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Secondary education

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

Moving from private to state Yr 7/8

134 replies

glindathegoodbitch · 25/02/2019 05:23

Dear All,

As you can see, the ungodly hour I am writing this means that I am stressed out if my eyeballs with worry.

Dd (currently yr7) is at a great private which she is flourishing at. She's been there since Yr2 and is very involved in every aspect. Drama and music scholar, but also very sporty (County at 2 sports) and bright- top set all round. She's in a very strong friendship group and is very loved.

Things were finely balanced. DH's wages pay household and running of, my wages pay school fees. The last year we have had a massive change of circumstance. I have had I'll health resulting in horribly long hospital stays, our youngest ds has been put on the radar for sen, so all in all, I took the decision to stay at home (he is pre-school) and spend more time with him. This has resulted in him making leaps and bounds with his communication and cognitive development. I'm over the moo and he is much happier and calmer. Middle ds (yr1) is making huge leaps because I am at home to read and spell with him and he is like a different child. So much more secure, less anxious and is loving school finally- reception he cried every single day. I feel like if I were to return to my very high pressured, long hours, long commute job, I would be throwing both boys under a bus. I have simply loved being home with them and to be there for when Dd comes home too.

Here comes the massive problem: we just simply cannot afford dd's school fees. Not even a little bit. I've been sticking my head in the sand this term hoping that money would some how magically appear out of my arse, but to no avail.

I'm going to sort out some part time, school(ish) hours work. Ds's school has no breakfast club and limited afterschool so options are limited.... but it will in now way make a dent in the school fees, plus... I'd actually like to live a bit. We haven't been on a holiday in years and we are always balancing every last penny. Our house is in desperate need of repairs, but there's just no money. Private school is a total pipe dream unless I am working to the point I barely see my children. We are very rural so everything takes so much longer and is so much further away- we can't move, tied to family property and could not afford to buy elsewhere.

Im just so sick of worrying about it. I'm up most nights. DH going to talk to bursar today, but we don't hold out much hope. They are a tightly run unit and have a strict 'no more than 50%' policy- which she is already on. I don't know of anyone who has ever exceeded it.

So I am looking at the local state today. The school looks great and is outstanding, but is in an incredibly rough town and there have been rumours of County lines drugs and there was recently a stabbing type incident in the school. I know no one at the school so can't find any further information beyond what is in the papers.

Both DH and I were privately educated so we are stupidly institutionalised. I'm terrified that she will be unsafe or bullied horrendously. That's no reflection on state education, just my own ridiculous ignorance.

If she moves at the end of year 7 will she be bullied for being the new girl? Will she settle OK? She's so funny and beautiful and I love her so much, but I cannot go bankrupt just to keep her at school. How do I go about all of this?

It feels like [redacted]'s choice. Either I risk my Dd potentially being unhappy (or she could flourish???... Some private to state success stories would be really appreciated) or I feel like I'm abandoning my boys to keep her in a school that we cannot realistically afford anyway.

I'm so so sorry if this is rambly nonsense, but I've been up since 1am with it all going round and round my head whilst googling 'local state school drugs/grooming/bullying'.

We should have pulled her at the end of year six, but we're swept up in the scholarships/ we can do this if we knuckle down/ isn't it lovely wave...

Please tell me that it's all going to be OK. I'm exhausted.

Identifying information edited by MNHQ

OP posts:
glindathegoodbitch · 26/02/2019 18:56

Thank you so much all of you for all of your advice.
Paperwork into bursar, application off the the big state secondary. We've definitely ruled out the middle school. It's nice, but it has a real primary school vibe to it and she'd have to move again in a year and to a school which is miles away and not one we'd choose. I know beggars can't be choosers and all that, but she's still my (big) little girl and it would totally destroy her. She's so sporty and very much into drama and music and there just isn't enough opportunity for her there. She gets her confidence on the sports field and the stage so without those being strong enough, she might totally lose herself.
God knows how long the waiting list will take, but we're just going to have to scrap through as hard as we can and maybe try and arrange to pay any fees we need until we have a place om a longer term basis? I just don't know.
Very stressed and another sleepless night, so it all seems rather bleak. Just trying to be super positive for Dd! x

OP posts:
Fazackerley · 26/02/2019 19:11

Leweston is very sporty and good at drama and not that far away and there always used to be very good deals to be had

SwimmingJustKeepSwimming · 26/02/2019 19:44

School sport really isnt the same in the state sector...or the stage for that matter. Much bigger schools too so usually less chance to represent school or be in plays. So really dont pin everything on that, do leave it as a nice to have.... and def keep up outside sport and drama!

HotpotLawyer · 26/02/2019 20:02

I went to private school (on a scholarship). It had big playing fields and a well resourced Sports department, but my real sports experience and challenge came with training with the county club (Athletics) outside school, and competing through the AAA. Likewise Youth Theatres run by and within professional theatres often offer more challenging projects than schools. The Brewhouse in Taunton has a youth theatre.

My Dc’s State school has a far wider and more accomplished music offer than my school ever did. (The school prioritises music and private lessons are £150 a year, free to Music GCSE students)

PenguinPandas · 26/02/2019 21:25

If the sport is just for exercise then state plus a club like David Lloyd (about £30 a month for a child but adult needs to join to at about £80 a month) would give access to pool, tennis courts, gym, fitness clubs, aerobics etc. Otherwise there's lots of sports clubs outside schools for people who compete. DD is quite sporty and we did DL and a gymnastics club and that gave her about 4 hours of sport plus 2 at school per week. School waiting lists can also move a fair bit at times - people can be on several lists.

oldowlgirl · 26/02/2019 22:29

Oh Op, I really feel for you as I can imagine how torn you are. I don't know the area, but agree with others in that you should fully research as many state schools in the area & get on the waiting list for as many as possible. Definitely ring the schools personally too - you can go & look around them even if they don't have spaces currently.

I would say that bright kids who have decent parental support will do well anywhere, so she will be fine (as will your boys for having you around more). Good luck Thanks

cestlavielife · 26/02/2019 22:38

Ask the schools where the leavers go... any decent state school will have stream of kids going on to great unis.
And as state school your dd may get more access to shadowing schemes etc

Hanomi · 27/02/2019 15:25

Hi Glinda

Have sent you a PM. Hope it helps.

Yale445 · 27/11/2022 13:24

@glindathegoodbitch - I remember reading this at the time and we are now in a similar situation.
how did your DD get on ?

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