The BRIT school entertained two visitors from Riddlesdown school with a view to looking at the schools provision for photography. Sam Hurley Head of Art at Riddlesdown and Jess Smith who will be teaching the new photography AS course at the school visited Leading Edge manager and BRIT photography teacher Chris Lewington to discuss course implementation and look around the BRIT school darkroom and photo studio.They also discussed AS delivery with leading Edge art manager Harrie Poole. Hopefully there are future prospects of a photography project involving both schools.
Tuesday, July 13, 2010
Riddlesdown in the picture
The BRIT school entertained two visitors from Riddlesdown school with a view to looking at the schools provision for photography. Sam Hurley Head of Art at Riddlesdown and Jess Smith who will be teaching the new photography AS course at the school visited Leading Edge manager and BRIT photography teacher Chris Lewington to discuss course implementation and look around the BRIT school darkroom and photo studio.They also discussed AS delivery with leading Edge art manager Harrie Poole. Hopefully there are future prospects of a photography project involving both schools.
Wednesday, July 7, 2010
Its all Rocket Science for Selhurst children
Following on from the schools Little peoples day some of our year 10 BRIT students helped with a trip to the Science museum with Selhurst children's centre. The students accompanied the children by coach up to central London. At the museum the children saw the exhibits of space rockets and astronauts and then had a fun time in the museum's own experiential learning facility where the laws of science can be tested out to the rigours of play time. The children thoroughly enjoyed themselves and managed to wear out all our students into the bargain.
Photo of astronaut by Heaven aged 4 Selhurst Children's centre
Power to the Little People!

July 1st saw a special day organised for many of our neighbouring nursery and early years schools. Year 10 students put on a selection of events and shows around the theme of Space and invited the schools to spend a day with us in outer space. There were shows from dance (Setara and her journey to the stars), theatre, music, musical theatre and even glove puppets with visual art and design. The day started for the children with the mad professor making his test tubes bubble and explode and along the way the nursery children met with the planets and other astrological themed characters.
And did the children enjoy it? Well here's a response from one of the local nursery schools
"it was a fantastic day - we had a great time. We received lot of comments from the parents saying how wonderful the students are and also just how talanted. We appreciated that the students were so kind and caring towards our children.
Thanks to you all the staff and students for organising a great day."
Best Wishes
Anita Head Teacher
Selhurst Children's centre
Tuesday, June 29, 2010
Riders of the Storm

This year selected Year 12 BTEC National Diploma Visual Arts students are working with Addington High school's Year 8 Gifted and Talented students to create animation, sets and visuals for the BRIT school's annual Bloomsbury Theatre show which this year is called "After the Storm". So far our students have been designing and delivering workshops to Addington students involving screen printing, model making for sets and animation characters, T-shirt design, split pin puppets, typography and much more . All of this work has now been brought back to The BRIT School in order to use and develop for the show. the project has been initiated by leading Edge visual arts and design manager Harry Poole......Go to the Visual Arts and design blog to view student blogs and see how the project is developing....
Thursday, May 20, 2010
High Velocity Norwood

In April this year some Year 10 Norwood performing arts students came to perform as part of the BRIT school dance department's show 'Escape Velocity' at Greenwich theatre in South London. The Escape Velocity show presented a diverse evening of dance entertainment featuring some of the best work by our post 16 dance strand students. As a culmination of the project that Leading Edge dance specialist Jodie Clarke has been working on with Norwood school, their students were invited to perform a piece in the same show. A fantastic experience for these students to be performing in a real working theatre to a live paying audience.
Tuesday, April 27, 2010
Sweet Dreams for Oak Lodge
The Dream, a unique and exciting project as deaf and hearing actors work on stage together.
Oak Lodge is a school for deaf students in Wandsworth. Ten year 9 students from Oak Lodge along with ten Year 12 Theatre students from BRIT have been working together and creating a short version of Midsummer Night’s Dream called The Dream.On April 27th they performed their version of Midsummer Nights Dream on stage in the school's Obie theatre to a live audience.
The project was initiated by Leading edge Theatre manager Simon Stephens and the collaboration has involved deaf awareness workshops for both staff and students with workshops focussing on acting skills and Shakespeare at Oak Lodge School.
Full Marks for Oklahoma workshop
Students from St. Marks a community school based in Mitcham took part in a workshop lead by Musical Theatre and Dance Leading Edge manager Lorraine Woodley. They were supported by students from the cast of this year's year 13 Musical Theatre show Oklahoma. The students started off with a general dance technique and then where taken through the contextual themes of Oklahoma, moving on to focus talking about the style of choreography in relation to the musical number 'Farmer and the Cowmen'. The students from St Marks then learned a section of this choreography themselves helped by Brit Musical Theatre students and performed it at the end of the workshop.
The students finished their day by watching a performance of the show. An enjoyable end to an enjoyable and highly rewarding day.
'They thoroughly enjoyed participating in the workshop and having a go at the choreographed routines that they would later go on to see in the show. They thought that you were an amazing teacher and all now want the chance to go to the BRIT School when they are older.' Lucy Brown, St Marks
Monday, March 22, 2010
Gaining Ground with Melborn College
The BRIT school recently played host to a group of staff from Melbourn Village College in Cambridgeshire. The BRIT school will be supporting this school over the next two years. Melbourn's particular needs were to look at cross curriculum ideas and our vocational curriculum at Key stage 4 with a performing arts focus. Melbourn plan to build a new performing arts wing to their school and we have said that we would be keen for their students to come down here and see work and take part in workshops at the BRIT and in turn for our school to visit them. Our visitors had an enjoyable and informative day and left saying that it was so nice to feel so welcome, when they entered a lesson and class room they felt welcomed, wholeheartedly, by the staff and students.
Tuesday, February 16, 2010
Norwood Visit
The school entertained two visitors recently from Norwood school. Emma Thurstan, head of the faculty of Visual Art and Design and Ali Cowley from the art department. The faculty encompasses both Art and Technology and Emma and Ali wanted to gain a better idea of how things work at the BRIT school in the Technical Theatre Arts and Technology departments. They were keen to visit and look into ways of further improving their technology offer with particular reference to set and costume design.After a tour of the departments and talks with some of our students they enjoyed a performance of one of the Common Ground plays from the Theatre department in the Obie theatre. We now hope to discuss ideas for some collaborative work and also to develop stronger links between our departments at the the BRIT and Norwood.
And a word from Emma......... "We were both very inspired and both enjoyed talking to the set production students who we found to be so committed, enthusiastic and passionate about their course. Please can you pass on our thanks to the students. The performance was also really enjoyable to watch".
Fruity Festivities on BRIT FM
This Christmas was heralded in to the sound of the Pineapple club back on the airwaves on BRIT FM. This is part of an ongoing project initiated by media Leading Edge manager Jon Preston. Senior citizen's from the Pineapple club teamed up with students from another ongoing Leading Edge radio project from Saint Joseph's school in Beulah Hill to give us the Family Christmas show. Saint Joseph's is an all boys catholic school and the students that have been coming into the BRIT school to work on the project are all SENCO recommendations. The senior citizens from the Pineapple project are all from the local Afro Caribbean community and they were able to team up with the St Joseph's students to pass on the skills they have picked up running previous Pineapple club shows. It is a sign of the impact of the project that not only have St Joseph's remarked on the behavioural improvement of these students but they have now embarked on a similar project of their own involving some of their local senior citizens.
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