I think might prove varian that a bright child will probably do well wherever they attend school.
William and Catherine’s Anniversary Photo
Our granddaughter is still at primary age but currently lives in an area that has a grammar school.
It got me thinking that the majority of grammar schools left are in affluent areas therefore still viewed as elitist, however statistics show that non white ethnic minorities make up 28% of pupils at grammars yet only 22% at comprehensive schools.
I truly believe that the grammar schools create social mobility and would greatly benefit many young people.
I think might prove varian that a bright child will probably do well wherever they attend school.
Growstuff of course going to the Grammar helped your daughters friend, your daughters friend if anything like our Grammer School is the norm and not the exception.
I am glad your daughter has done well.
Every School however good or bad has has clever, or hard working pupils.
Simple question to all those in favour of grammar schools.
Would you feel the same if your child/grandchild ended up in the secondary modern school?
Pantglas2
^They’re the hypocrites not the Tories - we know they believe in getting the best for their kids and have always been up front about it. Not so the socialists who preach one thing and do another on the sly!^
See my earlier post Trisher - we know exactly what we get with Tories but Labour do say one thing on education, health - fairness, equality blah Di blah, except when it comes to their own families - hypocrites!
So what you get with the Tories is an underfunded, inadequate system with huge class sizes because their children won't be using it whereas Labour politicians demonstrate they want the best for children including their own.
Isn't it more hypocritical to pretend you want a system that educates everyone but cut budgets, so schools lose staff and children suffer?
growstuff
foxie48
LullyDully
Not all grammar schools are in affluent areas. There are some in inner city Birmingham, much sort after as it happens. A very good comprehensive/ academy is the best bet. ( I went to a GS, quite narrow in those days, must be better now. )
Four of the six Birmingham KE grammar schools are not in affluent areas but they draw from across the city they do not have a catchment area, the three associated Academies are non selective and do draw from the local area. Comps, whether they are academies or not, also draw first from their catchment area and good schools are always over subscribed. FWIW, academies are not necessarily better than LA schools Better is also quite subjective, a "good" school for one child might not be a "good" school for another.
Of course the academies are selective. They don't have the most able in their intake. They're secondary moderns in all but name.
I agree that academies are not better than LA schools. They're just branded differently and probably have a high-earning CEO.
Academies are as non selective as the comps in the LA. Most LAs do not have grammar schools. The main difference between Academies and Comps is the funding + a bit more freedom in the curriculum and the ability to employ teachers who do not have QTS, ownership of land and buildings etc. I've fairly recently taken the school where I was COG out of LA control into a mixed academy trust. My local secondary academy is totally non selective, they take pupils in the catchment area.
The tories have always believed in choice - state funded education, health AND private/selective schools/hospitals for those who can afford better.
Socialists believe that no one should have a choice, especially those prepared to make material sacrifice to enable a better standard, except when it comes to themselves and their families of course.
And that’s what makes them hypocrites according to my dictionary - a person who acts in contradiction to his or her stated beliefs or feelings.
Chardy my son did not go to a Grammar School, he is not a lesser person, he enjoyed his School, and did not feel inferior as he did not want to go to the same School as his sister.
Pantglas2
The tories have always believed in choice - state funded education, health AND private/selective schools/hospitals for those who can afford better.
Socialists believe that no one should have a choice, especially those prepared to make material sacrifice to enable a better standard, except when it comes to themselves and their families of course.
And that’s what makes them hypocrites according to my dictionary - a person who acts in contradiction to his or her stated beliefs or feelings.
State funded education with classes of 30+, where school budgets are cut so staff, buildings and children suffer. A system suitable for the poor, the hardworking and underpaid.
Private education, small classes, huge playing fields, extra curricula activities for the rich and privileged.
Everyone should have a choice -not just the rich.
Tory-a person who pretends to have virtues, moral or religious beliefs, principles, etc., that he or she does not actually possess
The tories have always believed in choice - state funded education, health AND private/selective schools/hospitals for those who can afford better.
Socialists believe that no one should have a choice, especially those prepared to make material sacrifice to enable a better standard, except when it comes to themselves and their families of course.
That's just immoral. Why should people with a bit more money be able to buy their children more success in life than those with nothing? Its not giving up the material things in life if you have nothing to give up in the first place. My parents lived in a two room flat with an outside toilet when I was little, there was nothing for them to give up to get me a better start in life, they could only just make ends meet. If it hadn't been for a proper equal education system in Scotland God knows what I would have been doing today.
If thinking that makes me a socialist, well sign me up for the Little Red Book. God it makes me angry.
No! Everyone deserves the chance of an equal education and children develop at differently so why write them off at 11? What people fail to realise is that out of a class of say 30 very very few would pass the 11+ And make it into grammar schools.My husband went to a private school in Oxford. Hated every second of it. No way would he ever send our children to a private school.
Everyone should have a choice -not just the rich..
Agreed! So why do socialists deny grammar schools to those that want them?
Tory-a person who pretends to have virtues, moral or religious beliefs, principles, etc., that he or she does not actually possess.
Change the first word to Socialist - and the same applies... “pretends” being the operative word in both cases!
DD went to our little village school which only had three classes. From there she went to the local comprehensive, took A levels and went to university. She worked for a PhD and is now leading a research team at the same university. I don't think she would have done any better at a grammar school.
I went to a girl's grammar school which has since gone co-ed and comprehensive. I went for a tour of the school a couple of years ago and was amazed at the changes. So many more opportunities for the children than we ever had, subjects we had never even thought of.
