Meet the Other Phone. Child-safe in minutes.

Meet the Other Phone.
Child-safe in minutes.

Buy now

Please or to access all these features

Secondary education

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

In the wrong year group at secondary

28 replies

Dinosaursareextinct · 25/02/2014 14:57

My DD is at a very small private school (non-selective), which goes all the way through. There are not enough children to have one year per class, so it is ability based. Her class is mainly Yrs 7 and 8, but they are treated as Yr 8 and are heading towards common entrance. Age-wise she is a young Yr 7.
I'm worried that if things stay as they are, she will be taking GCSEs a year early. Even if the class splits into 2, which may happen at some stage, she will probably be kept in the top group, as she is relatively able (though not hugely so).

I think that if she takes her GCSEs a year early, she will do less well than she might do if she had an extra year of both studying and maturity.
Also, she is unlikely to do A'levels at the school, due to its size, so would she be stuck at age 15, having done her GCSEs, and legally required to go to a state school for a year and re-take the GCSE year? Or would the 6th form college consider taking her a year early (I doubt it)?
I can't afford to send her to a different private school (she has financial support for this one), and am wondering whether I should move her to a comprehensive in the next year or so, so that she takes GCSEs at the usual time. But she really doesn't want that, and there are some good things at her current school which she wouldn't get elsewhere. I'm also not sure how she would cope in a very big state school after being in a tiny private school where everyone knows her. There might well be a risk of bullying.
Any thoughts anyone?

OP posts:
titchy · 28/02/2014 11:33

Current 6th formers can leave education at 16. Current year 11 have to stay till 17, current year 10s till 18. Might be a year out, but certainly anyone in sixth form at the moment doesn't have to stay till they're 18.

Given that she is young for her year, if she wants to do something like medicine that requires work experience, she might find that difficult, even taking a year out, as she'd still be 17 for most of that year.

Dinosaursareextinct · 28/02/2014 11:38

Yes, she's only Yr 7 age, so has to stay in education till 18. To take a gap yr age 17 would probably have to flee abroad on some kind of foreign study or work scheme! Or maybe stay at college an extra year and do an extra qualification.
Will look into mainstream school options v seriously over this year and next, as it would obviously make things simpler in the long term. What a pain.

OP posts:
RaspberryLemonPavlova · 02/03/2014 00:30

Education is very broad after 16 though. For instance apprenticeships still count. I wouldn't worry too much about that just yet.

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