Thanks for your help iseenodust. Unfortunately there's no forest school. I'll be going into the schools again and asking exactly what they do all day. He may love it.
Lisad he's been going for two years now. I think he is no longer interested in the material there. He told me that he's limited to reading one book a day there. I think that the fact that he wanted to read more means that he probably couldn't find anything else to do or anyone else interesting to talk to.
I'm going to a conference next week on giftedness where the key note speaker is dealing with emotional and social aspects of life as a gifted child. It's for parents and teachers and looks to be very interesting. I'll enjoy it anyway and get more info about how schools treat it.
I was also thinking of going to a local educational psychologist to see what they think of the local options. I'm a bit unsure about whether to assess at this stage.
It seems that many of you do favour a child-led approach, so I think that it's homeschooling that is the issue. As I say, I don't rule anything out. It's not just because of the gifted thing that I was looking at unschooling, but because it's an option. I am going to a talk on it soon. I thought it would be interesting though to see if anyone here with a gifted child had used that approach to homeschooling.
I read John Holt's 'How Children Learn' and it's fascinating, particularly one part where he talks about a one-roomed school where the children were allowed to follow their own line of questioning as far as they wanted. One example was that the children were putting away their coats for the summer and they had to be dry-cleaned rather than washed. They asked why. This led to them discovering that wool couldn't be washed because it shrinks, to them writing to a university to borrow a microscope so they could examine strands to find out why, then they decided to look at loads of other fibers. That got them interested in weaving, so they made some cloth by writing more letters asking people to borrow tools. They got wool from a local farmer and carded it and so on. Then they thought it would be interesting to see how long it took to produce so they started working out man-hours and a unit of work. That moved them on to asking about how long it would take to make a bigger object like a suit....it moved on to colonisation and industrialisation then. It was fascinating.
As regards my comment 'he has decided not to go to school', I think that people may misinterpret my turn of phrase. It's possibly a cultural thing. I have said school-time now, come on now and used various 'tactics', but I this time he really has come to the end. There simply is no point and it seems a shame to put him in an environment he doesn't want to be in.