Home Forums Chat Forum Private school vs state school

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  • Private school vs state school
  • iolo
    Free Member

    Ok, granted there is other private education which is not boarding. If parents want to send their kids there they will. To many people middle class state schools are classed as “common” and would
    not want little Farquar mixing with the “commoners” 😆
    If’s their choice that’s fine

    I graduated in 1993 and have worked ever since. Just wanted to do something different so decided on a OU degree.

    deadlydarcy
    Free Member

    inaccurate use of terms like exclusivity etc.

    Is it not you that’s labouring on the exclusivity thing thm? I’ve asked a couple of times now if you equate exclusion on the grounds of location with that of exclusion on the grounds of religion with that of exclusion on the grounds of wealth? None is desirable of course, but are they all equally bad? Is that what you’re saying?

    julianwilson
    Free Member

    And the second part of my own goals re education is related to exactly that. Just not in this country because of all of the BS that prevent progress here.

    Go on, give us a hint.
    I am thinking you are planning the “TeamHurtMore International Academy for special kids who can’t read good.” Inside a hollowed-out volcano in international waters (no visa or minimum wage issues, and you can sail your kids there at the start of term, see?) where you can teach the IB and have less or indeed no cqc/ofsted paperwork/inspections. (actually that all sounds pretty cool, will you do bursaries?)

    binners
    Full Member

    inaccurate use of terms like exclusivity etc.

    Fair play. Christ only knows how us state educated plebs had ended up lobbing terms like exclusivity, and superiority about eh? Must be the politics of envy, because we never got to dress up and stare moodily into the middle distance 😆

    teamhurtmore
    Free Member

    My point as you surely realise was about how allocating a very limited bursary to a limited range of kids of limited academic (and indeed sporting!) ability does not significantly serve to redress the inaccessibility of these schools to all children.

    Correct. This is becoming a habit.

    Go on, give us a hint.

    No that would take the fun away. Comparing what I am accused off with what I do in real life, makes me smile even more. I enjoy the irony and happy for it to continue. It makes me smile.

    I think you facing up to the reality of the current situation would be a start. Your comments about what represents a broad range of society were very telling.

    As were yours Grum, as were yours!

    mefty
    Free Member

    Back to Bursuries, my old school had three programmes:

    The original bequest that set up the school which is aimed at the local town and is principally academic I think but don’t know – this covers 5% of the children.

    Scholarship programee – awarded based on exam for academic, art and music. I don’t know how they do the sport ones which didn’t exist in my day but when you go co-ed you need to do something to maintain the quality of the Rugby team. These were straight financial awards ranging from 75% to 10% based on performance. Now they are means tested so a rich scholar will only get a small financial award for recognition purposes only.

    Boarding Foundation – This is relatively new is separately financed and represents 100% of fees and extras in all cases and is awarded in consultation with partners who operate in deprived areas. Whilst the kids have to be able to meet the entrance requirements, these are not awarded for academic excellence – they are awarded to those who will benefit most from the boarding experience and have the ability to become a role model for aspiration in their local community. It is quite a novel approach and has been very successful. Again this accounts for 5% of the pupils.

    robbespierre
    Free Member

    iolo,

    I went to comprehensive school too and I also have two degrees (but don’t tell anyone :wink:)

    I think most parents that send kids to private school are not motivated by snobbery like you say.
    I think that a lot of parents (and teachers) feel that state school education is blighted by poor behaviour leading to “crowd control” teaching. This is not helped by a very poor attitide by a large minority of parents towards teachers and schooling – “it’s free, it’s my right, my little prince/princess is always right”.

    Of course brilliant kids (like you and me were :-)) can overcome this. But many can’t due to temperament or ability level.

    In an ideal world, you could get state schools up to the standard of the private schools. But it won’t happen in a democratic country. In the RUD (Robbespierre Undemocratic Dictatorship) it would work well!

    robbespierre
    Free Member

    Fair play. Christ only knows how us state educated plebs had ended up lobbing terms like exclusivity, and superiority about eh? Must be the politics of envy, because we never got to dress up and stare moodily into the middle distance

    And of course Eton is a typical private school, isn’t it? 🙄

    binners
    Full Member

    Oh… you went to the other place?

    😆

    CaptainFlashheart
    Free Member

    And of course Eton is a typical private school, isn’t it?

    Nah, it’s a mediocre Slough comp.

    😉

    teamhurtmore
    Free Member

    Slough Grammar please flashy. That’s the second time you have done that. Are you an OH by any chance!?!?

    mefty
    Free Member

    I used to know one of the guys in that photo, ironically he hated his school.

    julianwilson
    Free Member

    Correct. This is becoming a habit.

