Friday, 2 May 2014

Oh to be in Brighton, now that May is here.


Brighton in May is a flurry of music, theatre, comedy, dance, circus, visual art, film, literature, debate, outdoor and family events.

The Brighton Fringe is an annual festival and this year runs from the 3rd may to the 1st June hosting a bewildering array of events all over the local area. Brighton Fringe is one of the largest fringe festivals in the world. Many of the events are free and most of the admission events are £12 and under.  The numbers of shows are too vast to list but you can see the array of talent and entertainment by visiting www.brightonfringe.org  
Brighton Fringe Logo

Brighton Festival also runs in May from the 3rd to the 25th and is one of the biggest arts festivals in the U.K. This year there will be 448 performances across 147 events which will take place in 34 venues throughout the city and beyond. In total, the Festival will play host to 37 premieres, exclusives and co-commissions and 26 free events. Visit www.brightonfestival.org 

The Great Escape is a new music festival that is taking place from the 8th to the 10th May showcasing emerging artists from all over the world. Over 400 up and coming bands play in 35 Brighton venues. Visit www.escapegreat.com

The Great Escape

Artist open house 3rd to the 25th May Over 1,000 artists & makers showcase a dynamic mix of art to the public in over 200 homes & studios. It is a totally free event. Visit aoh.org.uk

Wednesday, 19 March 2014

Stafford House School of English Nationality Statistics - February 2014

A healthy nationality mix is key to students progression in English language and at Stafford House we are proud of the wide nationality mix across all our centres.

London

Stafford House School of English London had students of 38 different nationalities during the month of February.

The top 10 nationalities in London in February were:



Brighton 

Again for the same month, our Brighton school had students of 18 different nationalities.

The top 10 nationalities in Brighton in February were:



Canterbury

Our Canterbury school had students across 25 different nationalities.

Top 10 nationalities in Canterbury in February were:



Boston 

Boston had students across 66 different nationalities.

Top 10 nationalities in Boston in February were: 













 

Monday, 10 March 2014

Stafford House London Expansion

Stafford House London Expansion
 
Stafford House London has opened a second teaching site located within a five minute walk of our original building at 2 Southampton Place.

Students will now also be taught from 90 Great Russell Street, from Monday 10 March, located  just two doors down from the British Museum.Offering the same premium facilities including interactive whiteboards, 90 Great Russell Street offers an extra 9 classrooms, a student lounge and reception.

Teaching will commence for IELTS and Upper Intermediate classes in the first instance. Students will still utilise the main facilities of canteen, library, large student lounge and student services from our 2 Southampton Place building.


Friday, 24 January 2014

Discovering Brighton Museums

We have many free museums and galleries a short bus ride from Stafford House Brighton and directions to these are available from the school reception or just have a chat with the Activity Coordinator for details. Stay warm and dry and enjoy some local culture!

Booth Museum of Natural History
The Booth Museum of Natural History was founded in 1847 by Edward Thomas Booth who amassed a large collection of British birds in the 19th century. He built a museum to house his collection, displaying each of the birds in a series of dioramas. Edward Booth employed George Saville, from Belgium via Cambridge, as his taxidermist, who was rumoured to been paid £25 per month, a huge sum in those days. Booth’s technique was to shoot the specimens and probably while still in the field he would make a large, rather primitive painting of the area in which the bird had been obtained. The skinned bird along with the painting would be presented to Saville. A painting of the bird would be made and cut out, then placed on the landscape painting, moved around until the desired composition was achieved, and glued into place. Saville would mount the birds and replicate Booth's painting in the form of a display case. These cases range from two feet by three feet to six feet by six feet. Prior to Booth’s collection, mounted birds were usually placed on simple wooden perches. Booth’s dioramas, as well as his museum, are his major legacy to the world. The idea of exhibiting the bird as well as its environment has been widely copied all over of the world and perfected in large museums in the USA such as The American Museum of Natural History and the Smithsonian Institute.

The Brighton Museum & Art Gallery can be found in the grounds of the Pavilion, and has many interactive exhibits. The World Art collection is one of the finest in the country with artefacts dating back two millennia. The Fine Art collection contains some 2,000 paintings – almost as many as the National Gallery. The Fashion gallery celebrates centuries of style from Regency to Punk.
Brighton Fishing Museum
Images of Brighton and Exploring Brighton galleries present both the traditional and unconventional aspects of the city’s rich and colourful history through audio, film, artefacts, local ephemera and imagery. At the Hove Museum and Art Gallery you can step into a world of toys, cinema, local history and fine art, it has one of the finest craft collections in the country.


