No. Dh went to academic schools, some private, some selective. Did very well and graduated, followed almost immediately by a breakdown.
The amount of unhappiness in his life is depressing in itself.
But who knows? He has continued to work along an academic line, taking professional examinations and surviving in a pressured role. He can now work for himself, which works better IMO, as he has that rare professional qualification so can charge a good rate for a smaller amount of hours.
I wonder if the habits of discipline and order he got into have paid off in terms of keeping him somehow on track despite some truly appalling depressive and psychotic episodes.
The genetic pattern in his family is pretty strong. Maybe he needed that strong structure to achieve anything in life? I type a lot of referral letters for people who have illnesses like him, and they are existing, self-medicating on drugs and alcohol, achieving nothing in terms of productive work, voluntary or paid.
I feel in a quandary about what's best to do for ds - I am prioritising stability and local schools as I still have close friends I met the day I went to school who have been all the way through primary, secondary and university with me - I think that kind of network is very, very important. But I do believe in exams as proof of what you can do, even seeing that dh is practically allergic to them now after so many.