    When have you ever admitted otherwise?

    Comparing what I am accused off with what I do in real life, makes me smile even more. I enjoy the irony and happy for it to continue. It makes me smile.

    No one “accuses” you of anything, unless you are particularly sensitive to what you experience as value judgements on what you do. If you drop hints as to your occupation attached to funny, controversial or interesting posts on a forum for long enough, people will tend to join the dots. Unless you have fabricated some of these, I think most regular readers here have a pretty good idea of what you do for a living and what your professional interests are, in the same way as they do for other regulars on here like ernie (where is he btw), JY and DD.

    So anyway, when can I put my sprogs on the waiting list and what bursary will you be awarding an outstanding 9-year old from a 45k income household?

    Junkyard
    Free Member

    😆

    An awesome contribution Binners I laughed in an office 😳

    Rockape63
    Free Member

    I agree!

    julianwilson
    Free Member

    Fair play. Christ only knows how us state educated plebs had ended up lobbing terms like exclusivity, and superiority about eh? Must be the politics of envy, because we never got to dress up and stare moodily into the middle distance

    And of course Eton is a typical private school, isn’t it?

    The bullingdon photo binner posted is not the eton uniform, it’s the club uniform. (they were all at Oxford by this time of course. And although there was no entrance exam to the bullingdon club, i will eat my hat if there are any state educated folk in that picture. Or indeed any photo of the club, excepting the odd waiter or chauffeur that slipped into the frame.)

    Oh, and if you put aside who is in the photo, you can just enjoy the quality of the hairdo’s 😀

    teamhurtmore
    Free Member

    Fair cop – accuses is the wrong word. Things that are “attributed” would be better. Don’t worry though Julian I would hate to lose the laughs.

    zilch, interviewing the parents is the first step!! 😉 (hope you are not particularly sensitive)

    Seriously, the last thing you would need is a bursary, that’s the point. Ironically, getting rid of exclusivity is central to the project. Hence the lovely irony.

    Junkyard
    Free Member

    in the same way as they do for other regulars on here like ernie (where is he btw), JY and DD.

    We are quite probably less interested in amusing mind games for our own amusement – inserts smileys winks and exclamation marks so that no one really knows whether this is a dig or a playfully joke

    julianwilson
    Free Member

    Seriously, the last thing you would need is a bursary, that’s the point. Ironically, getting rid of exclusivity is central to the project. Hence the lovely irony.

    Does that mean it won’t be in a hollowed-out volcano in international waters either? I iz dizappoint 🙁

    But more seriously, taking your educational project abroad (as you mentioned last page) is hardly going to make it equally accessible to all uk kids unless it is done on the internet. And then you still have vicarious responsibility (via the parents) for home-schooling/ofsted regs, no?

    jambalaya
    Free Member

    I’m glad to see this thread is still going (was out of circulation yesterday). I will read back over the many pages I’ve missed but a couple of comments from the two pages I’ve read here.

    On awarding bursaries – yes there are difficult choices, people face those every day. Doctors make decisions based upon budget considerations (whether they admit that or not), that’s far harder than educational decisions.

    As for banning fee paying schools this won’t impact the real elite as they will send their kids to school abroad and the elitist issue will still remain although perhaps at a lower scale.

    I say again the real solution in to better fund state education to reduce the gap (real or perceived)

    teamhurtmore
    Free Member

    In our lifetime jambalaya, the proportion of state spending allocated to education has risen threefold from 4% to 13% of total Gov spending. It has been argued that over this same period both standards and equality of education have gone down. Perhaps rather than simply more money, we need to spend it more wisely?

    robbespierre
    Free Member

    In our lifetime jambalaya, the proportion of state spending allocated to education has risen threefold from 4% to 13% of total Gov spending. It has been argued that over this same period both standards and equality of education have gone down. Perhaps rather than simply more money, we need to spend it more wisely?

    +1

    deadlydarcy
    Free Member

    There isn’t a public budget (of that kind of size) that couldn’t be spent more wisely.