 Or you could visit the Brighton Fishing Museum which is housed along the sea front. Uncover the history and heritage of Brighton’s fishing industry through a wealth of photographs, remarkable artefacts and restored traditional Sussex clinker fishing boats.

Sunday, 8 December 2013

From studying English at Stafford House to politics at university

It’s always a pleasure to welcome back ex-students and this week we said hello to Na-Young from Korea who studied with us in 2010. Na-Young said ‘I have really fond memories of my time in Canterbury and I miss the city and my teachers.’ She was back in Canterbury doing some voluntary fund-raising work for the charity Future Sense Foundation.

After studying English at Stafford House Na-Young followed a Foundation Programme at CATS College Canterbury. After that she moved to Sheffield and is now in her second year of a Politics Degree at Sheffield Hallam University. She said ‘I really love my course. I’m the only international student so it is hard work. But I’ve got lots of friends on the course and many of them want to learn more about Korean culture.’ As well as being active in the Korean Society she is also a member of the Badminton Club and has her charity work.


Pat O’Donoghue, the Principal at Stafford House, said ‘It doesn’t surprise me that Na-Young is involved in so many different activities. During her time at Stafford House she organised a Korean evening with other fellow Korean students. She brought along traditional costumes to wear and I still have the photo of when she and I dressed up in them.’
2010
2013

Monday, 21 October 2013

Nature walks near Brighton

Brighton is a busy city.  But just a short bus ride and you can find yourself in beautiful scenic open countryside.  One of the most popular places for our students to visit is the Seven Sisters, which forms part of the South Downs, this always has the most numbers of students sign up as part of the social programme we offer.  The Downs are chalk cliffs which cover 260 miles of the English coastline. The name Downs is from the old English word Dun, meaning hill. The South Downs became a National park in 2009 and contains a number of nature reserves.   An alternative destination is Devils Dyke, again a short bus journey to what John Constable ( one of the greatest English landscape painters)  called “The greatest view in the World” At nearly a mile long, The Dyke valley is the longest and deepest in the UK. Legend has it that the Devil dug the chasm to drown the parishioners of the Weald. (Although scientists believed it was formed 10,000 years ago in the last ice age).
One of my favourite places after the cliffs to visit is near Patcham where you can find Jack and Jill, one black and one white windmill standing side by side, you will also be able to walk to the Chattri Memorialwhich marks the spot where the bodies of Indian soldiers were cremated. During the First World War, (1914-18) over one and a half million Indian army soldiers saw active service alongside British troops. Twelve thousand Indian soldiers who were wounded on the Western Front were hospitalised at sites around Brighton. These included York Place School, the Dome, the Corn Exchange and the Royal Pavilion.

The fifty-three Hindu and Sikh soldiers who died in Brighton were taken to a peaceful resting place on the Sussex Downs near Patcham for cremation, after which their ashes were scattered in the sea, in accordance with their religious rites. The nineteen Muslim soldiers who died were buried in a purpose built burial ground near to the Shah Jehan Mosque in Woking. Built in 1889, the mosque is the oldest of its kind in north-west Europe. 

Written by David Burgess, Principal, Stafford House Brighton

Saturday, 5 October 2013

Shopping in Brighton



The Laines in Brighton
Brighton is famous for the variety and quality of its shopping.  Churchill Square is a shopping Centre / Mall with all the usual high street names, but Brighton also offers a vast array of independent traders and unusual second hand shops. SnoopersParadise is my favourite, it is a collection of stalls, clothes rails and cabinets all overfilled, many of them themed.  Full of retro video games, old toys, vintage clothing, cameras, telephones etc.   This shop amongst many others is located in the lanes, (spelt "laines") which is a network of historic  twisting narrow lanes and cobbled courtyards in the city centre.  On our weekly  orientation tour which all students receive at Stafford House School of English, the laines will be pointed out to you, but it will be up to you to go and wile away the hours just looking at the vast selection of unusual gifts, designer fashion,  retro-Fifties wear, oriental and Balinese furniture and many jewellery shops,  and even  specialist shops such as the one  just offering kites. And the list goes on. Even when you leave the laines the streets are full of other weird and wacky shops, so it does not just resemble the usual British high street with all the usual retailers. 

Written by David Burgess, Principal, Stafford House Brighton