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Infant class size appeal help

27 replies

Luczlukz · 10/01/2017 17:28

Hi I've got a infant class size appeal on Thursday. The school seem to think I've got a good possibility of winning. My son should be in year 1 but he's currently at home being home educated. We walked the three hours a day to school for a year but it just became too much. We were told by admissions that year to put My daughter in the school we wanted Nathan to go to which we did. Then at the end of the year we asked admissions what we were to do as they both had different school and they had no answer which was another reason we removed him. How do I need to prepare? I'm absolutely nervous. I don't know what I should be doing. How I should be preparing? Can anyone help? Thank you

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HarveySchlumpfenburger · 10/01/2017 17:32

If it's an infant class size appeal then you are only likely to win if you can show the Local Authority has made an error and that error cost him a place.

Did the LA offer you a nearer school place or transport to the school that you were walking to previously?

tiggytape · 10/01/2017 17:42

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PatriciaHolm · 10/01/2017 17:49

Infant class size appeals can only be won under the following grounds -

  • the admissions authority made a mistake (such as not measuring your distance to school correctly)
  • the admissions criteria were unlawful
  • the decision not to admit was perverse (in a legal sense - this is very hard to show)


What grounds are you appealing under? The school shouldn't be saying anything about your success/failure of appeal - they can't support the appeal. They could come to the appeal and essentially say "yes another student is fine" but in the case of ICS appeal that's basically irrelevant, the only applicable grounds are those above.

You say a 3 hour walk - 2 round trips presumably so 45 minutes each way? How far was it in distance? If over 2 miles then at his age he would have qualified for free transport. Was this offered?

If the journey on transport was more than 45 minutes and there were no nearer schools with space, you could make the argument that he should have been placed under the Fair Access Protocol which gives the LEA power to force a more local school to offer a place even if they are technically full.

However, by removing him and home educating you have essentially put the ball in your court in terms of finding a new school for him, though most authorities will be pragmatic about it and help you find another school with space.
Luczlukz · 10/01/2017 17:55

We moved in the August before he started school. Which in affect made it the furthest school. He would of got a place at this school as its 0.3 miles away from our house and he has a supplement form. The appeal also falls under the fair access protocol as he has no school.

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tiggytape · 10/01/2017 18:38

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PatriciaHolm · 10/01/2017 18:41

We moved in the August before he started school. Which in affect made it the furthest school.

Well, that's not the fault of the LEA and not grounds for appeal. You presumably then put in a late application for schools nearer the new address, but your son was placed in a school near your old address. Did you then get on waiting lists for nearer schools?

He would of got a place at this school as its 0.3 miles away from our house and he has a supplement form.

If he had been living at that address at the time of applications/place allocation, yes possibly, but he wasn't - again, not the LEAs issue nor grounds for appeal. What do you mean by a supplement form? That he was a sibling? This pushes him up the waiting list, but won't get him a place if there isn't one free.

The fact he would have got a place had you had the address at the right time is irrelevant. The appeal has to look at the decision that was made at the time it was made, with the information the LEA had at that time, and it doesn't appear from what you have said that they have made any sort of error.

The appeal also falls under the fair access protocol as he has no school.

That's not what makes it FAP. He had a school place and you withdrew him from it; at that point the LEA's responsibility to you ended, and it became your responsibility to find him a school.

If that school place was more than 2 miles/45 mins by transport away, then you have a stronger argument that they made an error in not finding something closer once you had moved, or considering him under FAP once you had made them officially aware of your new address if no nearer school had a place. Was the distance in excess of this? Were any other schools offered once you made the LEA aware of your move?

You also need to bear in mind that consideration under FAP doesn't necessarily mean a place at the school of your choice. The LEA will place a child under FAP at the school they consider best placed to take an extra, which won't necessarily be the one you want.

tiggytape · 10/01/2017 18:42

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PatriciaHolm · 10/01/2017 18:46

PS -reading my response back it sounds a little harsh and I don't mean to be.

However, I sit on appeals panels, and as such am well aware how hard ICS appeals are to win - I think the national average is less than 5% of ICS appeals are won. In many cases parents simply don't seem to understand the rules under which ICS appeals are heard, so I've tried to be as clear as I can. On the face of it, you don't seem to have grounds under ICS to win. However, you never know what will come up at appeal, and it's always worth a try.

Just also make sure he is on the waiting list for all schools you would accept too - as a sibling he is likely to be high on the list for the school anyway.

tiggytape · 10/01/2017 18:58

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Luczlukz · 10/01/2017 18:59

We always knew it was a long shot. But I'm not willing to travel to two school in opposite directions and pay out in excess of £300 in childcare fees. It's not a major issue him being at home. I would prefer that than him being sent to the wrong school like he was in reception who will do little to help him with his behavioural issues. Yes it did sound harsh. I believe I asked how to prepare not if my case was right.

