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Secondary education

Connect with other parents whose children are starting secondary school on this forum.

Best backpack for secondary for girls?

28 replies

Bluebell99 · 24/08/2013 16:47

Hi dd is going into year 7 in our small town, struggling with what backpack to get her. My ds year 10 has a wengar swiss army type one, not sure what the girls do. I think they may carry fashion type bags but as my dd has quite a walk, would rather something a bit more practical. Are the paperchase rucksacks too childish?! my dd quite likes the Cath kidson birds one, but it is quite expensive £42. Don't want to get something that she may be teased about. Thanks for any suggestions.

OP posts:
FranSanDisco · 24/08/2013 16:57

DD is going into Year 8 and I know the trials and tribulations of a 'school bag'. There seems to be trends that appear as the year goes on. DD started out with a cambridge satchel that Granny bought her (mad woman who loves to shop Wink) but DD was labelled 'posh' and 'WWII' -ish. I tried to pacify her about these offensive comments without laughing. She then bought a Jansport Rucksack with her own money, which was great as by this time she was cycling to school (Spring/Summer). She now has dragged out an old Paul Franks bag (pink/shoulder strap) from year 6 and is taking this when she returns in September Confused.

Basically, my advice is buy something you may end up replacing in a few months so keep it affordable Grin.

BTW we have had similar with the shoes!

monikar · 24/08/2013 17:05

I bought DD a bright pink Nike backpack from Argos for year 7 which was acceptable at the time, but this was 6 years ago. I may be hopelessly out of touch. I agree with Fran - don't spend too much as it is likely that you will need to replace it quite quickly.

Bluebell99 · 24/08/2013 17:07

Thanks FranSanDisco. Gosh, not even thought about shoes yet! Saw some nice satchels in Superdry, but is Superdry a bit passe now, and also expensive and the quality I have found to be rubbish (broken zip on hoody). She really likes the cath kidston bag, but it isn't that practical and is expensive. It's a minefield :)

OP posts:
ffsx2 · 24/08/2013 17:14

Anna Smith Bags all the rage here (Norfolk). Only £20 (don't think that's outrageous).

Bluebell99 · 24/08/2013 17:37

FFsx2, are the Anna Smith ones the owl print ones?

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HmmAnOxfordComma · 24/08/2013 17:43

I third the idea of taking an old or cheap one until you find out what's 'in'. At our school (quite geeky grammar), the girls have a mix of proper Cath Kidstons (all styles), 'fake' CKs, real or fake Cambridge satchels and regular sporty back packs.

Anthracite · 24/08/2013 17:59

My children all have proper ergonomic backpacks. They have sections for everything, and are designed so that the weight is distributed properly.

lotsofdirections · 24/08/2013 18:07

As a secondary teacher and mother of two girls I would buy something cheap from Primark for the first weeks until your daughter gets a feel for what she would feel comfortable with. Where I work satchels and Cath Kidston are all the rage but two years ago it was Paul's Boutique and messenger bags. However for shoes brogues are the way to go!

ffsx2 · 24/08/2013 18:25

yes, owl print, how did you guess? Wink
In blue of course.
Got mine on Ebid, btw, with delivery same price as local ones.

CheesyPeasForTea · 24/08/2013 20:37

DD decided to go for a slouchy backpack for year 8 after getting through two Paul Frank messenger bags in year 7. She rejected all the Anna Smith style owl/butterfly designs though as "(insert name) has that one already".

She has gone for
this
backpack, from the Victoria's Secret Pink store in the Trafford Centre. It is big enough to hold all her kit, seems quite sturdy (time will tell!) and she loves the design. It cost £40 Shock but I contributed £25 and she paid the rest.

I was talking to another Mum whose sixth form DD had a Cath Kidston backpack. That was also quite expensive but again she made her DD pay a contribution towards it, and it had lasted her the whole school year.

Bluebell99 · 24/08/2013 23:31

Ooh I like that one Cheesypeas, doubt we have that shop near us though.

