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Education

11+ being scrapped

999 replies

musu · 05/05/2013 11:36

At one school in Essex here

Interesting development which follows on from Bucks CC overhauling their 11+ and trying to make it tutor proof (although everyone I know in Bucks is still employing tutors).

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tiggytape · 05/05/2013 11:52

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tiggytape · 05/05/2013 11:54

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musu · 05/05/2013 12:03

It will be interesting to see how this trend develops. So far it has made no difference in Bucks. Ds is in year 4 and everyone I know has got a tutor booked to start at the beginning of year 5 (I suspect some have started already but not broadcast that fact). Ds won't be doing the 11+ so we haven't bothered.

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piggywigwig · 05/05/2013 12:15

The changes brought in by Chelmsford County High School for Girls isn't new/hot-off-the-press news, so I'm a little surprised at the Telegraph reporting it now. I guess it's at least 6 months old and hardly a scoop.

Chelmsford aren't scrapping the 11+ they're merely changing the format of the the selective test they present to candidates, calling upon CEM to devise it, rather than GL Assessment VR via the CSSE (Consortium of Selective Schools in Essex) and the Maths and English that CSSE set.

We have superselectives in Essex but no pass marks - it's the first 112 highest-scorers past the post for DD2's school. Therefore, you don't get the situation Tiggytape mentions with another superselective, where people "pass" but don't get a place.

Tiggytape
"But very clever isn't enough when you are up against 1000+ other equally clever children."

Absolutely right - the competition for GS places is incredibly tough. It's only one of the many steps in life where competition is huge.

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Picturesinthefirelight · 05/05/2013 12:16

I think dd's independent school are using theses tests. They are computer based and called INCAS. I'm sure that place in Durham has something to do with them

Interestingly for reading ds who is currently being assessed for Aspergers and who has been seriously under performing at school it has shown up that he has exceptional ability in literacy. We had been concerned about him getting into the senior school.

No one has tutored in fact it's been almost impossible to find our much about the tests.

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piggywigwig · 05/05/2013 12:24

If CEM can truly produce a tutor-proof test for Chelmsford, then I welcome it with open arms. If unscrupulous tutors now find they can't make money from capitalising on people's fears, then fabulous! If it levels the playing field and diminishes the tutoring "arms-race", then even better. But I don't think it's really managed it in Birmingham and Warwickshire, where they've already been doing CEM's tests for a while.

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musu · 05/05/2013 12:25

Durham do the Bucks new test and the Eton 11 pre-test (which is definitely supposed to be tutor proof). I'm sure some people must try and tutor for Eton though.

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piggywigwig · 05/05/2013 12:36

TBH - in Essex, we're semi tutor-proof anyway as our exam is VR, English Comprehension (with two hefty sections on spelling and punctuation) and Maths. Whilst you can tutor a child in terms of covering all of KS2 and teach them spelling and punctuation rules, they still have to have the ability to do it with a passage they've never seen. Then there's the notoriously difficult comprehension with inference skills tests that go above and beyond what a normal 10 or 11 year old can be expected to tackle.

Try this for size

www.csse.org.uk/English%20for%20pdf%202007.pdf

Likewise with the Maths - they have to take what they've learned and transfer that knowledge to solve heavyweight questions.

VR and NVR-only tests are easily tutorable and therefore IMHO no measure of a candidate's suitability for GS.

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piggywigwig · 05/05/2013 12:39

Picturesinthefirelight
I'm not sure that Chelmsford are doing a computer-based test but I could be wrong.

musu
As I understand it, no child in Bucks has done the CEM test yet.

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piggywigwig · 05/05/2013 12:40

...not child has sat the test for a place at GS.

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musu · 05/05/2013 12:54

No, Bucks CEM starts this September but as I said it hasn't stopped people booking tutors. We are out of that now and it is amazing just how many people have done that. I thought that those people were my friends but none of them mentioned anything about reserving tutors until after ds moved schools! I was amazed at how competitive it all is.

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trinity0097 · 05/05/2013 13:55

It wouldn't be INCAS from CEM centre, as that is to measure process made not a entrance type test.

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piggywigwig · 05/05/2013 14:47

musu
"I thought that those people were my friends but none of them mentioned anything about reserving tutors until after ds moved schools! I was amazed at how competitive it all is."

It's a sad fact of reality that you have no friends in the 11+ game if your "friend's" children are direct competitors for a place. I too was guilty of playing my cards VERY close to my chest. I didn't lie but neither did I volunteer too much information when asked. I'm lucky that I keep myself to myself anyway, in real life so didn't have any real issues. Wink

As far as getting hold of tutors is concerned, you're either in the know or you're not and many are already full by the beginning of YR4. We didn't play the paid-tutor game.

