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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To feel completely destroyed

220 replies

Itsgettingbetter · 16/01/2017 11:09

My 11 year old DS did not qualify for a bursary place at his two independent school choices. Sounds relatively minor writing it down but it is proving a trigger for larger issues I'm working through.

My parents and siblings are struggling with various difficulties and are all isolated. Becoming a single parent at 24 I vowed to would whatever it took to give my son hope, happiness and security.

When he started primary I returned to full time education having previously left uni after 1 year. This time I achieved a first, got a full scholarship to my masters at a top uni and am now doing my PhD which is fully funded too. I am confident that I will have a successful, fulfilling career at the end of it.

But that is still some way off (2 and a half years to go until I finish the doctorate) and I feel bitter and disappointed that I am not in position to pay for the educational experience I feel my son - who is bright and thoroughly enjoys school - deserves. The school he had his heart set on said they would interview for him for fee paying place. The fees are the same amount as my scholarship - it's practically unworkable.

We have been working towards this goal for years and I feel like an idiot for striving for something that it seems was never really in reach. One of the schools is just around the corner and it will be upsetting to pass it, knowing we're not in the position to access it. DS cried when I told him yesterday but all things considering is taking it quite well. He woke up with a smile on his face today - which I admire him hugely for. I am being positive for him but privately I feel distraught and stupidly naive. I have little support in real life and am tired of battling on alone.

OP posts:
throwingpebbles · 16/01/2017 12:04

Was this a tutor you were paying for? Sounds like she was exploiting you Sad

Most very bright and focussed children can succeed wherever they are - extra study on their own /extra tuition might help. I've just been reading a book about a boy who educated himself and made it into an Ivy League university

However, I get why you wanted this for your son - agree with recommendation up thread for christs hospital school: worth investigating

Ivanaflump · 16/01/2017 12:04

Yes 'yawn' nice to see your contributions to support the op though. 'Lol'

CoraPirbright · 16/01/2017 12:06

PlasticBertrand makes an excellent suggestion:
Send him to Christ's Hospital school. Sounds like he'd be perfectt for it and it for him.

CaraAspen · 16/01/2017 12:06

"NavyandWhite

Yes Cara I know some private schools aren't good, but I'm guessing the OP thinks the one she picked is!"

People were making a general point. Obviously. We have no way of knowing, in fact, whether the particular school is in fact "good" or not. We cannot exactly study the league tables, can we?

NerrSnerr · 16/01/2017 12:08

I'm not familiar with London schools admissions but is it as simple as just sending him to Christ Hospital School, is it over or under subscribed? I'm just thinking it would be building him up for another disappointment if he didn't get in and he may feel he has failed by ending up going to a normal state school.

paxillin · 16/01/2017 12:08

I imagine the paying parents would be quite angry if going to public school for free or heavily subsidised was more than a remote possibility.

CaraAspen · 16/01/2017 12:08

"Ivanaflump

Yes 'yawn' nice to see your contributions to support the op though. 'Lol'"

It's not a question of blindly supporting anyone, though, is it? This perception that inevitably all private schools are superior to all state schools is frankly wrong and misguided.

PollytheDolly · 16/01/2017 12:09

Wow! Don't be so hard on yourself. With a mum like you, he will be fine.

Good luck with your PHD and I know it's disappointing re the school but with you as his role model he can't go wrong Flowers

NavyandWhite · 16/01/2017 12:09

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

rightsofwomen · 16/01/2017 12:12

Bursaries are means tested.
I applied for my son's bursary once he had secured a conditional position.
Are you saying he did not get a position, or that he got a position and then didn't get the bursary?

Did they give you some idea of the sorts of bursaries they awarded?

I am a single parent, with a pretty good professional salary. My son was granted an 85% bursary. Do the schools you applied for just not give many bursaries out because I imagine your income and assets must be quite considerably lower than mine.

SoupDragon · 16/01/2017 12:12

Yes, the pain of sending your beloved child to state school because you can't afford private. It's a pain shared by so many.

Oh, the pain of having an enourmous chip on one's shoulder... it's a pain shared by so many.

