I know 16 children currently at Kent College who started at JKS but who have transferred to KC in the last 4 years. All of the parents have been extremely pleased with their experience to date
Some of the things they quote are:
- better SEN provision (esp dyslexia with the dedicated dyslexia unit. JKS had a great head of SEN but she left),
- more focus on maths and english (at expense of more breadth, of course)
- more personalised education at both extremes at both junior and senior school (eg one gifted child took a personalised timetable that allowed him to take 2 GSCE's 2 years early even though the school is not academically selective),
- better wrap around care for working mums (after school activities every day from 4-5 and from 5-6, with choices for each year level. Compare that to JKS with sporadic after-school - none on tuesdays and wednesdays for example - and odd choices of activity in recent years, many of which cost extra)
- no saturday school
- cheaper
I know teachers (and houseparents) in both schools and admire them all. They are all dedicated, and all have the same moans.
One thing to bear in mind is that if you have a child capable of getting into (eg) Eton, then JKS is the school to get them there, not KC, because JKS pushes kids and covers subjects such as latin and multiple MFL at an earlier age. Likewise, if you have a child who will embrace everything the school has to offer, then JKS is the kind of school that expects kids to compete for the lead in the school play, volounteer for school council, get to grade 5 or more in two instruments, ace it on the hockey pitch and hold their own academically. So, for the right kind of kid, its a great fit and an amazing experience. For more middle-of-the-road kids, the choice is far more finely balanced. Not saying that you cant do the same at KC, but the bar is different. And whether that is good or bad is very much open to debate.
Its really difficult when your kids are starting out to think of the bigger picture, and nothing is ever as straightforward as you hope. But if you have an idea of what your hopes are, then work backwards from there. Eg if you want traditional boarding or kings school at senior then head to JKS at junior, but if you know your child wont be a bright spark or super confident then maybe a wider academic ability group might be more appropriate? And if your child has a hint of SEN then think very carefully about whether JKS is the holistically pastoral place you want for your child.
And finally, dont sweat it too much (easy to say, i know). All the kids i know at both schools have all had access to fabulous educations (the kind we never experienced ourselves) and are all happy, kind, and high-achieving. And pretty much half the parents i know have ended up on a different path than they expected when they set out, anyway (especially when you throw Langton boys into the mix).
Sorry. Very verbose, but think it will all help.