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Secondary education

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State Schools Eclipse Eton in rankings for A-Level Science

182 replies

evenstrangerthings · 06/07/2017 17:54

Your Life has today published a new school ranking based on STEM subject performance at A Level and ability to deliver skills for the jobs of today and the future. Several schools have climbed more than 1,000 places in new STEM rankings, while Eton and Harrow drop out of the top 100. In some instances poorly performing schools according to Ofsted have a higher than average STEM ranking. On the back of findings, Your Life Chair Edwina Dunn, has called for an ‘urgent rethink’ of the way schools are assessed to equip the country for a post BREXIT world.

Report and full table at:

https://www.yourlife.org.uk/urgent-rethink-schools-assessment-required-equip-uk-post-brexit-worldd_

OP posts:
LimpLettuce · 08/07/2017 10:46

No they won't they'd still be privately educated so would still have to compete on a more level playing field. The same percentage would gain access for the lesser courses and so on.

It would be a more equal competition and no harder than state kids have to contend with,easier in fact as they still have the advantages of their privilege.

Door still open but they'd have to fight harder. Yes they may not get the courses their parents have paid 100s of 1000 s of pounds for but such is life.Said parents could always run the gauntlet of the state sector like everybody else though.

Havingahorridtime · 08/07/2017 11:08

on 100% bursaries are few and far between. Fees with a 30% or 50% are out of reach for most.

But they are not few and far between at my sons school. 20% of kids are on bursaries and the majority of those bursaries are for 90% of fees or above. Even those children on smaller bursaries won't have mummy and daddy's money and connections to rely on because the cut off point for any bursary is £45k household income.
I know there are lots of kids at the school whose parents have made huge sacrifices to afford fees or are reliant on grandparents paying the fees. Average fees in my region are £12k per year for senior school.

Clearly a lot of Schools are not offering a significant number of 100% bursaries but the schools in my region do offer them - my son applied for two independent schools and was offered 100% bursaries for both.

Abra1d · 08/07/2017 11:16

Make them study pointless subjects like history of art?

I did a similarly pointless subject, English, and have done very well for myself. I have helped my husband put two children through private school. I have also had a fulfilling life and given back something to my community.

And I can punctuate and spell.

happygardening · 08/07/2017 11:22

What's a lesser course? PPE? Classes? Sanskrit? They'll take these degrees and still get the jobs. Or they just won't bother or the very bright will go to Harvard MIT and others round the world and have even more advantages It's nor the subject that gives you advantages,. And
who decides on a non interview selection process for a RG university which of the 7% should get the place to study English?
And you haven't answered the question about those who have little choice but to send their children to independent schools, or the MC parents who confirm advantages on their by moving to catchment areas or tutoring or those from outside the UK whove been privately educated/tutored.

gillybeanz · 08/07/2017 14:26

My dd school offer 100% bursaries to low income families, with fees being paid on a sliding scale.
If you earn 190K you pay the nearly 32k fees.
Most of the children there, in fact well into the 90%'s receive funding.
There are none I know that could afford to pay uni fees and fund their children.
They will have to do it themselves, with loans, the same as everyone else.
Even the richer parents who I know who have paid higher fees have just managed it and won't have money left to fund uni.
I haven't seen any evidence of any privilege ito being able to afford uni fees and living expenses. my dds friends parents were only joking last week when it comes to uni it might be a case of lift to the campus, and a hamper of food/ practical box etc.

gillybeanz · 08/07/2017 14:30

You could also argue that a child who has been home educated and had the free choice over which GCSE/ A levels they took, to have advantage over those who had to choose from a restricted list/ blocks.
You could argue privilege for so many different cases and go on forever.

EmpressoftheMundane · 08/07/2017 15:14

www.theatlantic.com/business/archive/2015/07/college-major-rich-families-liberal-arts/397439/

Supports Noble's points a few pages ago.