CaraAspen · 16/01/2017 12:12

Private schools set entrance examinations. We don't know whether, in fact, the examination was passed. The OP's soon had a tutor so presumably that tutor was preparing him for the examination. It would be helpful to know at least this much in order to assess the situation fairly.

alltouchedout · 16/01/2017 12:13

Oh, I think YABVU.

I am not in position to pay for the educational experience I feel my son - who is bright and thoroughly enjoys school - deserves

Don't all children deserve a good educational experience? Why should only those whose parents can afford it, or who can win bursaries, have a good educational experience? Don't children of poor families or lower educational ability deserve a good education?

Why have you led your son to believe that a fee paying school is so superior? Do you want him to now feel that he has failed to achieve your goals for him and will go to a school that will fail to give him the educational experience he needs and consequently will fail to succeed in life?

There are excellent state schools. And to be frank, bright kids with supportive parents can achieve in any setting.

Please for the sake of your son, change your approach. I really feel for him- not because he won't be going to the school you'd prefer for him, but because you've built up this idea for him that he needed to win a bursary to go to a fee paying school to do well. That just isn't true.

CaraAspen · 16/01/2017 12:14

Corrected:

Private schools set entrance examinations. We don't know whether, in fact, the examination was passed. The OP's son had a tutor so presumably that tutor was preparing him for the examination...
It would be helpful to know at least this much in order to assess the situation fairly.

Ivanaflump · 16/01/2017 12:15

Cara can you pinpoint where anyone has said that? In your blind frenzy to bang your anti private school drum without actually offering anything to the op, I wonder if you imagined that?

Some private schools are shit, some state are. What is your point exactly?
The op is obviously not wanting a discussion on the general merits of the independent sector, she is asking for support for a very specific situation.

Don't let that stop you with your very helpful 'lols' and 'yawns' though.

CaraAspen · 16/01/2017 12:16

"NavyandWhite

Well I guess the OP has done her homework regarding the school eh?"

Do you know this? Has she said? Never presume anything.

WorraLiberty · 16/01/2017 12:17

Excuse my ignorance but what's different about Christ's Hospital School?

I've never heard of it so I Googled and all I can see is that it's a private school with a very recent staff sex abuse case?

lyricaldancer · 16/01/2017 12:18

The OP hasn't replied to any questions regarding the bursary/qualification/entrance exam so far. I asked early on in the thread. OP?

angelofmylifetime · 16/01/2017 12:18

I am so sorry that you and your son did not get the bursary you hoped for. I guess my niave answer would be to suggest you return to work in the hope you can fund this yourself. However, I am sure after studying so hard yourself you would not wish to do that. I am actually a little unsure as to how you manage financially when you are studying yourself, but I congratulate you for being able to manage everything.

All I can say is at your son's age I did get a bursary to a top independant school that myself and my parents had set all our hearts on. However the reality was I hated every single second, and was unable to make friends or fit in. I then transferred to a state school where I loved every second, made wonderful friends, had wonderful teachers, eventually obtained ten A grade O'levels and became head girl. I guess it was just meant to be, so maybe the school your son will go to is meant to be also.

Good luck to you both.

lyricaldancer · 16/01/2017 12:19

I've never heard of Christ's Hospital School either.

Ivanaflump · 16/01/2017 12:19

This should come up in the first couple of google hits

www.telegraph.co.uk/education/9601243/Christs-Hospital-exemplary-education-without-the-fees.html

NavyandWhite · 16/01/2017 12:19

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

CaliforniaHorcrux · 16/01/2017 12:19

To click on a thread saying 'to feel completely destroyed' was kind of expecting to read about a death or terminal illness diagnosis

I get it that you're disappointed

Trethew · 16/01/2017 12:19

All is not lost!

In five years time he will be doing his GCSE's and you will hopefully be in employment in your chosen career.

After this you can re-assess the situation with specific regard to his performance, his potential and his chosen subjects, and select the best place for his A levels taking your financial situation into account as well. It's a normal time to change, lots of children move for A levels.

Ivanaflump · 16/01/2017 12:21

The sex abuse case dates from the 80s and 90s. My dds state school has a similar case going from the same era.

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