Interview with Marcus, a local boy from Bridgwater who is aged 14 and is severely dyslexic.
“Sport was OK, and
I made friends, but I didn’t learn much,” he said. “It was no good. My parents saw I was getting nowhere. A disaster.”
So how about
Shapwick? “This place is nothing short
of brilliant! You enjoy work. That’s
what makes the difference.”
Marcus spent a year at Edington and another two at Shapwick.
Favourite
subjects:? English in a class size of
around a dozen, and media studies in a class of just six. And now he pursues a dream.
He is enthusiastic about drama and the world of stage and screen. Loves writing.
One day wants to write film scripts and has the determination that could make it all happen.
I also think that this job at the farm is a
great opportunity for the senior boarders to earn some money at the school
whilst putting something back into the school.
As it is not easy to keep a job going at home while we are here,
therefore it would be a great privilege for future 6th formers to continue
working at the farm throughout the entire year.
This would also be a unique selling point to the 6th form on the
whole.
I would also like to thank you and all your
staff for the support that they have given me over the time that I have been
here. I know that without this I would
never have achieved the amazing things that I have now. My life at Edington and
Shapwick has been an amazing adventure and I can't thank you enough for the
opportunities to do so many things that I would never have done if I hadn't
come to this school. The skills and
achievements that I have gained will stay with me forever and now will enable
me to take the next step in my life and go to Plymouth University where I will
still remember all the great things that I have accomplished and it has been a
pleasure and honour to be a part of Edington and Shapwick school.
They were then asked what benefits they
felt they had gained by being here rather than a mainstream school.
Luke: Shapwick has got a friendly
atmosphere and we want to learn throughout the school curriculum. In mainstream
I think we would have suffered because of our dyslexia.
Sam: Yeah, in say maths I was given a
problem and left to get on with it, whereas here you are given help and it’s
explained in different ways. I think it boosted my confidence here and I think
I’ve made friendships for life. You learn work and the Teachers know how to
make it stick in your head!