Dapplegrey2 · 08/07/2017 15:16

I personally would look at the percentage of privately educated children and make unis ensure places are only allocated to the same percentage.

Sorry limplettuce, you did make suggestions - I missed your post.
A lot of privately educated children are already going to university abroad - were your suggestions implemented the numbers would increase - unless you think privately educated students should be prevented from applying to universities abroad.

Do universities have any way of checking whether the applicant is telling the truth about where they went to school. Presumably they do.

gillybeanz · 08/07/2017 16:35

I may get flamed, but being honest my dd will probably attract a degree of nepotism in her field in the future.
I know it's not an advantage that some people like, but I don't care.
I see her struggle academically and despite trying as hard as we can to help her, there is little in the way of academic progress.
Anything at all that helps her reach her potential is ok with me.
I don't think it's anything to do with money, we don't have any.
Unless your child has sn/learning difficulties you can help to set them up for life and give them advantages that other children don't have.
A love of culture costs nothing, library books are free, charity shops are well stocked. Museums and galleries are mostly free and there are hosts of resources and youtube tutorials for all sorts of things.
It may not give the advantages that a private education might, but it may give better advantages, depending on the school and home.

LimpLettuce · 08/07/2017 16:40

Of course there is privilidge re being able to afford uni. Maintenance grants are an issue. You get them on a sliding scale according to household income £8k being the max for those on the lowest. Many kids will need either parental top ups or work. Work isn't that easier on a heavier course. Those able to pay school fees higher than your average salary will of course find funding their DC easier.Hmm

BubblesBuddy · 08/07/2017 17:02

It is not necessarily easier to pay uni costs if the money has been used for school fees and circumstances change. Lots of people saved for school but didn't have enough for university on top.

I think the comment about why a young person with text speak will not fulfil their potential is key. A truly intelligent person will realise, for themselves, that this is not good enough to acquire a top job. It would not be anywhere in the world. So schools need to be very clear what expectations are in the real world. If people choose to hold themselves back by not engaging with requirements, I cannot see why privately educated young people are to blame.

As for restricting university places for privately educated young people - Why on earth would any forward-looking society do this? We need the brighter and the best in this country and not have anyone held back.

If a school, parents, community and the young person themselves are not able to see and grab the opportunities, then they really do need to open their eyes to the possibilities. However you can take a horse to water, but you can't make it drink! How true that is even with all the outreach in the world, there are seriously entrenched views. Many immigrants don't hold these views though and they do very well!

gillybeanz · 08/07/2017 17:05

Limp

Nobody would disagree that it would be great to have free tuition fees, but until that happens I think it's a fair system apart from the high interest on the loans, that's disgusting.
The maintenance payment should be a grant too, rather than loan.
The fact remains though that poorer people can make it to uni now, whereas if your parents couldn't afford it you didn't go, in years gone by.

user7214743615 · 08/07/2017 17:13

I've met few engineers doctors etc who earn that kind of money, most are (needless to say) investment bankers or something financial and didn't study STEM subjects at university

Those working in finance typically did study maths, physical sciences, engineering etc. A large fraction of my maths students go on to highly paid careers in finance.

And those in finance who didn't study STEM often did economics (following at least Maths and often another science at A level).

noblegiraffe · 08/07/2017 17:56

Thanks for that link, Empress, it's good to have data to back up gut instinct Grin

EmpressoftheMundane · 08/07/2017 18:00

It makes sense to me too Noble.

LimpLettuce · 08/07/2017 18:28

Nobody would be stopping private kids from applying,they'd just have to try harder like state students do.

Going to a private school doesn't make you brighter. Surely an A with all those advantages is the equivalent to a B in state with huge classes and limited resources.

Re maintenance grants. Richer students not having to work must be a huge advantage.

