Postby SP06 » Tue Apr 11, 2023 6:51 pm
Fascinating thread. In my view (major public schoolboy, 2 kids at primary school) within the next 10 years - and likely sooner - the kids who have been through private education will have had genuine disadvantage purchased for them, rather than any upside. The reality is the kid who grows up in Nappy Valley has already won a very significant lottery in life, not of the sort you need to pay to supplement. Parental engagement, books in the house, and support for your local state school are the things that actually make a life-defining difference.
If your child drops a few grades at A-level Oxbridge will remain more interested in them if they apply from a state school. Just look how entry demographics are shifting in recent years for the big feeder schools (KCS et al). And employers - increasingly aware that diversity is a fundamental metric - will do the same. You may get your straight A* sweep at , but to what end?
And if results aren’t what you’re interested in, what’s left? Other than snobbery? Some nice playing fields, a few pianos and a stage with curtains? Learning Latin? Silent auctions for the internship at Great Uncle Gimpy’s law firm? Little white boys all lined up with their school caps on, and competitive picnicking at sports day?
Is any of that worth me spending the next decade sweating a boring but lucrative job I don’t enjoy, worrying about the cost of holidays, mortgages, my house in the country (and a property ladder leg up for my two), my own social life etc? Nope.
My suspicion is the deeply average St Custard’s minor public schools will vanish, and do so sooner than anyone expects. And the rest will get even more exclusive, even more sadly narrow, even more overseas dominated. And far less reflective of the world we inhabit.