How does the county cope with so many appeals?
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How does the county cope with so many appeals?
Just wondered, as there are so many appeals each year, more than 800, and about 340 are likely to be successful, does the county calculate the 11+ pass mark at a certain level knowing that it needs to leave so many places 'open' for successful qualification appeals?
Re: How does the county cope with so many appeals?
It's similar to how Surrey used to run back in the early '70's. About 1/2 the grammar school places were allocated by exam. Then the children who passed and who had near misses (there could have been a list made up by the primary schools of those expected to pass) had their work examined by senior staff from the local grammars and the near misses were then interviewed by the panel. Looking at the work was purely academic in the case of the passes - I bet they swore when they saw the mess I produced.
In some ways I prefer it to the system we have in Gloucestershire, in that it gives some degree of flexibility - ie it's not all about who can afford the most tuition, but based partly on the reports from school. Of course, it gives more grief to the poor parents!
In some ways I prefer it to the system we have in Gloucestershire, in that it gives some degree of flexibility - ie it's not all about who can afford the most tuition, but based partly on the reports from school. Of course, it gives more grief to the poor parents!
Capers
Re: How does the county cope with so many appeals?
I assume this relates to Buckinghamshire, Cats, and you must be right that an allowance for successful appeals is built in. There is some slack in the system, i.e. places that can be taken up by successful late selection applicants. The number of successful 11+ appeals seems to be fairly constant, even though panels are definitely not working to a quota. There are numerous panels operating every day, the composition of which is continually changing. None of them knows what decisions other panels are taking, or indeed what the overall picture is as a result of previous days' decisions. If there were to be more successful appeals than expected, it would presumably be at the expense of places that would otherwise be available at 12+.Cats12 wrote:Just wondered, as there are so many appeals each year, more than 800, and about 340 are likely to be successful, does the county calculate the 11+ pass mark at a certain level knowing that it needs to leave so many places 'open' for successful qualification appeals?
Etienne
Re: How does the county cope with so many appeals?
Yes, yes yes! Any chance you can get it changed, Capers, before my little one has to do it in 2 years' time?capers123 wrote:
In some ways I prefer it to the system we have in Gloucestershire, in that it gives some degree of flexibility - ie it's not all about who can afford the most tuition, but based partly on the reports from school. Of course, it gives more grief to the poor parents!
I think the grief for parents would be much less if school work came into it and not just 2 hours of tests on one day, which some children have been coached for 5 years for.
Some LAs already have a review system for borderline cases (which might include a report from the school or looking at school work).
Bucks felt they had to abolish their review system in order to get the 11+ results out before the 1st March allocations.
If we're talking about the exercise of discretion in borderline or otherwise deserving cases, that is something an appeals panel exists to do.
Bucks felt they had to abolish their review system in order to get the 11+ results out before the 1st March allocations.
If we're talking about the exercise of discretion in borderline or otherwise deserving cases, that is something an appeals panel exists to do.
Etienne
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Re: How does the county cope with so many appeals?
Kent used to use just this system a few years ago here in Gravesend. Children left juniors at 11 then went to local secondary. The Grammar schools took children from 13 who had been assessed by their secondary school teachers as 'Grammar ability'.Amber wrote:I think the grief for parents would be much less if school work came into it and not just 2 hours of tests on one day,
I didn't live here then but my neighbour tells me people still talk about how their sons/daughters were cheated out of Grammar places by useless/unprofessional/spiteful teachers.
The system then changed to take the 11+ like other parts of Kent and it is considered much fairer because the child themselves is tested. Unfortunately tutoring does still lead to an unfair advantage for many but it seems the current 11+ is a case of 'better the devil you know'.
When I took the 11+ in 1978, (in a Bexley school but I lived 1/2 mile away in Kent) I didn't even know I'd taken it because it was kept so low-key and certainly couldn't be tutored for.
Also, the parents of 11+ passers like the system, but parents of non-passers say it is unfair.
I really don't know the answer!
Yes, no system is entirely fair. My own personal view (which will be highly unpopular on this forum) tends away from selective education, but then I am a teacher (hopefully not 'useless, unprofessional or spiteful'; though I guess I have my moments at all 3!) and have watched highly intelligent grammar school 'failures' go on and get into top universities.
Maybe if there is to be a system of selection, the fairest one would involve a wide range of tests which it wouldn't be worth coaching for, an interview, and teacher assessment too. It would cost a fortune and make jobs for loads of pen-pushers - surprised no-one has introduced it yet!
**************It's snowing! *******************
Maybe if there is to be a system of selection, the fairest one would involve a wide range of tests which it wouldn't be worth coaching for, an interview, and teacher assessment too. It would cost a fortune and make jobs for loads of pen-pushers - surprised no-one has introduced it yet!
**************It's snowing! *******************
I'm sure you and indeed most schools would act professionally - but I heard enough appeals to learn that recommendations from different schools lack consistency.
I sympathise with the first. The second would be unlawful under the Admissions Code. And the thought of adding in inconsistent recommendations from schools fills me with horror!a wide range of tests which it wouldn't be worth coaching for, an interview, and teacher assessment
And if you're lucky, you might even get the results before the following September!It would cost a fortune
Etienne