OP posts:
microcosmia · 25/08/2013 02:07

I don't have girls but almost all school going girls I see have Jansport bags which seem to be rigeur here. They aren't cheap but last for years and do make a difference to the weight issue. I was amazed at the difference when D's got one on recommendation from a physio. I know kids who used their Jansport bag from school right through college. Of course if they're not fashionable in your DD's school then forget what I just said...!

NoComet · 25/08/2013 02:23

Yes to cheap and cheerful, DD2 has used all sorts, but generally reverts to her original cheep Adidas messenger bag. Grr she has a much nicer animal ruck sack.

DD1 just takes a sensible plain rucksack, but DD1 was born immune to giving a fig what her peer group thinks.

Tigerblue · 25/08/2013 19:42

My daughter started Year 7 last September and went through two fashion bags the first time, one broke on the handles, the other wore at the bottom, both due to the weight of what she has to carry. I then insisted she had a rucksack and we got one from Animal - I'm pleased to say it's still in use! Her friend swapped over to a rucksack at around the same time as she'd had two fashion bags go on her and her other friend has a satchel type bag but it's a real squeeze to get everything in.

Dancingqueen17 · 25/08/2013 20:17

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

Anthracite · 25/08/2013 20:59

I take the view that I am not my daughters' friend, therefore I do not concern myself with the latest fashion or what other girls are doing,

As a mother, I am concerned with health, so will get a backpack that will not give back, neck or shoulder pains. I don't care if it is fashionable or not. Really.

I think girls like to have prudish parents who cafe about them.

NoComet · 26/08/2013 10:54

Anthracite, you may not dds friend. DD2 wouldn't ever be her geeky mothers friend. However, do not be her enemy, over things that don't matter.

Justshabbynochic · 26/08/2013 11:00

Anthracite, where shall I pin your badge? Hmm

FranSanDisco · 26/08/2013 11:08

StarBallBunny, that statement makes so much sense Smile. I think Anthracite feels it's an 'ergonomic back pack' or we are failing parents Hmm. What is with the OTT replies on MN lately?

ImATotJeSuisUneTot · 26/08/2013 11:25

At least actual backpacks are fashionable now - much better than messenger style bags.

Anthracite, even ergonomically designed backpack straps loosen enough to hang about bottom height, making them cool. Grin

CockyFox · 26/08/2013 11:26

Hi, I'm not a secondary parent but I do live next to the local secondary. I haven't seen a backpack on a girl for a long time in July they were all carrying quilted Paul's Boutique handbags. They are often carrying their books separately as the bags are very small.
Oh yes and they don't wear coats even in the depths of winter with all that snow it was blazers with a scarf and gloves.

ImATotJeSuisUneTot · 26/08/2013 11:27

Isn't it strange how fashions travel - it was PB bags here about 18months ago. Now it's embroidered Aztec-y backpacks.

Clary · 28/08/2013 22:20

Just bought my DD an owl backpack from Amazon, cost £15 which I thought was OK.

She says a friend has one similar and it has lasted really well, a cheaper Primark one someone had broke after a few weeks.

Her yr 7 one was a sporty pink one from Sports Direct or somewhere, but that was about £12 I think so if this one lasts and she likes it I am happy.

BackforGood · 29/08/2013 00:17

My dd going into Yr7 has just bought a messenger style bag, on the advice of her sister who has been at the school 3 yrs.
Anthracite - my ds has always had a back pack, but it doesn't mean he carries it with "the weight is distributed properly" - I don't expect the "ergonomic design" works quite so well once a teen has it hanging off the one shoulder.
You have to get the balance right between 'being the parent not the friend' and setting them up to be visibly 'different' or 'dressed by their Mummy' as soon as they come into sight. It's a fine line. I'm not into following fashion, but I'm not into setting my dc up for a fall either.

3nationsfamily · 29/08/2013 14:44

At my DD school Vans are all the rage for both shoes and backpacks. She has this one which is sturdy and big enough for all her stuff.

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