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Secondary education

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

I am thinking of letting DS miss his umpteenth secondary school test tomorrow am I crazy?

27 replies

citylover · 11/01/2008 11:10

DS1 is in year 6.

I live in an innner london borough where the secondary schools are very variable. All the four good local ones we have applied for are very oversubscribed and there is a very slim chance he will be allocated one of those, it's a complete lottery. For his first choice they are actually (from this year) operating a lottery system within their inner catchment area as opposed to a catchment area alone - we live 5 minutes away!!

In a panic and to try to cover all eventualities I put down two rather random grammar schools on the outskirts of London.

DS is very bright but to be honest I don't think he is suited to the grammar school environment, he would be better suited to a local comprehensive school.

And as I was forced to go to a fee paying school on a scholarship and hated it I am very aware that however good a school is you won't thrive if you hate it! However my situation was slightly different in that my other option was a really good state grammar school where 70% of my classmates went to. I was the only one from my school to go to my secondary school.

When he sat the test at the first grammar school he hated the school. The second one tomorrow is not quite as traditional as the first but it is still highly selective and his chances of getting in there also slim. I know one boy from his nursery who got in and if my DS was offered at that school then he could travel with him. It's about a 20 minute train ride plus a bus at this end.

He has sat so many tests for each different schools - he has sat 5 to date plus the banding tests at school. The selection tomorrow is 5 hours fgs they have asked them to bring a packed lunch.

I haven't had him tutored but he is now used to the format of the 11+.

I am feeling inclined to say that he doesn't need to sit the test and just hope for the best (which is all you can do anyway with the current system) because really we would like a local school.

However I am so worried that he will be offered a place at one of the really bad schools in the borough and they are bad by any measure believe me despite their spin. We are talking gangland and really low A-C scores at GCSE. But by not going tomorrow our odds of this won't really increase much.

It is alleged our LEA operates social engineering whereby they offer places at the less successful schools to people in the more affluent successful parts of the boroughand vice versa.

What a mess!!

At least as we rent we do have the option of moving but
am very very reluctant to do that as I know people around here - have lived here for 15 of my 20 years in London and I really love this area. I am also very close to my work. And DS2 is happy in primary school.

OP posts:
Hallgerda · 11/01/2008 19:59

In further defence of Haling Manor, DS1's academic arch-rival at primary ended up there as a result of a badly-timed house move, and they do seem to be prepared to give him challenging work and keep him engaged. I'm not planning to move in that direction though, convenient though it would be for DS1...

ElenyaTuesday · 11/01/2008 20:06

I suppose most schools will make an effort given a half decent child to work with.

I know someone who went to Archbishop Lanfranc when it was at its worst but she did well there, went to Bristol and got a 1st in Physics. But I still wouldn't send my children there or to Haling Manor (or Selsdon or several other places!!).

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