by Bubs » Fri May 31, 2013 9:33 am
We took the plunge and chnaged our minds from a private pre-prep and prep, to go state instead. Always with the view of going private at secondary age in either case.
I must admit, it is a constant worry, but I feel as though I'd probably worry if we'd goine for a private primary too (worry that we still may not get in, and we'd have wasted all that cash too !).
From what we've found, tutoring is nowehre near as expensive as a whole private primary education - they only seem to need once or tiwce a week - maybe more towards the end (we're not there yet). And as the previous poster says, those in private schools also pay for tutors on top of their school fees, so no doubt you'd only get swept up in all that when the time came.
What gives me comfort is, that it's true that private secondaries do seem to reserve a number of places for the state sector. This can work in our favour as say:
Private secondary take 50% state, 50% private intake. BUT from their 50% private intake, they are obliged to take 20% (maybe) from their own prep school. That leaves 50% state, and 30% 'other' prep schools as the intake.
If that makes sense ?
That said, honestly, I do worry I'm leaving my child ill-prepared for what's ahead. Then, at other times, that's counter-balanced by the fact she's having a fun, easy-going, non-pressured / regimented, primary experience.
It's tricky. We'll always worry, won't we ?!
We took the plunge and chnaged our minds from a private pre-prep and prep, to go state instead. Always with the view of going private at secondary age in either case.
I must admit, it is a constant worry, but I feel as though I'd probably worry if we'd goine for a private primary too (worry that we still may not get in, and we'd have wasted all that cash too !).
From what we've found, tutoring is nowehre near as expensive as a whole private primary education - they only seem to need once or tiwce a week - maybe more towards the end (we're not there yet). And as the previous poster says, those in private schools also pay for tutors on top of their school fees, so no doubt you'd only get swept up in all that when the time came.
What gives me comfort is, that it's true that private secondaries do seem to reserve a number of places for the state sector. This can work in our favour as say:
Private secondary take 50% state, 50% private intake. BUT from their 50% private intake, they are obliged to take 20% (maybe) from their own prep school. That leaves 50% state, and 30% 'other' prep schools as the intake.
If that makes sense ?
That said, honestly, I do worry I'm leaving my child ill-prepared for what's ahead. Then, at other times, that's counter-balanced by the fact she's having a fun, easy-going, non-pressured / regimented, primary experience.
It's tricky. We'll always worry, won't we ?!