School Admissions from a Panicky Parent’s Point of View

A mum of two young boys, Stacey currently lives in Dorset and divides her free time (!) between looking after house and home, trying (sometimes unsuccessfully) new recipes, blog writing at It Takes A Woman, writing on theatre at BrewDrinkingThinkings and spending lovely evenings with friends and family. I’m very grateful she’s agreed to do us this cracking guest post!

My eldest son is nearly 3 and a half and is going great guns at Preschool, but pretty soon we will have to start the school admission process for him to start in Reception year in September 2012. School admissions are extremely competitive in my area and, since we are in the middle of two or three years in which there were bumper births in the area, competition for school places is quite fierce.

We live in Poole, which hit the news a couple of years ago for using anti-terrorism legislation when surveiled a family who had been reported as making a fraudulent application for a school place. They were not, as it turned out, doing anything wrong as they did indeed live in the catchment for the school they applied to – unfortunately it was (and is) a very popular and successful school. So why were they reported in the first place? Was competition so fierce that a green-eyed parent falsely reported them?

I find the whole arrangement troubling – parents at our Preschool who have gone through admissions this year seem to be mostly unhappy with their allocations. We previously lived in the catchment area of a fairly unsuccessful and quite run down school so when we had to move, although we liked the area, we specifically moved to the area we live in now because the First school is so good. It seems, though, that a lot of the children at our Preschool have been allocated places at the school in our old area, leaving us with the real possibility that our children will end up there anyway. We would have leave to appeal, but that may or may not be successful.

So what do we do now? At the moment, all of the above are unspecified worries as we can’t actually apply for places until the end of the year, but I’m trying to stay a step ahead in noting what the current policies are and what the deadlines will be. Our school of choice has 90 places available but, as I said, 2007 – 2009 were bumper birth years with an average of 1600 babies born in Poole in each of those years. Several schools have had to increase their numbers to accommodate this rate but it still means that not every child will get a place at their catchment area school. The Borough, however sees its job as done as long as all children in the Borough get a place somewhere – even though this could be a fair few miles away from their home.

Given this state of affairs, I know that I can’t change any initial outcome and I know the proper channels to take should we not get the allocation that we want, but I wonder what lengths some parents might go to, to get their children into a ‘good’ school? Obviously Poole Borough Council must have believed that the parents they surveiled had gone to fraudulent lengths to get their children into a good school and only last year the previous Government announced a range of measures, including a ‘whistleblower hotline’ and door step checks to uncover suspected fraud.

I’d like to think we’ve done everything right to ensure our children get the education we want for them, but we shall know whether we have done enough by this time next year. Unfortunately, I think it’s more a case of ‘fingers crossed’ than anything else!

Wow! Our area isn’t as competitive as this for school places and if Twitter and the like are anything to do by, there are even worse areas. Is the system broken? Are you in a similar situation? I’d love to hear your experiences.

Nicki

 

PlayMais – Fantastic, Affordable, Fun! #PhotoReview

We were sent a PlayMais World -Sea set to review just before the half term (great timing!). Playmais is 100% natural, eco-friendly and made from sweetcorn and food dyes and is a fantastic alternative playdough and other modelling materials. The packs vary in size, starting at just £2.99. The Sea World set we are reviewing retails at £16.99, and you get 1000 pieces, scenery, a child-friendly knife, instructions and more.

We are big fans of PlayMais and here is why:

The box is crammed full with over 1000 pieces but really caught my eye was the lack of packaging. This is a good thing... I hate wasteful packaging!
The box comes with scenery boards which can be built up for your child to display their models on. The scenery comes with instructions but it was just too much for me & Daddy had to take over. We struggled with the scenery but it's worth noting that Kieran opened the box the second time and just slotted it together. Humph. Perhaps it's not that complicated then?
Kieran loved using this safe (also eco-friendly) cornstarch knife to "cut" the blocks into different shapes. No glue in needed to put the shapes together, as the set comes with a little cloth you rinse and wring out. Rubbing the sides/end of a block on the water cloth is enough to make it sticky enough to bond with another piece.
The box states this set is for age 5+. Kieran is 5yrs in 3wks and could use it fine but found the instructions challenging. Instead, he used his imagination - this is Cyril the Sea Snake, as modelled by Kieran. This set really is suitable for a variety of ages from 4/5yrs up.
Yes, it's suitable for kids of all ages.....!
Just an illustration to show you just how much you do get in the box! The blocks aren't sticky so won't mix, dry out and get messy like dough or modelling clay so everything can literally get thrown back in the box for easy tidy-ups.
HOURS! Kieran & Daddy played for hours, Kieran and his friends have played for hours, me and Kieran have played for hours, Kieran has played on his own with these for hours.... I love PlayMais!
As you don't use glue you can stick the blocks to anything, the scenery, pot plants, photo frames... great for taking the kid's creations to a new level. Once dried up I have been able to easily remove blocks from each other for reuse
I have to include this or Daddy will be upset. Daddy created Terrance the Turtle using the step by step instructions. Didn't he do well!?

So how did the PlayMais get rated by our star judge?

A big thumbs up for PlayMais!

A great new craft experience for us and a wonderful gift idea!

You can see more about PlayMais on their website and don’t forget to visit them on Facebook!

*We were sent a Playmais set to test and review. Our findings are our own and are not influenced by PlayMais at all. PlayMais also holds no liability for the quality of my photography (!) and cannot be blamed for my inability to read scenery instructions.