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musu · 05/05/2013 17:08

piggywigwig that appears to be true. I discovered that quite few had booked tutors in year 2. Quite a bit of lying though as I remember talking about it and asking direct questions! I also remember being surprised at the number of people who had done senior school visits whilst our dcs were in year 3, again something I only found out many months later.

At that stage we would have been planning for ds to take the 11+ but then our circumstances changed and ds moved schools to one that finishes at 13.

If we had stayed at the school I doubt that I would have employed a tutor as we aren't in a super selective area and I'm of the view if they need lots of tutoring to get a place they will also need lots of tutoring to keep up. That is a view I shared with my 'friends' but I suppose they didn't believe me.

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thecatfromjapan · 05/05/2013 17:23

i think the Birmingham grammars have been using Durham CEM papers. And examples are on-line already. I don't see how they can possibly be tutor-proof since they draw on the same skills that existing papers call for: wide vocabulary; knowledge of grammar; maths. Confused So I don't see any decline in tutoring brought about by this change.

Personally, i find them a bit worrying because they will discriminate in favour of children who have been exposed to a wider vocab and more advanced grammatical structures (and higher-level maths) - and thus discriminate against those that haven't.

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piggywigwig · 05/05/2013 18:02

thecatfromapan
"i think the Birmingham grammars have been using Durham CEM papers. And examples are on-line already. I don't see how they can possibly be tutor-proof since they draw on the same skills that existing papers call for: wide vocabulary; knowledge of grammar; maths. confused So I don't see any decline in tutoring brought about by this change.

Personally, i find them a bit worrying because they will discriminate in favour of children who have been exposed to a wider vocab and more advanced grammatical structures (and higher-level maths) - and thus discriminate against those that haven't."


The only example online, that I know of, is the standard one that is shunted around to every consortium/school/ etc. It gives a very vague idea of the sort of thing that might be asked.

The reality of life at grammar school, is that if they aren't already at a certain level of skill and understanding of English and Maths, they might find the pace of life a little hard and become unhappy.

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tiggytape · 05/05/2013 18:55

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exoticfruits · 05/05/2013 19:13

Wonderful news. If schools don't like the tutoring, which they don't, it is up to them to do something about it and this is a good start. I would love it if tutoring didn't get any advantages.

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exoticfruits · 05/05/2013 19:14

I am glad they have woken up to the problem.

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MTSCostcoChickenFan · 05/05/2013 20:34

The last thread on tutoring was about a week ago. Various MN regulars were going on about it being cheating. Others weren't quite so direct but the general consensus was that nice parents don't tutor.

So Grin at the poster for being so [shocked] that people she considered friends didn't mention that they were tutoring.

And why do people keep going on about unscrupulous tutors. I'm not a tutor but if you came to me and said that you want me to tutor your DC for a couple of hours a week for the next fours years I would say thank you very much.

Does anyone really expect the L'Oreal woman to say 'buy the Boots version. It does the same job'?

Or 'the perfume is only worth £2. The other £28 is for advertising and the fancy bottle. The fragance there for £5 is similar' etc etc.

Tutoring seems to be the only profession where no one blame the gullible customer .

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CognitiveOverload · 05/05/2013 20:39

I went to that school. They probably dont care much abiut equality but more upset that children of lower academic ability get help through tutoring and this skews their intake. They only want the brightest...not kods who have been coached to pass and then find actually being at the school too much.

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musu · 05/05/2013 20:41

Not shocked just surprised that people I have known for 5 years didn't bother to mention it. I don't see other people's children as a threat. Rather I'm happy to celebrate their achievements but I'm learning that I'm in the minority where that is concerned. When ds was going for his scholarship I wouldn't have been upset if his friends had applied too.

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MTSCostcoChickenFan · 05/05/2013 21:02

musu - those people were probably conscious of being judged. As I've said, the consensus, at least on MN, is that nice people don't tutor.

Maybe, if their DC got in they didnt want people to say what people here on MN say ie if your DC needs tutoring to pass then they aren't that bright.

I'm just guessing at the reasons since I obviously don't know them but I highly doubt that it had anything to do with thinking that you are a threat.

I mean, unless they are a bit weird they are hardly likely to think that you are going to do hire two tutors if you ever found out that they had one. :)

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musu · 05/05/2013 21:27

That isn't the consensus where we live though. Where we live everyone tutors, I just didn't realise they booked them so early! Mind you if I were minded to put ds in for the 11+ I wouldn't book a tutor as no one knows what the new exam is going to be like.

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exoticfruits · 05/05/2013 22:28

It was bound to come- the selective schools are no longer getting the type of pupil they want because of the tutoring.

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