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Secondary education

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Are superselectives for the very able or only for geniuses?

110 replies

Ouluckyduck · 06/03/2012 20:58

because my dd is very able, but not a genius or a prodigy. Will she fit in?

OP posts:
shootingstarz · 09/03/2012 12:58

DD attended a non selective independent school, I moved her to a top of the league highly selective school because I thought it would be a better choice of school academically. She went to the super selective for 3 weeks the work was a year behind her non selective school in every subject, needless to say I moved her back to her old school where she is non thriving in every subject.

Yellowtip · 09/03/2012 13:01

Presumably the GCSE and A Level results from the non selective indie far exceed those of the top of the league highly selective state school then shootingstarz? By how much?

Foxton · 09/03/2012 13:06

Oh yes that would make sense - I would have just left school by 1989 and I didn't live in a grammar area at the time so it probably all passed me by.

shootingstarz · 09/03/2012 13:06

Opps I meant now thriving.

thetasigmamum · 09/03/2012 13:16

@Yellowtip I only know about the catholic schools. And it's only from what I remember older children talking about because I was the first comp year. BUT as I remember it, the boys with the highest scores went to John Fisher, the boys with the lower scores went to St Josephs - so if you were a boy your choice was Purley or Buelah Hill. Not great if you lived in Waddon like I did. The top scoring girls went to St Anns I think but Coloma got better results so....And of course Coloma swallowed up St Anns. St Anns always had fee paying people too though (until it merged with Coloma) so maybe that was it - perhaps it operated like Trinity and Whitgift and scooped up the very top 11+ scores. There is a partner in my firm who grew up not very far away from me who went to Trinity because of scoring very high on the 11+.

Yellowtip · 09/03/2012 13:17

Three weeks isn't giving it much of a shot but at least it would have helped the child who filled her place.

Yellowtip · 09/03/2012 13:19

That was the beauty of the direct grant system thetasigmamum. It bought me a place at Croydon High.

thinneratforty · 09/03/2012 13:20

MMM - if NW or StO, then yes, my area!

Think I'm in MMM and Pooka's area also, thanks for the tips about NW open evening.

Yellowtip · 09/03/2012 13:21

Mind you, I think it's heyday is over. I'm not sure if I helped the decline.

thetasigmamum · 09/03/2012 13:34

@Yellowtip Croydon catholics were just so lucky to have Coloma, although obviously not everybody could go there. But in those days St Mary's wasn't bad (I understand things have changed though :( )

shootingstarz · 09/03/2012 13:47

Yellowtip I know 3 weeks is not a long time but when things are drastically behind it?s not worth waiting.

Carbonel · 09/03/2012 13:50

Yellowtyip - yes you are right of course, the system it could be a lot worse Wine

clucky80 · 09/03/2012 13:51

I went to a superselective grammar school in Barnet in North London and am by no means a genius! I did have a tutor in my last year of primary school who I remember did some English work with me, comprehensions etc and maths and I had to follow some work books. The entrance process for me was an English exam and maths exam and if you passed this test you and your parents were interviewed by the Head (individually) where I had to read a piece that was given to me and was then asked questions on it and was asked general questions about myself. I was probably fairly bright in primary school and English was my strong point and I loved reading. My parents were told that at the age of 10 I had a reading age of 16 etc. My maths wasn't up to the same standards but was good enough to get me into the school. My sister also attended the school and left in 2004. Her entrance exam also included the reasoning tests. She had a tutor and from what I can remember she was tested on things that definitely wouldn't have been taught at that stage in primary school (pythagoras theorem springs to mind but I cannot say for definite!). She is extremely bright and has done very well and is working in Law now. She has a fantastic memory which is something that is always particularly useful when taking exams! I would say that about a fifth or quarter of my year group (90 pupils per year) went to Oxbridge and everyone in the whole year bar one, went to university. I think that attending a grammar motivated me to work harder than if I had been in my local comp (which had a terrible reputation) as it was such a competitive environment. I was distinctly average for the school though! What was good for me was that the school was v small and pastoral care was very good - I had much ill health and had to miss quite a lot of time from school and if I had been in a much bigger school I may have been 'lost'. In terms of geniuses there were maybe 1 or 2 in the year who really stood out but there were more people who would perform spectacularly in one or two particular subjects but would not be 'genius-like' across the board. It depends on what you mean by genius though as I would probably define an 11 year old with a capability of getting into Oxbridge a genius ie. very rare.

CecilyP · 09/03/2012 13:57

I wouldn't have thought 3 weeks was enough to establish that the work was a year behind in every subject - how on earth would you judge with a subject like, say, geography?

Yellowtip, when there was a selective system, there was definitely a pecking order; with the Direct Grant schools at the top, the Voluntary Aided schools in the middle and the County Grammars at the bottom.

