QUOTE(MusicalNitWit @ Jun 17 2011, 07:53 PM)

I'm not going to go into what my son can and can't do but to suggest that thick kids are sent to independent schools to get a leg up is ridiculous. Here are the reasons people send kids to independent schools:
1) To get away from bureacracy, health and safety and continual medalling from governments that are determined to dumb down education and fool everyone into thinking they are capable for university life.
puzzles me why anyone would want to get away from health and safety

- or would imagine that going privately would achieve that. I take it you mean meddling rather than medalling? The boards doing exams remain the same, and have the same dumbed down ness whether taken from the state or private sectors. And the fact remains that thick rich kids who are shoved into hothousing establishments for their education will indeed get a leg up - institutions with better teacher:pupil ratios, better provision of books, longer hours too....and as far as capability for university goes - it always was the case that universities attracted ranges of ability, and that the intellectually less able but financially better off still stood a chance of going if the money smelt right.
QUOTE(MusicalNitWit @ Jun 17 2011, 07:53 PM)

2) Class sizes. Whoever came up with shoving 30 five year olds in a room together was frankly bonkers. In fact school is a bizarre concept but I'm not going into that now.
yep, agree with both of those - and in fact, whether boarding or day pupil - schools are institutions. Having said that, I love the comments from a famous man who landed up in the clink for a while - he adapted to prison life far better than the poor delinquents who'd not been away from home before, just because he'd boarded at school

. As far as I can see, the educational value of schools is relatively limited for many, and their main function would appear to be as holding places for kids whose parents need to bring in an income, and of course also socialisation/survival of the fittest training.
QUOTE(MusicalNitWit @ Jun 17 2011, 07:53 PM)

3) Have never even considered state education in the same way some people would never consider private education.
in which case, given the amount of money they pour out, over and above what goes out in taxes, they're probably not the most thoughtful of people. The difference is, that private education is not a choice for everyone - state education is.
QUOTE(MusicalNitWit @ Jun 17 2011, 07:53 PM)

4) Doesn't have a "prizes for all" culture.
indeed - but on the other hand, I find over competitiveness equally revolting.
QUOTE(MusicalNitWit @ Jun 17 2011, 07:53 PM)

5)Manners, discipline, self-esteem, far more opportunities - if anyone thinks even a grammar school is in the same league as Westminster, Harrow, Winchester etc then they are deluded!
opportunities born already out of the social spheres those kids grow up in, for the most part. And the rest of the comment is frankly insulting to the majority of the citizens of the country.
QUOTE(MusicalNitWit @ Jun 17 2011, 07:53 PM)

and so many more reasons.
hopefully more reasonable than some of the ones given above....
*takes a moment or six to sort out the blooming quotation bits*