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Luczlukz · 10/01/2017 19:01

Also I'm willing to wait. If it take 2-3 years for him to get a spot in this school then so be it.

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tiggytape · 10/01/2017 19:05

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PatriciaHolm · 10/01/2017 19:07

If your appeal is on Thursday, then presumably you have admitted your documentation and appeal detail already? Technically the panel don't have to consider anything you submit on the day.

In terms of preparation, the best thing you can do is make sure you have a clear timeline of exactly what has happened, dates, distances involved, and clear reasons under the grounds above specifically as to why your son should have been given a place.

As Tiggy said, the panel will treat you fairly, but are bound by law and as such will need to see that the grounds you offer meet the ICS regulations.

tiggytape · 10/01/2017 19:08

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Luczlukz · 10/01/2017 19:42

We're not interested in any school but this one. We've been around all the school in our local area and this is the best one suited to his needs. As I said befor I'm not having two children in different schools as in two years my third child will be going to school. I will keep him at home and home school him. I will make that very much evident on Thursday. As we said we are not willing to our sons life more difficult.

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PatriciaHolm · 10/01/2017 19:48

I will make that very much evident on Thursday.

I would be wary of coming across too militant about that. Some panels can interpret that as bearing on blackmail - "if you don't give me a place then I won't send him to school". I would just be matter of fact about it if anyone asks what the fallback position is if he doesn't get the place. It's entirely your right to home ed of course, but as I say, panels have seen too many parents try to use it as extra leverage unfortunately.

HarveySchlumpfenburger · 10/01/2017 19:49

I wouldn't bother making that evident. It will play no part in your appeal and may make it look like you are trying to force the panel's hand.

Luczlukz · 10/01/2017 19:57

I didn't with draw him for leveridge I with drew him because of the strain the walking was doing to my mental health. I with drew him because he was at a school who thought that parents verbally abusing me in front of my children weren't their responsibility. I with drew him because I was constantly having to chase the learning mentor to follow through with things that had been discussed and agreed soon in meetings. To be frank I was that frightened to go in the playground I put him in breakfast club just to avoid parents. This is what I will be telling them. It more than likely won't work but I have to try.

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PatriciaHolm · 10/01/2017 20:22

Does your son have an EHCP? If you can get it to name the school you want, then that will get him a place - but it may be a long process.

Witchend · 10/01/2017 20:28

Luczlukz I think you're taking the advice here not how it's intended.

What they're saying is that if you go the way of "If you don't give me the school I want I will home school" it often is used (so tends to come across) along the lines of your child saying "if you don't give me some sweets then I'll throw my sandwich on the floor."

As an adult your reaction to that child is not going to be "oh in that case you can have sweets" in fact my dc have learnt that that means that they won't get sweets even if I intended to give them afterwards.

And the panel can have that reaction, if you try that too.

If they ask what you're planning on doing, then saying "actually I'm homeschooling until he gets a place" is fine.
But telling them how dreadful the other place is (you're appealing for a school not against that one) and sounding like you're using homeschooling as a threat may turn a panel that otherwise is well-disposed to sympathise, against you.

Luczlukz · 10/01/2017 20:36

I'm just confused by it all if I'm honest. I have no idea what to say but the school aren't helping either. Apparently the year one teacher told the kids last week that my son is starting in a weeks time! I had three lots of parents come up to me saying how pleased they are and I was like "ermm he hasn't even had his appeal yet?!"
I've had two meetings with the school to discuss my son and the supports they will need for when he starts at that school. Yet all the advice on here is no your gonna lose. So I'm totally confused.

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cantkeepawayforever · 10/01/2017 22:01

How many children are in the Year 1 class at the moment? is anyone leaving / has left?

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PatriciaHolm · 10/01/2017 22:02

The school seem to be under the impression that this is a normal prejudice case where you have to prove the prejudice of admitting to the school is less than to your son not being admitted. In that situation, then the school turning up and saying it's fine, no problem, would almost certainly result in a win.

However, if it is definitely ICS, then that is irrelevant. The law on class size cannot be overruled just because the school is happy to squeeze another one in. Are there definitely 30 children in each yr1 class?

Of course, an inexperienced panel may go down the sympathy route anyway, but strictly speaking if it is ICS there don't appear to be any grounds for appeal.

Luczlukz · 10/01/2017 22:15

They had 31 last year. 1 has left so there at 30 as it stands. But I wasn't told that when I visited the school over a year ago to put his name down for it. I had no idea it was over subscribed till my daughter started. So someone left in the summer taking it down to 30. It's all confusing. I think I'm just gonna have to turn up and see what happens.

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tiggytape · 11/01/2017 07:51

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