Yellowtip · 09/03/2012 14:07

shootingstarz I'm really curious about the relative results of the two schools.

clucky80 that's an unusual measure of genius! I would say that an 11 year old applying to Oxford or Cambridge has a parental background to pity rather than an intellect to envy.

clucky80 · 09/03/2012 14:38

yellowtip I am by no means saying that is an intellect to envy and what I had said is a 'capability'. The point I am trying to get across is that to me 'genius level' would be a child who say at the age of 11 is showing the intellect of an 18 year old/Einstein/Stephen Hawkings! I was just trying to use an extreme example. I do feel really sorry for the kids you see who are being pushed to do a gsce at age 7 say and you do wonder what happens to them as they grow into adulthood...
I was just saying to the OP that experience in my school (which was quite a time ago) showed that very able students were able to pass the entrance tests and did do very well and therefore I would think that her DD would fit in in such an environment.

andisa · 09/03/2012 15:14

My experience of super selective is pupils are interesting and on the whole well behaved. Lots of opportunities for extra curricular because the teachers are no too tired from managing behaviour. Some exciting initiatives but do agree that teaching standards are bit below your high flying comp. Pupils cope, put up with it but some teachers just talk - not really what should be going on in a 2012 school. Some teachers get away with being less than dynamic.

thetasigmamum · 09/03/2012 15:16

@andisa how many super selectives are you basing your comments on? And comparing to how many (and which) 'high flying comps'?

kensingtonia · 09/03/2012 15:26

Having a DD at a super selective and one at a high flying comp I do agree with Andisa that the teachers at the comp do definitely try hard to plan lessons that are very innovative and interesting. I don't know if they are better or worse than those at the super selective which has more traditional teaching methods, just different.

thetasigmamum · 09/03/2012 15:31

I have a DD at a super selective and a DS at the local comp (which although I wouldn't describe it as high flying is the best comp in the area and one of the top 4 state schools in the county). I have no comment on the ways the teachers at either school plan or deliver their lessons, whether they are innovative, interesting, boring, traditional. I haven't attended any of those lessons and anyway, I'm not a teacher, so how would I possibly know?

Both my kids are very happy at school and both seem to be doing well (DS is only in Y7)

andisa · 09/03/2012 15:42

Work in a grammar. DD at super selective. DS at high flying comp. Worked in indie, high result comp and challenging comp. Work near a super-selective and we are compared - so I do have some experience to base my opinions on.

DD loves her school. I'm happy. Would prefer that some of her lessons were not so uninspired though - tests, silence and complaining does the latin teacher! Can happen anywhere but they seem to get away with it more in super selectives methinks.

kensingtonia · 09/03/2012 15:44

At DD2s school, they have parent evenings where they show videos of lessons that have been filmed, give out lesson plans and talk about in in some detail about how they teach. DD1 describes her lessons in a way which makes me think they are similar to the format I had at my old school many years ago.

breadandbutterfly · 09/03/2012 17:10

Thinking about my earlier post, I suppose the issue is not whether the kids who get into grammar schools are all geniuses - they're absolutely not, and I say that confidently as a non-genius grammar school girl! - but whether bright children (or indeed even geniuses) fail to get into grammar schools. The answer there is simply yes - as there are more bright pupils who under the old standards would have been classed as 'grammar school material' than there are places.

So it falls to a single set of exams on a single day to sort out the wheat from the chaff - no surprise that some of the wheat misses out because of having a bad day or because their skills aren't adequately assessed or assessed at all in those particular exams.

The solution = more grammar schools!

It's very clear to me that I am not the only fan of grammar schools. Given how popular they are and how oversubscribed, it is singularly odd that no political party supports their return. Can't see this govt doing it as they are only interested in a good education for the rich and/or to benefit their friends who can squeeze some cash out of the state system. :(

Anyone joining me in a campaign for their return??

andisa · 09/03/2012 17:29

Not sure grammar system is fair - creams off certain type from certain background. However, competitive comps are also about house prices!

Saying that, I want my kids in settled schools with exciting learning and a record of academic success - feel I pay to get that, house price, tutors!

System is not fair but we have to live within it.

My mum would join your shout for grammars, went to a super selective grammar, all those years ago, from a docker's family on a housing estate - feels it gave her a ticket to a different world and has blessed her all her life!. She's overjoyed her DGD joined her in grammar school pursuit.

breadandbutterfly · 09/03/2012 18:37

Both my parents-in-law, who came fron uneducated working class families, made good in the grammar system. My uncle who came here as a penniless refugee became an Oxford Professor via the grammar school system. And so many more.

I think everyone should be entitled to an education that suits them - not everyone is academically interested and lumping together those who are with those who aren't makes everyone's lives hard - the bright, the non-academic and not least the teachers!

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