Science lessons at King’s now come with a new kind of field trip. Using virtual reality, students can step inside the human body, travel through space or walk through a moment in history — all from their desks. Teachers are using the headsets to make the abstract feel real.
Moments like this one rarely happen by accident. Behind every result is a stretch of ordinary days — lessons prepared with care, questions taken seriously, and teachers who know each child by name. At King’s, that steady work is the real story, and the days worth celebrating are simply where it becomes visible.
Our classrooms are built for participation rather than performance. Students are encouraged to try, to be wrong out loud, and to try again with a little more understanding than before. The Ministry curriculum gives the structure; the British-enriched approach gives the room to think.
How it started
It began, as most good things here do, with a small group of students who cared about getting it right. Staff gave them time and a place to work, families offered encouragement at home, and the idea grew until it belonged to the whole community.
None of it depended on a single standout individual. The strength of King’s has always been how many hands lift together — the quiet contributors as much as the ones on the stage.
We don’t measure a year only by the medals on the shelf, but by the children who walked in unsure and left knowing they belong here.
What comes next
The next chapter is already being written in classrooms, labs and rehearsal rooms across the school. Plans are underway to build on this term’s momentum and to open the same opportunities to more students, in more year groups.
We will keep sharing these stories as they unfold. For families thinking about joining King’s, the best introduction is still a visit — come and see an ordinary day for yourself.
— King’s School Media Office