    Junkyard
    Free Member

    We do need to spend it wiser for sure – more bursaries for private schools to enable choice 😉

    we certainly need to stop wasting it in apprenticeships and colleges offering expensive courses to which their are no/limited/few/ employment opportunities Motor vehicle, construction, forensic studies, Hairdressing, Beauty Therapy, Animal studies etc
    I would love to knwow the figure for what % of folk with these “trades” dont work ever in the job. My sample size is skewed as I meet only those who fail but I would imagine it is way over 50% and in some cases over 90%

    Same for degrees it is pointless having 50 % of our population degree educated when 50% of jobs dont require a degree

    julianwilson
    Free Member

    Threefold, wow! (Is that a basic percentage or are we adjusting for and comparing to expenditure in other areas, I am specifically thinking justice/police and health (also more) and defence which if we are talking lifetimes that began in the 60’s would be way less)

    Also I put forward that class sizes, vocational training in fe rather than simple apprenticeships, choice of subjects and IT were major components of this rise, but nevertheless worth it.

    teamhurtmore
    Free Member

    Edit:sorry ignore those stats, they were bllx. It’s actually been constant as a % at approx 12% in a rising pool. Sorry!

    Gov spending has increased as a percentage of GDP – from mid 30s to nearly 50% and within that education has stayed broadly the same percentage.

    Basic point still stands – we spend an increasing amount of our national output in education, but the results by all accounts have been disappointing.

    binners
    Full Member

    Same for degrees it is pointless having 50 % of our population degree educated when 50% of jobs dont require a degree

    The people at our uni who were doing stupid degrees tended to be the dim-witted, privately-educated offspring of home counties dwellers. Clearly having been sent north to get a BA in anything their limited intellect would allow, so that hopefully there wouldn’t be too much resentment when daddy parachuted them into a highly paid berth in the company, where hopefully he couldn’t do too much damage. They weren’t difficult to spot…..

    julianwilson
    Free Member

    It’s risen strongly in absolute terms and in relation to other types of spending.

    Thankyou thm, yes that’s just what my complicated and probably unnecessary use of multiple clauses and nested parenthese was trying to show i was curious about. 😀

    [edit] just seen your edit above. Much easier to see where 50% hass gone than 300%! See below..

    What changes are people really disappointed about with education?
    Class sizes? Safety? Safeguarding? Governance? (as opposed to governments!) real world vocational training? (as a sometime arts graduate who has used these skillz for maybe 40 hours of my career since I finished the degree) I agree with JY about the absurdity of there being far more degrees than jobs that need them though) Computer literacy though? According to ceops and most IT teachers, what teenagers can do with computers today is totally beyond the understanding of a majority of the population over 35.

    fwiw my own bugbear is the expense of inspectors/regulators who are burnt out teachers (same follows for medicine and social care imho) and the money that goes into preparing for and ‘responding to’ inspections which didn’t go all that badly, and meaningless kpi’s and figures. It is also still too hard to sack underperforming staff and I honestly believe that we (as in public service all over) could learn much from private enterprise about this: only thing worse than out-of-touch HR is a slow, toothless and timid out-of-touch HR!

    so let’s attack the one small part that has thrived over the period instead????

    Of course that thriving part wasn’t funded by taxpayers (well, apart from the parents!)

    -so some data would be very welcome about the relative changes in school fees, and any financial implications good or bad of their charitable status (including, if significant, changes to and if so financial changes from the delicate arrangement between the tax some of the parents pay elsewhere, and the usefulness to their personal finances of making large charitable donations from time to time 😉

    -of course any increase in money spent there also should be adjusted for the considerable and welcome investment in improving food and living conditions for boarders since the 60’s!

    teamhurtmore
    Free Member

    Sorry, Julian my edit for my incorrect figs (got the deniminator mixed up!) crossed with your post. Looks odd now.

    No the thriving wasn’t, although there were other thriving parts that were eg faith schools.

    Cost of better food and boarding facilities (very true) were met by private sources not gov spending, just to be complexly clear (I think that is what you are saying too)

    Over the period, percentage of student in private education fell from 8% to 5% and then recovered (excuse the choice of phrase) to 7%. So it’s good to see how we sweat on the small stuff!!! It makes a great diversion though as all these pages show!!!

    julianwilson
    Free Member

    Yes I was saying fee payers spent on better boarding: I wouldn’t want people thinking a rise in fees for boarding schools necessarly meant more investment in the education side of the whole package.

    So overall, and boarding fees aside, are fee-paying schools (through fees and charitable donations) better off per student than they were in whenever-the-beginning-of-our-notional-lifetime-was? And if so how much? And does this explain why they have thrived? Also if many of these schools have expanded, what did economies of scale bring to the quality for each individual pupil?

    teamhurtmore
    Free Member

    Have they thrived? They educate less of the UK population that they did in the 60s.

