Introduction to Which School?
Tom Wheare looks at some of the factors involved in choosing the right school for your child
Choosing
a school is an important and challenging experience for parents. You
are embarking upon a prolonged and significant financial commitment
and, as with everything else you buy, you should at least start off
with what you think you want. In the end, you may be delighted with the
product’s performance or utterly dissatisfied with it, but, if at all
possible, the choice should have been yours. That is why, every year,
John Catt Educational brings out a guide to the independent sector
which sets out the stalls of a wide variety of schools, providing the
reader with a first class vantage point from which to review the
options.
Not all independent schools have full listings, but then you are not going to be interested in all independent schools. You might be surprised how easily you can produce a long but manageable list. First of all, are you thinking of choosing a boarding school?
If not, you can immediately strike out all schools beyond a certain
distance from home. The answer to the question single sex or co-ed
reduces the options significantly. If money is limited, you may decide
not to go fee-paying for the whole ride but opt in when you feel the
extra input will be most worthwhile, affordable and available.
The general guide in Which School? should certainly help
you to find your way around the independent sector and each year the
Introduction focuses on some aspects of the educational scene in closer
detail. In this edition, there are articles contributed by three
particular schools – Millfield, Milton Abbey and Wells Cathedral
School; one group of schools – the Girls Day Schools Trust (GDST); and
one organisation which represents all the schools of a particular type,
whether state or independent – the Boarding Schools Association (BSA).
These articles may help to dispel myths or, at least, reassure parents
that there really are all sorts of schools out there.
Education has been one of the chief concerns of central government
since the 1870s. Mr Blair’s cry of “Education, Education, Education” is
really nothing new. As a result, education has become a political
football, which is not always the best thing to be. New Labour’s record
in this area clearly involves too many Secretaries of State and there
are many who would argue that too many decisions are taken at national
rather than local level. The press have portrayed the OFT investigation
and the Charities Act as crises for the independent sector, suggesting
that only through government action can independent schools be made affordable and accountable. Education is an expensive commodity because staff and resources cost big money and most independent schools
fund their substantial bursary awards out of a levy on fee income, a
slice of the budget that is usually matched by the money spent on
development. Since schools have been doing this for some time, each
generation of parents pays its share and each generation of pupils
experiences the benefit. Schools that are charities, ie
nearly all of the ones in this guide, usually have an explicit, stated
purpose to provide education. So long as they continue to do this to
the satisfaction of the Charity Commission, they will continue to make
some savings as a result of their charitable status and disburse funds
well in excess of those savings in the form of scholarships and
remissions, nearly all subject to means testing.
Parents with limited means, ie 99% of us, may wish to look
at scholarships. A word of caution here. Whilst it surely must be the
case that a full fee-paying parent should have the initiative when it
comes to choice, when the school is paying, in full or in part, as they
do when awarding scholarships or bursaries, the initiative is with them
and you must expect them to consider their own interests as well as
yours. In many ways, scholarships are really only for those whose
talent is so great that it clearly comes naturally. Although success in
this field owes a lot to perspiration, it is primarily about
inspiration. Bursaries are slightly different. Pretty well all schools
offer them as a way of widening access, and, in the wake of the
Charities Act, schools will be looking with particular care at how they
can help their local communities and families. There are no general
rules here: draw up your short-list and then ask the schools on it how
they might be able to help you.
A little further into this guide is a list of some of the questions
you may ask in the hopes that the Head’s answers will help you in your
choice. They are good questions, but people selling independent
education are well versed in the art of reassuring the anxious and
representing their school in an excellent light. What you pick up from
the other people you see on a visit, from the body language and social
vibes of the pupils and staff and, indeed, from the physical condition
of the plant and premises, is every bit as valuable as the Head’s
accomplished patter. Above all, your own feelings are vital, more
important even than those of your child. As a parent, you know
perfectly well that the responsibility for decisions rests with you:
you get to worry, your child sails through in uninterrupted happiness!
And if he or she doesn’t, you may blame the school, the other pupils or
even your child, but in the end you will blame yourself. So make it a
decision you are happy with.
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