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#1 (permalink) |
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Police called as parents cause havoc at grammar school exam
Tim Ross, Education Correspondent 10.10.08 Police called as parents cause havoc at grammar school exam | News Police had to be called in to prevent "havoc" breaking out when parents swamped the entrance exam for a London grammar school. Almost 1,500 pupils were competing for 126 places at Wallington County Grammar School in Sutton, threatening to create chaos. Elsewhere, police are said to have been called on to help chaperone thousands of parents from railway stations on the day of the exams. The credit crunch is forcing parents to attempt to save money on private school fees by sending their children to state grammars, according to experts. But soaring demand has seen schools overwhelmed on 11-plus day. Tina Marden, admissions secretary at Wallington, which has 880 pupils, said: "We had to have the police to control parking. We are on a red route and, if we didn't, people would cause havoc. The credit crunch does seem like an obvious thing that is affecting choices for parents at the moment." Fewer parents than usual withdrew their children from the school to send them private last year, she said. There are at least 10 applicants for every place at the most highly rated grammars. Competition appears to have intensified during the credit crunch. According to the Good Schools Guide, applications at almost one in five private schools have fallen by 10 per cent in four years, with the main winners being the selective grammar schools. Last year at Wallington, 98 per cent of pupils scored at least five A*-C grades at GCSE including English and maths. Robert McCartney QC, chairman of the National Grammar Schools Association, said applications across the country had reached record levels this year amid soaring demand from "aspirational parents". "One of the effects of the credit crunch is that those people who were just able to make the fees are no longer able to do so," he said. "Because of the poor state of the comprehensive system they are desperate to get their children into grammar schools." A Metropolitan Police spokesman confirmed that safer neighbourhood teams attended last month's exams at Wallington. |
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#2 (permalink) |
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Grammar schools are good because they take the best pupils. If they took in more they wouldn't be as good. Personally I wouldn't want to pay bloody taxes for them if my kids didn't get in.
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"It is poor civic hygiene to install technologies that could someday facilitate a police state." -Bruce Schneier How to Overthrow the System: brew your own beer; kick in your TV; build your own cabin and p*ss off front porch whenever you bloody well feel like it. Edward Abbey Leopold Kohr. |
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#3 (permalink) | |
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There might be a good case for creating more grammar schools without diminishing their quality too much. The real difficulty though is that the level of education now offered in comprehensives appears to be so different in kind - so unchallenging. It is not just the quality of the pupils, but the sheer lack of quality in what comprehensives have to offer that leads to desperation among parents. |
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#4 (permalink) | |
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I'm not a great fan of traditional schooling, I prefer the ideas of Rudoplh Steiner, the Montessori movement and similar. It is hard to see how you good dilute the pool of Grammer school students and have the same quality. I think it would be far better to reform comprehensives, plus then we wouldn't have to pay tax money to schools that don't teach all the students. Although I suppose it isn't as bad as Australia where there are massive state subsidies for "private" schools.
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"It is poor civic hygiene to install technologies that could someday facilitate a police state." -Bruce Schneier How to Overthrow the System: brew your own beer; kick in your TV; build your own cabin and p*ss off front porch whenever you bloody well feel like it. Edward Abbey Leopold Kohr. |
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#5 (permalink) |
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There is an Elephant in the room here.
Why do all these parents really choose this school? ![]()
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#6 (permalink) | ||
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Reasons: it moved to a better area and it began to have girls in it. So there are other factors. Quote:
Therefore, one must be sensible - a grammar school in every town, which is the situation that existed years ago, would produce a great many good schools. This would also give far greater access to the grammars, making them at least theoretically available for everyone. I don't see a problem with making grammars part of an integrated system in which - say - an up-to-date version of a secondary modern would not necessarily be considered inferior in quality. If taxation is an issue then it could be ensured that the new secondary mods would have as much money spent on them as the grammars, so they would have a decent amount of funding to offer more vocational subjects. Then this second tier of education would not simply be considered 'inferior' - only different in kind. I don't believe comprehensives can be reformed. Their inability to select pupils is a handicap. They work best in good areas where the presence of a good school ensures high house prices in that area - hence a form of selection by mortgage. This was hardly the thinking behind the comprehensive experiment when it was introduced years ago. |
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#7 (permalink) | |
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Grammar schools are just a guilt free apartheid.
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#8 (permalink) | ||
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Also with the best students being taken by Grammer schools comprehensives will decline. Quote:
__________________
"It is poor civic hygiene to install technologies that could someday facilitate a police state." -Bruce Schneier How to Overthrow the System: brew your own beer; kick in your TV; build your own cabin and p*ss off front porch whenever you bloody well feel like it. Edward Abbey Leopold Kohr. |
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#9 (permalink) | |||
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Grammar schools need not necessarily consume greater funds. Revived technical schools or secondary moderns with an emphasis on vocational subjects could have just as much invested in them, if not more. Quote:
The priority though would be to re-establish grammar schools once again in not-so-good areas in order to give bright working class children a better chance than they have now and improve levels of social mobility. Quote:
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#10 (permalink) |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Mar 2008
Location: East End of London
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I completely fail to see how a meritocratic system based on ability can be compared to state-imposed racial segregation.
Anyone can get to a grammar school if they pass the exams, whilst apartheid divides people at birth. In fact, because comprehensives work well in wealthy areas and badly in poorer areas, the comprehensive system is far closer to a system of apartheid. Priviliged children who are born into well-off families are much more likely attend good comprehensives - if they don't go private, of course. Whereas children who are the benighted spawn of feckless single mothers living on benefits will undoubtedly attend the poorly-performing comprehensives in bad areas. Comprehensive education is just selection by mortgage. Therefore it closer to a system of apartheid which divides people at birth, as people - by and large - do not alter their fortunes very much. Many studies have shown that children born in the 1950s subsequently enjoyed far greater levels of social mobility than those born in the 1970s. The reason is that those born in the 1950s benefited from attending grammar schools, which were far less available to the generation born in the 1970s. It is typical of the Labour party that first introduced the comprehensive system that it almost never seems to promote genuine aspiration in the working classes. Instead it prefers to keep its client state in exactly the form it is - in supposedly grateful servility. |
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