Calderwood Lodge Primary School

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Denominational Jewish primary school in Glasgow, Scotland. It is openly Zionist

Calderwood Lodge Jewish Primary School
Motto
Established 1962
Type Denominational primary school (voluntary-aided)
Religious affiliation(s) Orthodox Jewish
Headteacher Miss Jacqueline Dunn
Address Waterfoot Road, Newton Mearns, East Renfrewshire; Formerly: Calderwood Road, Giffnock, Glasgow G46 6QQ
City Glasgow
County East Renfrewshire
Postcode G77 5GP
Country Scotland
Enrolment ~150 (primary) + nursery places
Gender Co-educational
Age range
Website [Official school site Official school site]


Calderwood Lodge Jewish Primary School is a denominational (voluntary-aided) Jewish primary school in Giffnock, Glasgow, Scotland, under the authority of East Renfrewshire Council. Founded in 1962, it is the only Jewish school in Scotland and provides education from nursery to Primary 7, combining the Scottish Curriculum for Excellence with Orthodox Jewish studies.

The school has a very low proportion of Jewish pupils in recent years, reflecting the small and declining Jewish population in Greater Glasgow. Most places are filled through placing requests, and the school is open to children of all faiths, though it maintains a strong Jewish ethos.

History

Calderwood Lodge was established in 1962 by the Glasgow Jewish community to provide a Jewish day-school education. It originally operated as an independent school but later became a state-funded denominational (voluntary-aided) school under East Renfrewshire Council after boundary changes. In 2017 it moved to a new shared campus with St Clare’s Primary School (Catholic) in Newton Mearns, built with £17 million of public funding.

Ethos and curriculum

The school integrates secular education with Hebrew and Jewish studies. Jewish Studies (including Hebrew, Torah, Jewish history, festivals, and ethics) are administered by the charity Calderwood Jewish Education. The school promotes values of respect, inclusion, and community, and is supervised by local Orthodox rabbinic authorities.

Current situation

As of 2025, the school has approximately 150 primary pupils and a nursery with morning/afternoon sessions (total capacity around 80 nursery places). The proportion of Jewish children is now very low, with many pupils coming from non-Jewish families through placing requests. The school continues to serve the remaining Jewish community in Glasgow while operating as an inclusive denominational school.

People

  • Sora Jacobs - Chabad Shluchim in Glasgow - teacher for 15 years.

Staff

Senior Leadership Team (2025)
Name Role
Miss Jacqueline Dunn Headteacher
Mr Robson Depute Headteacher
Mrs Thomson Principal Teacher
Rabbi Rubin School Chaplain

Previous staff

Previous Headteachers and Senior Staff
Name Role Approximate tenure Notes
Dianna Wolfson Headteacher ~1976–1998 Served 22 years; retired June 1998; interviewed in TES Scotland about the school's role in Glasgow's Jewish community.
Ruth Levey Headteacher Late 1990s–early 2000s Mentioned in 2000 reports appreciating council support for Jewish ethos.
Christine Haughney Headteacher Pre-2010s Advised incoming staff on cultural/religious norms (e.g., not shaking hands with the rabbi).
Jim Duffy Acting Headteacher 2006 Temporarily seconded from St Cadoc’s Catholic Primary; non-Jewish; wore yarmulke during tenure.
Marion Carlton Headteacher Circa 2010s Led during 2017 shared campus move to Newton Mearns.
Lisa Corr Headteacher Circa 2018–2021/2022 Served over three years; took leave September 2021; position advertised 2022.
Margolit Borowski Principal Teacher of Jewish Studies Circa 2010s Provided Jewish studies resources and guidance to new non-Jewish heads.
Diane Hecht Primary 2 Teacher Circa 2000 Featured in Herald Scotland discussing religious ethos.

The school used to be run by Calderwood Jewish Education a Scottish charity which closed down in 2012. Its resources were then passed to the Glasgow Jewish Community Trust.

