Okay, I’ll try and respond to these multiple points as briefly as possible.
Here’s how it works currently at our school. On the first Wednesday of term, the youngest 10 kids in each class go in for half a day, on Thursday the next ten etc. Mine is among the oldest with a September birthday so she’ll do a half day on Friday. That’s all well and good, I’ll say for what feels like the millionth time how I can see how this benefits the younger or more timid children and is a good way of gently easing them into school in smaller groups. However, after that, ALL the children just do mornings for a further 2 weeks, which to my mind (and many others share this view), is completely unwarranted.
So would my child absolutely not benefit? No, I can categorically say she wouldn’t, she is being deprived of the FT education to which she is entitled. And no again, I’m not in any way being ‘difficult and argumentative’ , I believe I’m right about the school needing to offer choice and take into account the needs of working parents which is even enshrined in the admissions code. I am building a consensus and trying to put forward and strong, coherent and evidence-based argument.
Your point about nursery vs school doesn’t make a great deal of sense either. My child has done 8am til 6pm since the age of 6 months and you’re honestly suggesting to me that a 9-3 day at school is somehow more demanding of my child? NO, it’s simply not.
I asked the same question on Mumsnet yesterday which has had 46 comments (I won’t link it here out of respect for the owners of NVN). It’s clear that thousands, possibly tens of thousands of primary schools either offer the choice of PT or FT in the first 3 weeks, or simply go FT from the off in early September. Many don’t bother with home visits and interestingly, some do those home visits in July so that the kids can get straight into it in September – Bravo!
So in short, it can be done very easily and a great many schools do it, I’m just not remotely clear why this school can’t. Without wishing to be confrontational, I’m afraid this FACT completely destroys your argument.
So final point, I called the Department of education yesterday and it seems that schools do have a legal obligation to offer FT education from the start of term, so if a parent requests it, they can’t refuse. You can research the case in Bournemouth which set this precedent by looking at the link in Liver Bird’s comment. So it seems even the law is on my side I’m afraid. Hope this clarifies matters