A growing number of teenagers from private schools are applying to attend top comprehensives for their A-levels, it has emerged.
Headteachers from leading state schools have told Education Guardian that in the last couple of years, the number of teenagers from private schools who are applying for a place in their sixth forms has, in some cases, quadrupled.
They argue that this is partly because families have less money to spend on school fees, but also because more parents are realising that many state schools provide as good an education as their nearby private schools do. Jessica Shepherd, The Guardian.
That’s a foolish interpretation of what’s happening.
Some believe that it may also be because parents think the switch to the state sector will give their children a better chance of a place at a top university. Some universities, such as Bristol, now take into account when making offers whether an applicant has had the benefits of a private school, with its smaller class sizes, or has attended a comprehensive. Jessica Shepherd, The Guardian.
Which is exactly what’s happening rich kids have found another way of elbowing state school pupils aside in the scramble for a university place – we need to look at the entrance figures again and identify just how many students have been state school pupils their whole lives as opposed to just the last two years – we’d then get a truer picture of the bias in our university system.
