Farewell Janie

At the end of September, our long-serving Head of Admissions, Janie Jarman, leaves Bedales after 21 years of unstinting service to the School. Annette McCormack has taken up the reins as the new Director of Admissions and she is already enjoying getting out and about meeting members of our community. 

We are so grateful for everything Janie has done and given to the School. As one former colleague said: “Her knowledge of the place extends to its very roots – she believes in it and that shows when she is talking to any and everyone.” Janie will always be a special member of the Bedales community and a friend to so many colleagues, parents and students.  

Staff and BPA reps recently thanked Janie and presented her with gifts at a gathering in the Sixth Form Social Space. Read the leaving speech for Janie given by Rob Reynolds, Director of External Relations, below.

I feel humbled that I am the one to talk about someone who has had such a profound impact on the lives of so many people. I will try and do justice to the huge impact Janie has had on this place.  

Some of you will know I like numbers and when you look at admissions numbers, they are staggering.  

During her time, Janie has overseen the recruitment of over 3,000 students to our three schools. To recruit that many new students means managing more than 15,000 enquiring families and organising at least 100 open mornings.  

During this period, Janie has been wise counsel to all the heads she has seen come and go across the three schools – Keith Budge, Magnus Bashaarat, Chris Sanderson, Jonny Cully, Penny Watkins, Jane Grubb, Sarah Webster, Katie Potter, Jo Webbern, Victoria Homewood and the current trio of Will, Colin and Fiona.  

Janie has been the face of this School for over 20 years. In Olympic cycles, that would have seen Janie compete in 6 games in Athens, Beijing, London, Rio, Tokyo and most recently at Paris.   

When we decided to broaden admissions internationally, it was Janie who travelled the world to find the right students – leaping on planes to attend recruitment fairs. I’ve counted up 13 countries: China, Singapore, Malaysia, Hong Kong, France, Monaco, Jersey, Switzerland, Spain, Turkey, Dubai, Norway and the US. 

In recent years, Janie oversaw admissions through the COVID pandemic, ensuring no reduction in the numbers and the right calibre of student continued to join us. 

Since we launched the John Badley Foundation, Janie has helped to transform the lives of 37 young people on full bursaries helping them navigate their way through the school. When Russia invaded Ukraine, it was Janie who quickly helped 10 displaced young Ukrainians to join our school on fully funded places. 

Of course, behind every number there is a human story. 

This is what how one of the parents responded to the offer of a place:  

“This opportunity has brought immense relief to our lives. Finally I can breathe out and begin planning for our future with renewed optimism. The magnitude of this gesture is truly awe-inspiring, and I am overwhelmed with gratitude…The joy and excitement that my children are feeling cannot be put into words…For the first time in a long time, I feel absolutely lucky and happy.”   

Now I don’t normally turn to the Daily Telegraph for inspiration but I would like to quote from an article it published about the rudeness and arrogance of school admissions offices.  

“Admissions never answer the phone.” 

“The admissions office was so unfriendly I immediately struck it off my list of possibles.” 

“When I called admissions to ask a few questions, I was told: ‘I have absolutely no idea, nobody tells me anything.” 

The article likens independent school admissions staff to bouncers at a premium night club or a GP’s receptionist on the Monday morning after Christmas. 

The piece then changes tack, saying, and I quote:

“There is beauty to celebrate in the world of admissions.”  

It goes on to hand out a few gold stars or to continue the Olympics analogy, gold medals – including this one: 

“The registrar at Bedales really understands the word ‘empathy’ and cares hugely about each visitor: she should be mentioned as exceptional.” 

‘Empathy’ and ‘exceptional’ – to add to those descriptions of Janie, I turned to some former Heads and governors. 

One governor said she is “emollient and adaptable”. 

I had to look the first one up. Emollient means “attempting to avoid confrontation or anger; calming or conciliatory”. 

Maybe that’s one side of Janie?! 

He went on to explain that Janie provides that reassurance to so many parents who might be apprehensive, or sceptical or even too straightlaced to accept that Bedales can and does actually work. And that sometimes Janie has had to put right the damage done by others, be that an unusually-dressed tour guide, a disgruntled parent or a gruff colleague. 

This showed through in research we conducted with parents who chose to go elsewhere, but still chose to tell us and I quote: 

“I thought Janie was brilliant, really warm and helpful”  

“Janie is incredibly communicative – nothing was lacking” 

A former deputy who left us to take up a headship said of Janie: 

“When I started at Bedales, Janie was already known as the doyenne of schools’ admissions and offered a model of warmth and engagement that other schools sought to emulate. That persists to this day. Her knowledge of the place extends to its very roots – she believes in it and that shows when she is talking to any and everyone. She has the uncanny knack of making all sorts of people (and at Bedales you really do meet all sorts) feel that they are welcome and part of things even before they cross the threshold. If admissions teams have people who capture even a small fraction of her subtlety and warmth, they are lucky indeed.” 

Another former Head said: 

“Janie always puts everyone before herself. She is totally devoted to Bedales and its ethos. She personifies John Badley’s founding motto ‘Work of Each for Weal of All’. She is a walking, or in Janie’s case, running Debretts and if Janie doesn’t know someone they aren’t worth knowing!” 

Only Janie comes to work on a Monday morning having been chatting to the Queen of the Netherlands or a former US president over the weekend. 

Another previous Head talked of Janie’s intricate knowledge of each individual student’s background and her intuitive understanding of their needs; the occasional look she’d give said Head when she thought he was going down the wrong path (head slightly tilted, pause in speaking); and her characteristic jog across the Orchard to try and cram so much in her overpacked day. 

