LATYMER UPPER SCHOOL – LEADING THE WAY IN EDUCATION
Latymer has a long tradition of being leaders in education and we are constantly exploring ways to ensure the curriculum we offer is of the highest quality and the most appropriate for the needs of our pupils.
‘We are committed to the development of a robust, exciting and relevant educational offering that will best serve the needs of our students by developing them as learners, equipping them with core skills such as critical thinking, resilience, collaboration, creativity and problem solving; skills which will be the foundation for further study and which are so sought after by employers in the modern workplace.’
Susan Wijeratna, Head of Latymer Upper School
CURRICULUM REFORM
Our sector-leading Middle School Curriculum at Latymer is currently being implemented. Our dedicated and pioneering staff are curating long and short courses into the Middle School which will sit alongside traditional scholarly learning but which focus more on contemporary fields of study (e.g. AI, entrepreneurship, information literacy); in addition students will still take some traditional written exams, open book assessments, presentations and VIVAS but they will also undertake alternative and more relevant forms of assessment which provide amongst other things opportunities for leadership and presenting to unfamiliar, external audiences, growing in confidence as they do so, just as universities now assess in a variety of ways.
Our Curriculum Reform Programme which is rooted in neuroscientific research and real-world application is the next exciting step in our educational vision so that learning is challenging, meaningful, and relevant. Students leave Latymer with deep knowledge, strong analytical skills, and the ability to thrive in any environment, preparing them to shape futures; both their own and for others around them.
“We hire brilliant people who are independently-minded and we trust them to do a great job. That is really coming through with the first iterations of the courses they are producing. We can see their enthusiasm for their subjects, and knowledge of what young people deserve and need.” – Ian Emerson Deputy Head Academic, The Week Independent School Guide SPRING SUMMER 2025 edition.