My feed
Premium

Please
or
to access all these features

Connect with other parents whose children are starting secondary school on this forum.

Secondary education

Have your children got into Grammar school without tutoring?

129 replies

Seasider · 08/09/2011 10:14

Hi
Live in Dorset and would like son to go to Poole Grammar, but wider question is, as above, has anyone had a child get into Grammar without paying for a private tutor?

OP posts:
Report
Yellowstone · 08/09/2011 10:34

Yes, several. As have lots of other parents at our school (a so-called 'super-selective).

Report
Seasider · 08/09/2011 10:36

Thank you. That is good to know.

OP posts:
Report
TheWomanOnTheBus · 08/09/2011 10:59

Clever children will always get in without. Middling might get in without. Poorer children can get in if they are tutored. Of course - as the schools are at pains to point out - they might then struggle when they get there (and of course may have deprived someone else of a place who might have thrived there - a middling child, not tutored, who developed late).

So - everyone - lets all stop the tutoring! Everyone benefits.

Report
slavetofilofax · 08/09/2011 11:27

My son got in without private tutoring, but we did do a couple of practice papers for each of the tests at home. He was 10th on the waiting list on allocation day, so if other people had not refused their place, he would not have got in. I feel that if we had have done more work at home, it may have made all the difference and got him the extra 2 marks that would have guaranteed him a place and saved us stress while on the waiting list.

I strongly disagree that clever children will always get in without tutoring, it very very much depends on the school, their admissions criteria, and the level of competition for each place. It may be true in grammar school areas, but it is definately not true for grammar schools that are surrounded by comprehensives.

My ds's grammar school states on it's website that they expect to have more applicants that are suitable for a place, than they have places to offer. Grammar schools that are not in grammar school areas often have the top students from 70 primary or prep schools, they are all clever children but the grammar school simply doesn't have enough space for all of them, so they take the children that score the highest on the day of the test.

Report
TheWomanOnTheBus · 08/09/2011 11:44

Ok, the cleverest children will always get in without tutoring (by definition!).

The others are all stressing themselves and their parents out by this relentless competition..... yes, tutoring may have got the extra 2 marks but then what if those below in the rankings had just that much extra tutoring so they got an additional 3 marks ....

All too stressful really.

Report
slavetofilofax · 08/09/2011 12:01

I think in the type of school I'm talking about, an extra three marks through tutoring would still mean that that child was capable of keeping up with the standard at a grammar school. The point is that while the cleverest may get a place, there are still very clever children that won't. I find that quite sad.

Some parents (like me! Smile) have reasons other than the academic standard for wanting their children to go to a grammar school rather than a comp, and while I agree that all the competition is too much stress, if you know that the temporary stress is going to make a huge difference to your child's education and theri happiness over the next seven years, then it doesn't seem that big a price to pay.

Report
Jinx1906 · 08/09/2011 12:46

We had no choice but to tutor our DC. The state primary schools in our area are completely out performed by the private schools. A large share of the kids taking up GS places in Bexley comes from Indies. I once saw a breakdown from the council and the results were Shock. If the standard of teaching in our Primary schools would be of the same level as the Indies we would not have to result to tutoring.

Report
Kiggy · 08/09/2011 13:46

Yes they can. It also does not need to be a stressful situation either. I have 2 children at grammar schools and it was definitely the best thing for them. One morning of exams was less stressful for my son than another 7 years of being bullied for being a nerd!

Report
CustardCake · 08/09/2011 13:48

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

Seasider · 08/09/2011 14:15

I am working with DS at home as tutoring is not viable for us. I hope that he will get into his choice of Grammar as that is where most of his closest friends are aiming for and I think that the local comp is not going to be the place for him to enjoy himself or thrive...

And I would have let him go to a comprehensive if we had a better one near us, so it's not a snobby thing!

OP posts:
Report
Jinx1906 · 08/09/2011 14:28

We didn't have a tutor, we used the tutoring school of mum and dad. But even if we didn't want our DC to go to GS we would have done the same, because sadly the primary school was not very good.

Report
slavetofilofax · 08/09/2011 14:30

Completely agree CustardCake.

Seasider, I totally see where you are coming from and why this is important to you. Our local comp is actually a very good one, so although I wouldn't have been devestated if ds had to go there, I know that it wouldn't serve him as well as the grammar.

I know people on here say the 11+forum is quite scary, and I know I found it intimidating when I first looked, but it is very good for getting information about the particular scool you are aiming for. 11+ tests vary greatly throughout the country, so it's good to find out as much as you can about the tests your ds will be taking so you can prepare him as best you can.

Report
DollyTwat · 08/09/2011 14:32

I've just arranged a tutor for ds1, he is very bright, gets A's always and when he took an assessment for the tutor he got 78%

I think he would pass without the tutoring, however the verbal reasoning skills aren't covered at school, so he won't learn these in a structured way. He really wants to go to grammar school so I think it's worth tutoring him in these skills. The competition for our grammar is very tough so if he knows how to go about answering the questions he's not at a disadvantage

I think it's a shame that primary schools aren't supporting those children who want to take the exam

Report
Hullygully · 08/09/2011 14:37

Yes. But do practice papers at home so they know the types of questions and techniques - it really really matters. And there's loads of free tests on the 11+ plus forum.

Report
Hullygully · 08/09/2011 14:37
Report
DollyTwat · 08/09/2011 14:39

snogs Hully

Report
TheWomanOnTheBus · 08/09/2011 14:49

custardcake makes a great case for abolishing the grammars. It all seems so random and therefore unfair for all the reason she says ....

Report
slavetofilofax · 08/09/2011 14:53

Wouldn't it be better if they provided more Grammars, so that every child who would be better suited to that type of education would be able to access it?

Report
CustardCake · 08/09/2011 15:00

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

Hullygully · 08/09/2011 15:01

Sadly they are great for the children that do go to them, and shit for all the rest.

Report
TheWomanOnTheBus · 08/09/2011 15:01

But no matter how many you have you then have the problem of deciding (testing) who is "suited" and who is not and so the randomness at the boundary will still exist, and there will always be limited space and so unless there is a particularly "dense" year then competition (and spiral of tutoring) will come in again.

Better to have schools (some parts of the Uk are fully comp after all) which find the right path for all children with flexiblity to move around, so its not just a question of do you hit the mark on one test at age 11.

But lets not hijack the thread. (my fault, I admit).

Report
CustardCake · 08/09/2011 15:13

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

Don’t want to miss threads like this?

Weekly

Sign up to our weekly round up and get all the best threads sent straight to your inbox!

Log in to update your newsletter preferences.

You've subscribed!

Hullygully · 08/09/2011 15:21

Not round my way they don't - the parents send em private if they don't get in. The comps get the rest.

Report
TheWomanOnTheBus · 08/09/2011 15:30

The local "secondary moderns" you mean (not comprehensive if there are local grammar schools at the school is not then all ability) ..... hmmm... so if the comps/SMs (whatever they are called) are so good, why the competition to get into the grammars.

Seems all a lot of stress and money over nothing then.

Report
CustardCake · 08/09/2011 15:40

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

Please create an account

To comment on this thread you need to create a Mumsnet account.