Hi, please do ask this on the home ed board as well. Tbh not sure how you?d use a year to h/e in order to try and be in a better school because you?ll need a chunk of that for your child to learn to adjust to self motivated learning, but h/e can definitely be used as a gateway to exam success not a barrier. It?s down to the parent and student, but you?ve the freedom to create pretty much what you want if you?re motivated to do it.
There?s a whole exam focussed/structured home ed world out there, it?s just another part of the autonomous one. There?s actually room to be wildly different from your neighbour in h/e, and while many are autonomous, there?s all sorts of variations going on, with the common theme of creating whatever works best, you just have to be pro active about being whoever you are and be grateful for the freedom to be it..
Youngest came out at the end of yr 8, from a school that didn't particularly want him doing exams and felt his maximum was a diploma and a certificate of competency.
He wanted a lot more but has some learning difficulties (and was having a very rough time) and was written off.
At first we only came across autonomous, ?less interested in exam's? families and it did feel lonely, but they were welcoming if slightly bemused at what we were seeking, but then we found the home ed exam board for exam focussed H/edders, and a structured h/e group, and became a happy patchwork and before we knew it several of our autonomous friends started doing exams too. :)
Although we didn?t plan it and just muddled our way through, son?s now on track to end up with 12 I/GCSE'?s, 6 A levels, and 1 A/S, (something our mediocre, low expectation school said half of couldn?t be done, and wouldn?t be desirable even if it could) and loads of practical stuff as well.
He's now decided he wants to go to uni and do a sturdy degree even though no one in this family?s ever done anything like that.
Don?t be afraid of being different, it could pay off more than you ever expected.