Located a few minutes from RAF Valley, Ysgol Y Tywyn is a Welsh-medium school, bi-lingual in Welsh and English. Children from the RAF station and the local community attend the school. RAF Valley is categorised as an isolated posting/location. RAF Valley is a training station for fighter pilots, so there can be less deployment and mobility of families has decreased over the last few years. Postings of families occur through a trickle movement (a few at a time). Some veteran families have decided to settle in the area and the children attend the school. Children from Armed Forces families bring a wealth of experiences and backgrounds to our school, including the different places they have lived, countries they have travelled and the lifestyle of living within an Armed Forces family.
We regularly experience mobility, when families are posted in and out of the Station. The children will often be separated from their serving parent, when they have to work away, attend training or deploy on an operational tour. New children and families can find learning Welsh a challenge, as well as transitioning from different countries and learning in a new curriculum framework. E.g. Moving from Scotland and England.
Case study completed by: Emyr Williams (Headteacher) and the children at Ysgol Y Tywyn, Anglesey
Nearly all pupils have a good understanding of the advantages of being bilingual and see the Welsh language as a living and useful language.
Teachers assess pupils’ skills purposefully on entry to the school. There are useful systems to monitor and track pupils’ achievement and wellbeing as they move through the school. These support pupils to identify and target purposeful support for pupils, including those with additional learning needs.
The school’s response to establishing the digital framework and promoting the Welsh language across the school is sound.
Visitors include local artists, a priest from the armed forces and pilots from the air force. A notable example of this is the visit by one of the heroes who rescued young children from a cave in Thailand. This prompts pupils to write thoughtfully and encourages them to feel empathy towards others.
Date produced: December 2019
"Being a military child is hard, but it also gets you a lot of new experiences that I wouldn't have experienced otherwise".
Esme-Jane
"For military children they [Mount Street Junior School] do a club called Little Troopers, they've done a Remembrance service, purple up day. We celebrate Holi and Dawali".
Arushi
"My Mum is my parent that is in the Armed Forces. She is a reservist. So when I was younger it was a lot worse, she travelled around a lot. I've lived in the same house my whole life, but she has moved around me. I was in a constant cycle of saying goodbye".
Emma
"My Dad, he's in the Army and he works in the Engineers and he goes away on week days and comes back on weekends"
Emily
"Dad often goes away. It is a bit worrying not knowing where your Dad is going. It does worry me and my sister. Yeah, you just never know when he's coming home".
Joe
"In June or July, my Dad is going away quite far. He's in the Army, he's a chef. Having your Dad gone is so sad."
Josie
"I've lived in many places. So, I was born in Cyprus, after that I've been to Germany, then I went to this place called Stafford. Then another place which is Wales."
Dominic
"I've moved seven times in fourteen years."
Lilia
"Now we've got a forever home. I never have to worry about leaving or how long until I am leaving. I feel like I belong here a lot more, that's always great."
Oliver
"As soon as we get used to a house, you get moved - I’ve been to four schools and moved six times."
Aiden
"I lived in Nepal, then we went to Brunei, then Malaysia."
Ashim
"In my eyes, you have hundreds of friends in different places."
Chloe
"I’m used to moving now and mixing with the children... I’ve done it so many times, it’s just a normal thing now."
Chloe
"It's ok talking over skype and that, but sometimes you just want a hug when Dad is away."
Georgia
"He signed off last week, so he will be done by the end of this year. He’s done 24 years. I find that better because he will be around a lot. He likes watching us playing rugby, so he will get to see us more."
Lewis
"I’ve enjoyed going around to lots of places around the world, it's adventurous and exciting."
Harry
"In my eyes, you have hundreds of friends in different places."
Ieuan
"My mum got a chalk board and it says how many sleeps on it with chalk, every minute it’s getting closer for him coming home."
Mia
"I don’t want him to get promoted... I want him to get promoted but I don’t want to leave."
Oliver
"I might be going to boarding school so that I don’t change schools every few years."
Ryan
"I've been to seven different schools; I’ve not stayed put in one school long enough."
Shana
"He has been away for six months and he is back for two weeks, then he goes away again."
Sianed
"My parents were in the Army. My mum is a like a nurse and my dad went to the war in Afghanistan. I actually didn’t really know what he was doing so I was like, ‘Cool Dad, go there,’ but then I found out and thought, 'Thank God he came back alive.'"
Sanjog
"I’m going to a new place entirely. They don’t know anything about me and that’s a big restart and that’s really good for me."
Piaras
"I moved to Wales because my dad was posted in the Army. I thought I would get bullied and I was shy when you meet new people, but I made some friends."
Dan
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