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Are there guidelines for how often a child should be in a composite class ?

10 replies

taylok · 22/06/2011 13:12

Hi
I've got all this to look forward to as DS is just 4, but my nephew is being placed in a composite class for the 3rd year in a row; are there any guidelines as to how often a kid can be put in a composite class if a single year class is available ? And is there any guidance on the age range within a compsite ? I'd read somewhere it should be no more than 12 months ? We're in Scotland.
Ta much

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hannahsaunt · 22/06/2011 13:16

My ds1 will have been in a composite class for 6 of his 7 primary years. The only year not was P2 and thereafter it has been with the same group of children who have been kept together. It has been absolutely fantastic and we were strongly supportive, therefore, of ds2 being put into a composite. Advantage in Scotland too is that composites are capped at 25. I see no issue.

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ASByatt · 22/06/2011 13:19

I'm not aware of any limits?
Where I live, composite classes are the norm, although your post suggests that maybe things aren't working out for your nephew?

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taylok · 22/06/2011 13:25

No they aren't, he's in a class with boys almost 2 years older than him with distinct behavioural problems. I know its a sort of not in my back yard thing, but we feel he's been in there 2 years and deserves a chance at a regular class with his own friends. Oh well. ta

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rainbowtoenails · 22/06/2011 13:30

There are loads of rural school in scotland which only have composite classes so no to both your questions.

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AMumInScotland · 22/06/2011 13:33

DS was in composite classes all through, and some schools only have one or two classes to cover P1 to P7 so no there aren't any rules.

It sounds like maybe the school need to do more to reduce the impact of the children with behavioural problems though - his mum should maybe try to put pressure on from that angle.

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RustyBear · 22/06/2011 13:39

You couldn't limit the age range in a composite class to 12 months, as many single year classes will have an age range of 12 months less one day (in England, oldest child born 1 September one year, youngest born 31 August the next year.)

So if you had a composite Year 3/4 class this year, there could be children in it born between 1st September 2000 and 31st August 2002 - this is quite normal, and some schools have them all the time.

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Hulababy · 22/06/2011 13:46

It would be impossible to put a cap on composite classes and even age ranges to an extent. In some very small schools composite classes is the only way a school can function to stay open.

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ASByatt · 22/06/2011 13:48

I think that the issues you describe are a feature of that particular school/class/situation rather than being attributable to the fact it's a composite class.

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JemimaMop · 22/06/2011 13:51

Composite classes are the norm here. In my DC's village school there are 4 classes: Reception (from the term after they turn 4 until the September after they turn 5, so some children are there for 5 terms), Year 1/2, Year 3/4 and Year 5/6.

The very small primary school that I went to 30 years ago only had 2 classes: one for infants and one for juniors.

I don't see any problem with them. Any class can have some rowdy children in, regardless of age range.

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LindyHemming · 22/06/2011 16:54

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