Many staff at Bedales change responsibilities, moving around to find the right role for themselves and to become a part of the school. Janie started as part-time Music Administrator, then Registrar at Dunhurst and progressed to lead admissions for the Whole School….. and has also become Hampshire’s go-to pre-eminent estate agent. 

Janie – you are a true Olympian in the world of admissions, a multiple gold medal winner. We will miss you and we are so grateful for everything you have done for us. THANK YOU. You will always be a special member of the Bedales community and a friend to so many colleagues, parents and students; and we insist that you come back regularly.  

Please raise a glass for the emollient, empathetic, warm, intuitive, adaptable, amazing, encyclopedic, running who’s who, the exceptional Janie.   

Relocating to Petersfield

The view from the Poet's Stone in Steep, near Petersfield, Hampshire
The view from the Poet’s Stone in Steep, near Petersfield, Hampshire

By Helen Martin, Freelance Writer

In 1900 John Badley moved his school, Bedales, from Lindfield, near Haywards Heath, to a small village called Steep, just outside Petersfield in Hampshire. It’s easy to see why the school is still here, over 125 years later. Surrounded by the stunning hills and woodlands of the South Downs, yet only 60 miles from London, the Petersfield area is a fantastic place to call home.  

Location is one of the area’s main selling points 

“For families looking to move out of town into the country, the area is highly desirable,” says local estate agent, Claudia Hunt of the Country House Company. “You have all the benefits of living in the country without any of the disadvantages, including excellent schools, reliable broadband and fast, efficient transport links.” 

Heathrow and Gatwick airports and London are within an hour’s drive. Guildford, Chichester, Portsmouth, Winchester and the Wittering beaches are within half an hour. The Petersfield to Waterloo train takes just over an hour. 

In Petersfield itself there is the Heath Pond and playground, a huge variety of baby, toddler and children’s clubs, lido, leisure centre, yoga studio, Waitrose, M&S, two doctors’ surgeries, a community hospital and a centre of complementary medicine

Queen Elizabeth Country Park is located a few miles further south. There you’ll find mountain bike trails, an assault course, adventure play area, dog agility course and weekly parkrun. The surrounding countryside is filled with walks of varying difficulty, including the South Downs Way, Serpent Trail, Hanger’s Way and Shipwright’s Way. There are plenty of bridleways too for getting out in the fresh air on foot, bike and horseback.  

The area is well served by historic country pubs 

The Hawkley Inn in Hawkley, The Harrow in Steep, The Queen’s Head in Sheet, The Thomas Lord in West Meon and The White Horse in Prior’s Dean (locally known as The Pub With No Name), all serve fantastic food in cosy, fire-lit surroundings (The Pub with No Name in particular has lots of safe, outside space for children).  

A little further afield is the Long Barn in Alresford: an elegant gift shop and café. In Petersfield itself there is Annie Jones for French cuisine and cocktails, Restaurant Six for Mediterranean food and   

Lemongrass for Thai. For coffee we have Madeleine’s Kitchen or The Natural Food Deli.

Steep punches well above its weight for such a small village 

There is an eight-court floodlit tennis club with adjoining cricket ground (both of which host children’s sessions). To the north of the village is the Poet’s Stone, dedicated to local poet Edward Thomas, which rewards a sharp climb with stunning views of the South Downs. Nearby is the famous Edward Barnsley Workshop, where the eponymous Barnsley made the furniture that would see him become one of the most significant figures in the Arts and Crafts movement (Barnsley himself was a former Bedales student and made the furniture for the Bedales Memorial Library, widely regarded as one of the UK’s finest examples of Arts and Crafts architecture). 

Sir Alec Guinness was perhaps Steep’s most famous resident, and the legacy he left for a film society ensures a regular film club continues to run in the village hall. For live performance, Bedales’ own arts events programme offers a diverse selection, ranging from visiting drama and dance practitioners, musicians (the National Youth Jazz Orchestra and Hackney Colliery Band are repeat visitors) and talks (in recent years we’ve welcomed the former Poet Laureate Simon Armitage, geneticist, author and broadcaster Adam Rutherford, and award-winning actress and Old Bedalian Minnie Driver, to name a few), as well as homegrown student productions.  

Small wonder the local property market is thriving 

“The property market is holding firm despite the roller coaster of Brexit, elections, weather and the pandemic,” says Claudia. “Supply remains low and demand is high, and it is likely that this demand will increase as we move through spring into the summer season and as families get organised for the start of the new school year in September.” 

For families looking for schools, Bedales Senior, Prep and Pre-prep are significant draws. Bedales’ approach encourages intellectual ambition, creative thinking and independent learning – vital requirements for further education and beyond – and they start developing these skills early with the youngest children as they progress through Bedales Pre-prep and Prep Schools. As the Good Schools Guide says: “This is a wonderful place to develop a strong sense of self, stretch minds, develop a love of learning and make lifelong friends.” 

“The delight of moving to the country is that the stress is taken out of constantly being in the car,“ adds Bedales Head of Admissions Janie Jarman. “The daily school-run is so much less pressured when everyone’s surrounded by fresh air and green fields. And with all the extra-curricular activities taking place in school, there is more family time at home.” 

When it comes to finding that family home, Claudia has some very sound advice. “Because time is precious and the logistics of settling in to a new school and new area can be significant, consider a rental property initially before committing to something more permanent to allow yourself time to better understand the local market and to give yourself options.” 

As John Badley himself might have said: keep an open mind.