Are your children’s vaccines up to date?

Set a reminder

Please or to access all these features

Primary education

Join our Primary Education forum to discuss starting school and helping your child get the most out of it.

when does school become compulsory for a child whose 5th b/day is in hols.

13 replies

madamearcati · 21/10/2009 12:57

DD is 5 on xmas eve , so I know the rule is that fulltime ed is compulsory the term after their 5 th b/day .Is a holiday during the hols classes as falling in the term before or the term after ?

OP posts:
Are your children’s vaccines up to date?
throckenholt · 21/10/2009 13:02

In England and Wales, most local education authorities have a policy of accepting children into school at the beginning of the term during which the child becomes five. However, the child does not have to attend school until the beginning of the term following their fifth birthday.

MunchMummy · 21/10/2009 13:02

I would say she has to start school in January.

risingstar · 21/10/2009 13:02

would be the term after their birthday, regardless of when that falls, so January in your case. really, any birthday that falls after the start of the previous term ( so 1st September) would fall on the next one (1st January).

Clary · 22/10/2009 00:22

actually throckeholt more and more LEAs are moving to one-point entry (ie the Sept of year the child turns 5) and a good thing too IMO.

madamarcati yr DD should be full-time educated (HE also an option) by January. Is she not at school already then?

madamearcati · 22/10/2009 10:01

She is at school - I was just wondering with regard to days off.She sometimes has a half day off when she gets overtired and obviously won't be able to do that xmas.
thanks for that information everyone

OP posts:
HSMM · 22/10/2009 10:14

School is not compulsory - education is. You can send her to school the term after her 5th birthday (unless they accept her in the September), or you can keep her at home and educate her there.

FlamingoBingo · 22/10/2009 10:24

She shouldn't be having days off like that anyway, madame. Either she's in school or she's not, regardless of her age, really, although I can understand your reasoning. But if you send her to school, you have to accept school attendance rules, don't you?

madamearcati · 22/10/2009 12:18

many of the reception children have been going home early, coming in late some days.The school are happy and in fact encourage it.Absence for non-schoolaged children is coded differently now I understand.

OP posts:
madamearcati · 22/10/2009 12:19

pressed submit too early

It is in no-ones interest to have an over tired child in the classroom is it ?

OP posts:
RubyrubyrubysAScaryOldBint · 22/10/2009 12:24

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

henryhuggins · 22/10/2009 12:27

agree, a tired child is not great to have in a classroom - i regularly have this (secondary) where the kids have been up far too late, usually watching inappropriate tv shows, or playing computer games. they are so grumpy

but surely at this age(I have a daughter who turns 5 in dec too) a morning at school shouldn't make them so tired you have to keep them off? what are they doing the rest of the day? did your dd go to preschool last year?

madamearcati · 22/10/2009 12:41

henry Buggins - she is in school 9-3.30 not just mornings.I don't think its unusual for DCs to be very tired their first term at school.She went to playgroup 3 mornings a week last year 9.15 to 11.45. So a big jump.

OP posts:
henryhuggins · 22/10/2009 13:08

sorry - thought she was just attending am.

New posts on this thread. Refresh page
Swipe left for the next trending thread