The promises we keep — for every learner, every day.

A public no-fee school can’t promise marble lobbies. We promise the things that actually matter to a six-year-old and her grandmother: that she arrives safely, eats properly, is heard when she is sad, and goes home in one piece.

Six everyday assurances

What we owe the families who trust us with their children.

These six pillars are reviewed every term by the SGB and the principal, and audited annually by the District Safety Committee.

The school’s palisade fence and a security guard greeting a parent at the front gate.

Campus security

Fenced and gated grounds, a contracted SAPS-vetted day guard, and a sign-in register for every visitor. Gates open 06:30 and lock at 17:30 once aftercare ends.

Children climbing the steps of a yellow public scholar transport van as a supervisor checks them off a list.

School transport

For learners on the surrounding farms we coordinate with two licensed scholar-transport operators. Daily registers go to a parent WhatsApp group, and the SGB checks each operator’s permit termly.

Daily nutrition (NSNP)

Every learner gets a hot, balanced meal each school day under the National School Nutrition Programme. Our menu is set by the Department’s registered nutritionist, and our food handlers keep a daily ingredient register.

Health on site

A small sick-bay, two first-aid trained staff members, and a referral line to the Jubilee District Hospital. The Department of Health Mobile Clinic visits us each term for vision and hearing screening.

Wellbeing & care

A part-time learner support educator, a visiting social worker once a week, and a quiet “talking room” next to the staff room. We screen all Grade R and Grade 4 learners for emotional and learning concerns.

Emergency readiness

Two fire and evacuation drills per term, written safety plan reviewed annually, fire extinguishers serviced quarterly, and an emergency contact poster in every classroom. SAPS Hammanskraal is on speed-dial.

Our SGB safety review is open for any parent to read. Ask at the office for the latest term’s minutes — there is nothing about your child’s school day that you should not be allowed to see.

“My granddaughter is six. The first thing I check, every Monday, is her school bag and her tummy. This school looks after both.”
— Mma Tlhagi, grandmother & primary caregiver, Grade 1B