by abfab » Thu Jan 28, 2016 12:59 pm
The state schools are actually significantly more diverse than the private ones. Yes, there are plenty of children from affluent families at Belleville and Honeywell, but my children have also had several classmates who live in social housing (there is actually quite a bit BTC, and some children from further afield join the school in later years), in care and with quite severe special needs in their classes. There are also many more children from ethnic minorities at Belleville and Honeywell than at the local private schools. Every single one of those children benefits from mixing with a genuinely diverse group and they learn at an early age that people are people whatever their differences.
I agree class size is definitely a factor, but only one. If you have well behaved children, 30 is fine. The private school kids probably get a bit more attention, the state school kids probably learn to be a bit more self-starting. Pros and cons, as you say each to their own.
The state schools are actually significantly more diverse than the private ones. Yes, there are plenty of children from affluent families at Belleville and Honeywell, but my children have also had several classmates who live in social housing (there is actually quite a bit BTC, and some children from further afield join the school in later years), in care and with quite severe special needs in their classes. There are also many more children from ethnic minorities at Belleville and Honeywell than at the local private schools. Every single one of those children benefits from mixing with a genuinely diverse group and they learn at an early age that people are people whatever their differences.
I agree class size is definitely a factor, but only one. If you have well behaved children, 30 is fine. The private school kids probably get a bit more attention, the state school kids probably learn to be a bit more self-starting. Pros and cons, as you say each to their own.