lemonzest wrote:On a slight tangent, re: Bolingbroke (and as a person who sounds like they're in a similar situation to you - looking for a primary school for 2014) - is it really worth looking at the feeder schools with the explicit purpose of hoping for a place at secondary - or will the whole Academy be stuffed full of siblings anyway well before our kids get there?! Again, I've no idea, but thought I'd ask the question in case anyone else has a clue.
lemonzest: Predicting who will get offered places in Bolingbroke in 2021 is a task for which a crystal ball would be useful.
However, there are two relevant figures:
- How many children are finishing in the five feeder schools every year - 374 (120 at Belleville, 90 at Honeywell, 60 at Highview and Falconbrook, 44 at Wix)
- How many places there are in year seven at Bolingbroke - 120 places
If there are more applications than places then applications from those who will have a sibling at the school at the time of admission will get preference. After siblings,
- first, places will be allocated to each feeder school in proportion to the total number of applications received from that school. (Thus, if 20% of applications came from school A, it would be allocated 20% of places remaining after siblings, children in care, etc.)
- secondly, within each feeder primary school’s allocation of places, applications will be ranked by straight line distance from the main entrance of the academy to the child's home. Places will then be offered to children from each feeder school in the numerical proportion determined above.
The nearer to the Bolingbroke site you live the more likely you are to get a place. However, what is important is how much nearer to the Bolingbroke site you live than other applicants coming from the same feeder school.
What you also want is a lot of applications coming from your feeder school from people who are further away than you are.
I have no idea how this is playing out in practice in terms of current admissions, but I'm sure that if you ask Wandsworth Council they will be able to give you more specific figures about numbers and distances for applicants from each feeder school. It is also worth noting that if parents who are planning to send their children private after primary school put in an application for a state place at Bolingbroke (as a back-up option that they are unlikely to take up) that can affect whether your child gets a place.
Given that the number of places at Bolingbroke is currently only 1/3 of the number of pupils leaving feeder schools I would be wary of assuming that your child will get a place simply because he or she is at a feeder primary school.