For grammar schools to work now there would have to be really schools for the less academic children offering them proper opportunities. Not just keeping them off the streets till they are old enough to leave. In other words - more schools, more teachers and more money.
No
Pantglas2
^Why is it hypocritical to use the system that exists while trying to change it. Very strange logic.^
Because they had 13 years to change it so why didn’t they - explain that logic...
Just like Tories do (and at least they own it) they use every trick in the book to make sure their own kids don’t go to bog standard comps including finding religion, moving house etc from Shirley williams through to Tony Blair- hypocrites.
I am neither Labour or Tory Pantglas but how does it differ if they both do it?
Chardy
Simple question to all those in favour of grammar schools.
Would you feel the same if your child/grandchild ended up in the secondary modern school?
This is a good question. In a similar vein, I feel the same when I hear people argue for cutbacks in university education and an expansion in the number of vocational courses that lead to manual jobs. Would they encourage their own children to apply for those instead of getting a degree? I doubt it, somehow.
rafichagran
Growstuff of course going to the Grammar helped your daughters friend, your daughters friend if anything like our Grammer School is the norm and not the exception.
I am glad your daughter has done well.
Every School however good or bad has has clever, or hard working pupils.
Why "of course"? On the evidence I've seen, she would have done just as well at the comprehensive my daughter I attended - and possibly have been happier. It didn't "help" her at all.
You seem to assume that the grammar school is somehow better - it really isn't.
My daughter wasn't an exception at her school. There were many more who were hard-working, achieved highly in all sorts of fields and are now doing well.
foxie I think you've misunderstood what I meant. If there are grammar schools in the same area as academies, the academies aren't fully inclusive. They are, in effect, secondary moderns because they don't have the most able pupils. Therefore, they are the result of a selective system.
Pantglas The majority of parents don't have a choice with a selective system. If their children aren't academically able and they don't have the money for private education, their children are stuck with second best. Grammar schools only offer a choice to an elite.
I am neither Labour or Tory Pantglas but how does it differ if they both do it?
Snap Pippa! I have absolutely no political allegiance although I’d probably be defined as liberal by those who know me well. It differs because one lot own up to it and t’others deny it, which makes them hypocrites in my book!
I don’t understand the good socialists who practice what they preach and send their kids to the local comp, how come they don’t call out their comrades who game the system for their own kids benefit? They’re ready to call the tories for the same thing!
When I went to university, back in the 1960s, the only students there who had failed their 11+ were those who parents had then sent them to private school .
It set me thinking about all those other children who failed and went to secondary modern schools but given the same private education could have gone to university.
People like my best friend at university, who suffered a lot of ill health as a child and did not even take the exam as she was so far behind other children, the school could not see the point in her even attempting the exam. She went to a good private school, caught up and went to university,
Like my dear DiL, whose father died of cancer when she was 7 and where the family struggled mentally and emotionally in the ensuing years. She was the first child from her secondary modern to go to university. But not from the school. She did not go to university until her mid 20s, having first trained and worked as a secretary.
The grammar, technical school, d(o not forget the technical schools, although not many were built), secondary modern, like many such schemes the theory is good; in practice they do not work.
Oldbat1
No! Everyone deserves the chance of an equal education and children develop at differently so why write them off at 11? What people fail to realise is that out of a class of say 30 very very few would pass the 11+ And make it into grammar schools.My husband went to a private school in Oxford. Hated every second of it. No way would he ever send our children to a private school.
May I state the obvious here? Private schools vary, from very good to rather bad, just as state schools do. You really can’t generalise like that.
I think there is a misconception by some posters here that people with money can buy their children more success in life. You can't actually buy a brain. What you can buy is confidence and discipline which might be the factors that influence parents who can afford it to pay for tuition.
Elitism can come in many forms - academic, monetary, social.
Further to my pp, one interesting anecdote about independent schools now vs. a few decades ago:
A nephew of ours (now late 40s) went to an independent school in the N of England, that regularly came not near the top but reasonably high up in the A level league tables.
My sister told me that more recently it has slipped quite a way down the league tables. She puts this down to the fact that the sort of parents who used to send their children there (mostly reasonably comfortable but not rich) can now no longer afford to do so, and it’s become the preserve of the very well off.
The school was selective by exam, and maybe still is, but the league table evidence would suggest that it’s now much more a question of whether the parents can afford the fees, rather than how well their child will do in the entrance exam - assuming they still have one.
Of course there has always been a difference between independents with rigorous selection procedures, by exam and maybe interview too - and those that will take more or less anyone whose parents can pay the fees.
Pantglas2
^I am neither Labour or Tory Pantglas but how does it differ if they both do it?^
Snap Pippa! I have absolutely no political allegiance although I’d probably be defined as liberal by those who know me well. It differs because one lot own up to it and t’others deny it, which makes them hypocrites in my book!
I don’t understand the good socialists who practice what they preach and send their kids to the local comp, how come they don’t call out their comrades who game the system for their own kids benefit? They’re ready to call the tories for the same thing!
I really don’t understand who these good socialists are not calling out their comrades? What exactly are you expecting? A daily roll call of shame ? There hasn’t even been a case for ages - it’s only ever been a handful anyway. Yes it’s wrong morally some would say not to practice what you preach re your child’s education ( although some would say it’s wrong to sacrifice your child on the altar of your principles) But your OTT generalisations are pretty tedious. This and successive Tory governments are nothing but hypocritical re education in a much more fundamental way by saying it matters to them and then constantly underfunding it and undermining it by change after meaningless. change. I mean look at who is S of S for education? FFS ?
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