Lurkedforever1 · 08/07/2017 19:30

As only 7% of children are privately educated then penalising them isn't going to level the playing field. How about we penalise mc dc from oversubscribed comprehensives? There are far more of them. Then we could share the state school funding equally too, rather than London first and the scraps for the rest of the country. How is havings £12k a year school conveying a huge advantage, but a state school in London with 2x the funding of some other counties isn't? I'll agree to dd needing better results for university based on private school, provided every parent whose dc have been advantaged by a mc upbringing and a state school that meets their needs are equally penalised.

Or do unfair advantages only count when they are other peoples lime?

I think the dominance of the privately educated is down to the haphazard way the state system caters to the most able. Privates maximise the potential of the most able, whereas taken as a whole the state system doesn't.

FanDabbyFloozy · 08/07/2017 19:56

Another friends is a senior partner in a magic circle law firm she goes to a dinner party meet a man who's a senior party at a big investment bank Goldmans etc she gives his son three weeks work experience, 2 years later he gives her non university educated DS a job.

I find this incredibly difficult to believe.. I know a LOT about intern and graduate recruitment in these firms and can assure you that they have to evidence every part of the process and all decisions made.
There is no chance that a non-graduate DS was given a graduate job at an investment bank these days. No way.

gillybeanz · 08/07/2017 20:01

limp

So what about children with sn and/or learning disabilities who attend private school, should they be told to work harder and have to achieve higher grades than others to gain a uni education?

We are constantly being told on threads that the leafy comps results are as good as private and that private doesn't mean a better education. make your mind up.

Farahilda · 08/07/2017 20:02

"As only 7% of children are privately educated"

I think that's 7% across all age groups. It's way lower for prep, and as high as 20% for sixth form

Dapplegrey2 · 08/07/2017 23:30

FanDabby - yes I agree, that story sounds very unlikely.

perdigal · 09/07/2017 00:03

Well I know at least 8 people at Eton and all of them earn over at least 250k. So you may not like it but Eton is a ticket to wealth and generally great grades. Most Etonians I have met are polite but yes they will move in their own set. So is life!

Crumbs1 · 09/07/2017 12:24

Other consideration that will skew results is that in some public schools A levels were only encouraged for the 'less academic ' with a strong preference for IB. I think something like 85% of children took IB.

happygardening · 09/07/2017 13:43

"Going to a private school doesn't make you brighter"
Limp couldn't agree more but it also doesn't mean you're not super bright.
I know Limp you want believe a independently educated child getting an A is only do so because of the school, not because they're bright but this just isn't true for all.
My DS got a D1 in 1 in one of his Pre U's (they are harder than A levels) and so a D1 is equvilant an A** and meant he got in excess of 95%, the main reason he achieved this with minimal effort on his part because he's a genius at this particular subject, not because of his schooling. I can assure there have been time during his school career when the teaching in this subject has been mediocre at best. But you think it's not a valid and believe that his achievement is less that a child in the state sector getting a A? Secondly as we live in a nice area with nice ambitious schools I've no doubt he would have achieved equvalant grades there, but from what your saying this would be better because it was a state school? He by the way looked at our local state 6th form colllege they had a gifted and talented group being aimed at top universities he was shocked by how spoon fed they were.
Rightly or wrongly he's not continuing the subject at university, but if he had, no university would have felt that his D1 was because of his school rather than his innate ability.
Fandabby Dapple I only read what's written on Facebook no degree, working at a very big name bank. As I said above another friend who works for a very famous household name FTSE as a senior partner told us only a few weeks ago that increasingly they're more and more recruiting non graduates. Apparently they struggle to keep graduates who find some of the work especially in the beginning -beneath them- not what they envisaged.

happygardening · 09/07/2017 13:50

I like the IB and have worked at two independent schools who ran both A levels and IB. The latter was signifucantly less popular, even at the very selective school, the students perceive it to be harder work, don't know if this is true, and you have to be a strong alrounder. Very science orientated children didn't feel the science was as in depth enough especially if you wanted to do a STEM subject at a top uni and chose A levels again can't comment on how true that is in reality.

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