxbridge' say at face value.
 
Also noteworthy, this young man Hasan Patel has gained a scholarship to Eton College

<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="en-gb"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">I know you want the best education system for all,and will always fight for social justice. You are a proud testimony to your current school & of course your own efforts. I have no doubt you will be teaching as much, if not more, than anything you will learn at Eton &#55357;&#56841;&#55357;&#56399;</p>— Salma Yaqoob (@SalmaYaqoob) <a href="https://twitter.com/SalmaYaqoob/status/1087645908337078273?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">22 January 2019</a></blockquote>
<script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
Based on? Oxford is the number 1 medical school in the world.

Based on the fact that kids I have taught, felt like our posters daughter. I know a few over the years that thought it wasn't​ very good, off course I may be wrong.
 
Based on the fact that kids I have taught, felt like our posters daughter. I know a few over the years that thought it wasn't​ very good, off course I may be wrong.

There's a lot of myths out there I feel but I agree that the teaching style there etc doesn't suit everyone.
 
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