History

As is widely reported Calderwood Lodge, was “founded originally in 1962 by the Zionist Federation”.[1]


Bishop John Keenan is half of the religious authority for a unique education project in Scotland. There, two primary schools, one Catholic and one Jewish, share a purpose-built campus. “I think,” jokes Bishop Keenan, “that the relationships here have gone beyond interfaith dialog. As far as I can see, the dialog is in the bricks.”
St. Clare’s Catholic Primary and its Jewish counterpart, Calderwood Lodge, are housed in a brand-new building in the Newton Mearns suburb in the south of Glasgow, Scotland’s largest city. Plans were in the works for four years to open what is thought to be an international first, where two religious schools share the same premises.

The two schools are halfway through their first term and will open formally on November 8, in a ceremony due to be attended by both Keenan, who is the bishop of the Diocese of Paisley, and Britain’s chief Orthodox rabbi, Ephraim Mirvis. The project grew out of an educational and municipal coincidence: Calderwood Lodge, founded originally in 1962 by the Zionist Federation, switched school districts after a municipal boundary change, and came under the authority of East Renfrewshire Council.[2]

TES report

The Times Education Supplement notes:

After 22 years as headof Calderwood Lodge, Scotland’s only Jewish school, Dianna Wolfson retires this week. She takes Eleanor Caldwell on a tour of her school.
Friday afternoon at Calderwood Lodge Jewish Primary School in Glasgow is always a special time. For 12 pupils in Primary 7 it was even more special because at 5.15am the following Monday, they would be setting off on a week-long trip to Israel. For them, Glasgow was going to Israel, while for the eight left at home, Israel was coming to Glasgow.
The children going to Israel with two of their Hebrew teachers were ready to see the sights in Jerusalem, learn more about their faith, visit both the north and south of the country, meet their pen friends and have fun. Those in Glasgow were set to embrace Israel at home, with activities including a visit to the Dead Sea Scrolls exhibition at Kelvingrove and a chance to try some Israeli (chalah) baking.
Calderwood Lodge is the only Jewish school in Scotland. Housed in a magnificent villa overlooking Newlands Park on the south side of Glasgow, the primary school was founded in 1962 by the Glasgow Jewish community and the British Zionist Federation.
It was taken over in 1982 by Strathclyde Region, moved to Glasgow City Council in 1996 and since last year has been administered by East Renfrewshire. After “an uninterrupted relationship” with Calderwood Lodge since 1963, first as a parent and for the last 22 years as headteacher, Dianna Wolfson retires at the end of this term...
“I’m proud to say that many of our pupils are achieving a National Certificate Module 1 in Hebrew by the end of Primary 7,” Mrs Wolfson says. “Many of the children also belong to Jewish youth groups or have strong family links, and go to Israel for the summer, which improves their command of the language greatly.”
Hebrew study continues alongside French, which children begin to learn in P6 as part of the national scheme for modern languages in the primary school. She says that the visiting teacher of French was “absolutely thrilled” with the standard of French in the school.
Not all members of staff at Calderwood Lodge are Jewish. Depute head Maureen Blacklaw, for example, says that she did not seek out Calderwood for any particular reason: “I really liked the school when I visited it and was delighted to have been offered the post. I just feel I’ve been embraced by the faith.”
P23 teacher Dinah Tennent followed in her mother’s footsteps in becoming a teacher at the school. “As a non-Jewish person,” she says, “I’ve learned so much about my own religion through learning about Judaism. I can now really see where Christ comes from. I greatly admire the absolute commitment the children in the school have to their faith.”
Nor are all the pupils Jewish. Approximately 10 per cent come from other faiths including Catholic, Protestant and Muslim. “I don’t like quoting numbers like this, because the non-Jewish children are just part of the whole school community,” Mrs Wolfson says.
“They all come on board with the school’s own Jewish-based programme of religious and moral teaching. Parents of other faiths are often looking for a school that appreciates the value of religion and they find this quite a caring school,“she says. “After all, a lot of Jewish values are shared with Islam and Christianity. We’re all decent people who can look beyond the simple differences in ways of worship.”
The children who come to Calderwood are drawn from the 6,500-strong Jewish community in greater Glasgow. How much the children’s experience of being at a Jewish school influences their observance of the faith in later life varies, Mrs Wolfson says.
“We can do so much in school, but it really depends on lifestyle in the home. In families where there is perhaps not such a strong religious ethos (possibly where one parent is not Jewish), I think the school offers the children an equilibrium. On leaving Calderwood, there are inevitably some children who are leaving behind a lot of Jewish observance.”...
This year, Israel’s 50th anniversary has provided an extra celebration. In addition to activities on the day itself, P7 pupils have done a project and prepared a database about Glasgow people, particularly those with associations with Calderwood Lodge, who have gone to live in Israel. The school has put on a special celebratory end-of-term production, which included a traditional Israeli line dance. A “Happy Birthday Israel” banner in Hebrew takes pride of place in the school hall...
On the walls of the entrance hall, the familiar school mission statement, “To encourage the children to work to their full potential in a happy, stimulating, caring, (Jewish) environment with an effective home and school partnership”, is lined up beside Calderwood Lodge’s own distinctive mission statement in Hebrew from Leviticus: “You shall love your neighbour as yourself”.[3]

