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Education

State schools and Question time

(65 Posts)
PamelaJ1 Sun 10-Jun-18 09:37:57

Like Rod Liddell of the Times I was impressed by Shami Chackrabati’s answer to the question on the benefits of comprehensive schools. Look where it got her after all.
I must admit that I did wonder where her children were educated but gave her the benefit of the doubt.
She spends £20,448/year to send them to Dulwich College.
Do what I say, not what I do?

lemongrove Sun 10-Jun-18 18:20:02

Come on trisher it’s hypocracy of the highest order for Labour MP’s to send their children to private schools.

I have no objection at all to private schools, if parents have the money, why shouldn’t they? As long as they are not the kind of Islington parents who trumpet the values of socialism of course.

If all private schools closed down, the children would have to go to the local comp, thus adding even more to the burden of state schools.

Jalima1108 Sun 10-Jun-18 19:48:06

clever children can sometimes be difficult to handle.
especially if they are not stretched and get bored. Yes, they can find all kinds of tricks to distract an inexperienced teacher.

Jalima1108 Sun 10-Jun-18 19:51:03

I should have continued - it is often the middle sets that are neglected; some of these pupils are capable of grade B and above but the resources are often deployed to those expected to achieve A* and A and those who need extra help.

Jalima1108 Sun 10-Jun-18 19:53:14

Personally, I don’t have a problem with parents sending their children to public schools.
me neither - and I would downsize or do whatever it takes to enable my DGC to have a good start in life; however, their parents believe in the comprehensive system and that is fair enough as I believe the local school will be a good one; there are no grammar schools where they live.

trisher Sun 10-Jun-18 20:32:30

Jalima1108 - it is often the middle sets that are neglected; some of these pupils are capable of grade B and above
This used to be the case, but when league tables began to count the number of pupils with grade C, heads started targetting the just below C students.
Of course GCSEs have changed now. But I suspect there will still be the pressure to focus on children who are almost acheiving an average mark.

Deedaa Sun 10-Jun-18 21:13:05

When my children were at school I noticed that if there were meetings about school policy only a handful of parents were either interested or articulate enough to argue against some of the school's choices. Some of us hadn't been able to afford private school fees and some refused to send their children there on principle, but most just went along with what the governors said. I imagine private schools get more parental input.

MargaretX Sun 10-Jun-18 21:41:41

On the continent there is not this feeling that you have to be educated privately; this is attached to the class system and runs down from the aristocracy that the UK still has.

All countries have problem schools and problem children but there has to be more money available in a rich country
to improve schools and that means fewer tablets and lap tops and more real teaching.

You can't keep on about some children being clever and the others are good with their hands. what a load of rubbish. Clever children are often better with their hands than other children, but slow childen have to be checked that they can read and write and add up, before moving up the school, and extra teaching should be provided.

My DDs are both not badly off but if they sold their cars and went on no holidays they still could not manage 20,000 for each child's private schooling.

Jalima1108 Mon 11-Jun-18 14:40:00

MargaretX how is secondary schooling set up in Germany? I'm sure I remember hearing something on tv here about there being three types of school - grammar schools, technical schools and general secondary schools, and the pupils attend the schools which best suits their aptitudes and ability.
Do children sit a type of 11+ examination or do they apply to the school which best suits them?

Or, is it not as I've described the system?

Deedaa Mon 11-Jun-18 23:46:08

I believe that in Italy all children go to the same schools till they are eighteen. Although they go on to do different things they do form lasting friendships with people of all classes because they've always known each other.

SueDonim Mon 11-Jun-18 23:58:52

Jalima, I have a friend with children going through the German education system. She says it's very rigid and they cannot cope with a child who challenges the norms. The child must fit the system, the system will not flex to accommodate the child.

Obviously that is just one area of Germany and can't be extrapolated to represent the entire country but she doesn't think it's a system to be emulated.

Jalima1108 Tue 12-Jun-18 18:47:20

Thank you SueDonim - although I will say that perhaps the British comprehensive system cannot always cope with a child who challenges the norms - I don't mean not helping those with disabilities but expanding the horizons for those who wish to explore opportunities outside the prescribed curriculum.

varian Tue 12-Jun-18 18:58:50

The ethos of most modern comprehensives is to be inclusive. This applies especially to large schools. Children who a generation ago would have been segregated into small special schools are now integrated as far as possible. This seems to work well for most children with physical disabilities or special educational needs, especially if they are supported by learning assistants.

Where it does not always work so well is with children who are severely disturbed, to the extent of persistent nasty bullying and disrupting classes. The school then has to go through a strict protocol of escalating sanctions, often culminating in exclusion.

SueDonim Tue 12-Jun-18 19:11:06

I'm sure there are UK schools that are not so good, Jalima, but my friend's experience is that no schools in her part of Germany offer anything but a regimented regime. Even if she chose a different school it have that same ethos.

They're not very keen on parental involvement, either.

Hm999 Sun 05-Aug-18 14:12:05

Angela Rayner, shadow Secretary of State for Education sends her children to state schools not private.

If you live in a grammar school area, if they pass the exam they'll go to a grammar school regardless of their parents' jobs. However these days, entry to grammar schools seems to depend a lot on cramming beforehand, rather than the debunked idea of IQ. In UK, we struggle to measure educational potential.