The relentless competition for London 11+ places and associated industry of preparatory courses, subscription websites, revision materials, tutoring etc. etc. exposes children to the kind of pressure and boredom that can damage natural curiosity and a love of learning. Worse, it risks having a deleterious effect on child mental health, especially for a generation of kids just emerging from the educational disruption and unhappiness of a pandemic, which took a huge toll on them. Unfortunately the industry is driven to a significant degree by us: anxious parents who are desperately trying to do our best for our kids and who sometimes face an uneven playing field. Most of us, I am sure, felt we had little choice other than to buy into Atom, order Bond books etc., driven on perhaps by school-gates (or MN!) chatter about who was doing what. However, I think one has to be reasonable and realistic about what is ultimately in the child’s best interests.
I taught for a long time in the selective London independent sector and was involved with 11+ examining and assessment. My view is that if a child really needs a heavy amount of tutoring to meet the standard of x or y school then it may not be in their interests to be in that environment. Over the years I taught some exceptionally bright students, many good, able kids (most of the cohort), and some who were struggling, unhappy, perhaps still being tutored yet always feeling that they couldn’t cut it. I have no doubt that, had they been in a less selective or fast-paced school, they would have done much better academically, socially and emotionally.
Fwiw, this is what I did with my (privately educated) DC for 2023 entry. Breaks and bribes were included in all study sessions. DC is very good at English and VR, but has struggled with Maths and some aspects of NVR:
1 hour’s Maths tuition pw, term-time only, from January of Y5;
1 hour daily five days a week during 2 (of 3) weeks of the Y5 Easter holidays (key skills and beginning to look at practice papers);
1-2 hours four or five days a week during the Y5-6 summer holidays (3 weeks off whilst abroad or staying with relatives);
A short course (three mornings) on NVR from a local provider during the summer holidays;
2-3 hours Saturdays mornings Y6 September and October (practice papers).
During the autumn term, DC’s school (a prep) set regular Eng/Maths/Reasoning hw and gave them a 40-minute Reasoning lesson a week.
I did not use Atom, but relied on GL practice papers from Amazon, and bought in a few tests from PreTest Plus (more consistent, better designed than Atom, in my view). In terms of workload, I felt the above was quite a lot, and certainly the maximum I could expose DC to without causing excess stress and unhappiness. I think I did the most I could do in order to enable DC to have a decent crack at some good schools without cracking up. I resented doing it, though, as 11+ drilling is so counter to loving learning for its own sake.
For reference, I know parents who did both much more and much less, and kids have differing levels of resilience, of course.