Fleurpepper
DaisyAnne
Mamie
It is difficult isn't it. I have worked with teachers and teaching assistants who have provided breakfast and taken clothes home to wash. I think most of us have stayed awake worrying about our pupils.
In the end good teachers understand that knowing pupils and understanding their troubles is important, but our focus should always be on raising standards and helping them make good progress. That balance is sometimes hard.
I think the current situation is terrifying. I am hearing from friends about appalling bills for their schools and a massive level of cuts. Why on earth are schools excluded from the energy cap?
It isn't difficult, but neither should it be personal. Closing independent schools, particularly at this point, will do nothing.
Getting this far-right, 'you only get what you pay for directly' government out, is the only answer. Those who have chosen to make this a personal battle are doing more harm than sending a child to a private school ever did. The only way to stop the stripping out of funding and facilities from schools is to change the government. Whatever schools a person or their children use is irrelevant.
Closing independent schools would be very difficult, as the system is so entrenched, and as the state sector is seriously lacking in space and places.
However, as pointed out in the OP, in Skandinavian and some other countries- it is a political, as well as social and educational CHOICE, to make great education for all a priority. This had huge repercussion on society at large, the poverty and crime rate, etc.
It is clear that when the politicians, top rate business people, professionals - all those with influence and a voice- use the public system and do not have an opt-out, they make sure the system is properly funded, with excellent staff, equipment and facilities.
I do believe the first thing to do is to cancel the Charity Status loophole. And of course to make good education for all a priority.
I doubt there is an argument in what you say Fleurpepper as "where there's a will there's a way" when it comes to your own children.
However, even if there is an argument, now is not the time to pursue it. The only way to improve schools is by funding them, not just adequately, but to make up for what has happened under the Tories.
In the early pages of this discussion, it was clarified that only Finland, of the Nordic countries, bans private schools. It is successful with this by having very, very high standards in its schools. We would have to get at least partway there before we even think about banning part of our mixed education system. But why ban them? What does that achieve?
Charity status needs proper consideration. Manchester Warehousemen and Clerks Orphan's School decided, in 1862, to pay for the orphans education by opening the school to fee paying boarders and day-pupils. It still does this. The school was started by the same group of men who brought us the start of our modern "weekend". Perhaps times have moved on but it really doesn't look like it to me. When we provide properly for those whose household income has disappeared then maybe I could agree that the day of the charity driven private school is over.