    More recently, entrance figures and %s have rising again. But this is skewed. An exclusive 😉 group are thriving and even expanding overseas. At the same time, an increasing number are under very significant financial pressure. Some on here won’t like it, but left to the market, the numbers may well drop anyway!!!! Heaven forbid.

    julianwilson
    Free Member

    teamhurtmore – Member

    Have they thrived? They educate less of the UK population that they did in the 60s.

    You alluded to thriving, yes (I cut and pasted it up there^^),

    so let’s attack the one small part that has thrived over the period instead????

    although i can’t seem to find it in your posts any more.

    bokonon
    Free Member

    we certainly need to stop wasting it in apprenticeships and colleges offering expensive courses to which their are no/limited/few/ employment opportunities Motor vehicle, construction, forensic studies, Hairdressing, Beauty Therapy, Animal studies etc
    I would love to knwow the figure for what % of folk with these “trades” dont work ever in the job.

    As someone who has taught in this area, I think that assuming that people will get a job in a particular trade is missing the point of how effective these courses are at providing basic education which is not facilitated elsewhere – I’ve taught hundreds of (mainly) boys with no qualifications music technology, and they ended up being pretty good and Maths, English and other really useful life skills – significantly better than they left school with at 16 – the fact it was framed round music meant that engagement was higher and they were much better able to learn in the more practical and task oriented framing of a college course.

    Yes, it would be great if they all went on to get job X – and a good number did, I still hear from people touring with bands, DJing here there and everywhere and working in some nice studios all from these courses – but lots of them don’t, but I would be more concerned about where they would be without them.

    This kind of data is also sadly not the kind of data which is collated to illustrate my anecdote with actual evidence.

    teamhurtmore
    Free Member

    Are you in forensic medicine Julian? yes, the ones largely referred to here are thriving. As others have pointed out though, Staines Grammar is not representative of the whole sector.

    julianwilson
    Free Member

    Not in forensic medicine, no… but a useful tool in my job is indeed “sweating the small stuff” as you put it. with my systemic hat on, I am also trained to be curious and ‘circular’: why did you edit that bit out, and especially given your own forensic examination of others’ posts here and elsewhere, did you really not expect anyone to notice and mention it?

    teamhurtmore
    Free Member

    ??? Hardly hidden Julian, come on. I posted figures about 4-13% and commented on them twice. They seemed strange so I rechecked them and realised that I had made a mistake and posted that clearly with the correct data. I would have been disappointed (having made the effort to be accurate) if no one had noticed. Play fair….

    In case you missed it

    Sorry, Julian my edit for my incorrect figs (got the deniminator mixed up!) crossed with your post. Looks odd now.

    CaptJon
    Free Member

    This point may have been made, but any discerning middle class parent would spend the money for tutition on a nice house near a good state school. That way the kid gets a good education and you get to live in nicer area.

    xiphon
    Free Member

    This point may have been made, but any discerning middle class parent would spend the money for tutition on a nice house near a good state schoo

    My colleague complains she can’t afford tuition for her two sons (11 and 13), despite them probably needing it. Both around £20 each per week.

    But at Xmas she bought them (each!) a new iPad Air, xbox and 50″ LCD TV.

    I just laughed.

    (I wonder how many other people fall into this situation?)

    julianwilson
    Free Member

    ??? Hardly hidden Julian, come on. I posted figures about 4-13% and commented on them twice. They seemed strange so I rechecked them and realised that I had made a mistake and posted that clearly with the correct data. I would have been disappointed (having made the effort to be accurate) if no one had noticed. Play fair….

    Who said anything about hidden?

    Play fair….

    I think I learnt this one from you thm, ‘play the ball’ -the ball in this case being that you seemed to be questioning where I had the notion (from you) that fee-paying schools had thrived (and that n spite of this they were being laid into), and that just because the rise in spending on state education had not risen as much as you had originally said (note my acknowledgement of this in my own edited post) this does not now mean that fee paying schools hadn’t thrived after all, that they might not be subject to undue criticism in spite of this, or that you hadn’t said it. I can’t be responsible for your poor editing but forgive me for not joining up a change in the understanding of funding and the perceived success/failure for one sector (state) with a change in the relative/perceived success of another one (fee-paying).

    Or is it up to Sir who gets to sweat which bits of the small stuff?

    miketually
    Free Member

    This point may have been made, but any discerning middle class parent would spend the money for tutition on a nice house near a good state school. That way the kid gets a good education and you get to live in nicer area.

    If you’re really good, you bring up bright, intelligent, motivated kids. That way you don’t need to waste money on expensive houses near ‘good’ schools as they will do well in any school.

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