Zionism

The school itself reports:

This year Calderwood Lodge is working alongside UJIA to mark Mitzvah Day. The Pupil Council are collecting non-perishable food items to be used to make Welcome to Glasgow packs for asylum seekers. Goods collected in school will be given to the UJIA.[4]

According to the JC in 2018:

UJIA’s Joanna Hyman cites the partnership between Calderwood and an Israeli school and the participation of a dozen Scottish teenagers in Israel tours this year as evidence of the community’s Zionist credentials.[5]

TES reported in 1998:

Friday afternoon at Calderwood Lodge Jewish Primary School in Glasgow is always a special time. For 12 pupils in Primary 7 it was even more special because at 5.15am the following Monday, they would be setting off on a week-long trip to Israel. For them, Glasgow was going to Israel, while for the eight left at home, Israel was coming to Glasgow.
The children going to Israel with two of their Hebrew teachers were ready to see the sights in Jerusalem, learn more about their faith, visit both the north and south of the country, meet their pen friends and have fun. Those in Glasgow were set to embrace Israel at home, with activities including a visit to the Dead Sea Scrolls exhibition at Kelvingrove and a chance to try some Israeli (chalah) baking.
After an informal introduction in nursery, the 200 pupils at Calderwood begin to learn Hebrew in P1. At this stage they make up their own prayer book with only pictures representing the main prayers. Formal reading and writing lessons begin in P2 and in P3, pupils get their first real prayer book. A concert with Hebrew song and drama celebrates the event. Study of the language continues until P7. “I’m proud to say that many of our pupils are achieving a National Certificate Module 1 in Hebrew by the end of Primary 7,” Mrs Wolfson says. “Many of the children also belong to Jewish youth groups or have strong family links, and go to Israel for the summer, which improves their command of the language greatly.”[6]

Although Calderwood Lodge was taken over by the local authority in 1982, it remains a Zionist school today. It collaborates with the United Jewish Israel Appeal (UJIA), Maccabi, Mitzvah Day, the Scottish Jewish Youth Alliance (SJYA) and other Zionist groups. (The SJYA is itself a collaboration between Glasgow Maccabi and UJIA Scotland, both Zionist organizations.) The school also marks Israeli Independence Day (Yom Ha’atzmaut) and the “liberation” of Jerusalem (Yom Yerushalayim)—their term for the illegal occupation of East Jerusalem in 1967.[7]

Student body

  • In 1998: Nor are all the pupils Jewish. Approximately 10 per cent come from other faiths including Catholic, Protestant and Muslim. “I don’t like quoting numbers like this, because the non-Jewish children are just part of the whole school community,” Mrs Wolfson says.
  • In 2017: A significant proportion of pupils at the Jewish primary school are Muslim.[8]
  • In 2018 Calderwood’s Jewish ethos is applicable to all its pupils, which means that the 48% of children who are not Jewish still learn Hebrew and attend Jewish subject lessons. [4 may 2018]

So there appears to be a 10% decline in Jewish kids per five years.

Resources

External links

Official school website Glasgow Jewish Representative Council page

Contact

Notes