How on earth does a trade union official afford school fees for Roedean?
He can afford Roedean fees BECAUSE he is a union official. Ripping off union members.
How on earth does a trade union official afford school fees for Roedean?
That's exactly WHY I send my kids to private school. I went to state school and did perfectly fine, but it's hard to fail at private school
Daily Mail . . . Fascist racist scum rag.
Quite. For one, places like Roedean still have to jump through the same Ofsted hoops as state schools, and have the same level of professional quality teachers and staff. Academies do not.
Apparently he pays the fees in cash with income from his Buy To Let portfolio... [emoji23]
Classic that Tories underfund state education for years and then blame people on the left who can afford independent school fees from reluctantly making that choice for their child.
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My son is at a Russell group uni studying a stem subject. His grades are on par or higher than many of the privately educated kids. He is by no means unusual for the state educated kids at the uni.
I have friends who’s children have been educated at private school and one thing that has come to light is that it at least three cases the kids have found the move from private school to uni very intimidating. They go from small classes with nearly one to one tuition to being in large classes with very little one on one tuition.
My son viewed it as just a bigger college than his six form where the class sizes in many cases were smaller.
That being said if you can afford it then why not.
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There was a discussion about scrapping private schools on Politics Live this afternoon. The idea is being backed by Ed Miliband and they want to get the Labour Party to adopt it as policy. So this chap won't be very happy.
Why are you ignoring that he sends his other child to a state school? Clearly he does 'believe in' comprehensive education. He obviously has his reasons to believe that this girl's specific needs are best served at a different school - information that we do not have.
Either way, he is entitled to that choice, and there is absolutely no conflict between that and opposing the privatisation of state schools.
I would like to see this list of the high proportion of posters on this thread who are defending (I think this is what you mean) the labour MP for sending his kid to Roedean yet who have also slagged off tory MPs for themselves being educated at Eton. Your inference is 'we' think Boris, Cameron, Mogg and others shouldn't have gone to Eton. Show me one of my such posts.....
I think that if three leading tory (or labour) recent/current leading female MPs had all been to Roedean, and were using their position to undermine state education while supporting the charitable tax deductable status of private schools, it would be reasonable to cry 'foul'.
Slagging of a tory MP for sending his son to Eton, though....majority of posters on this thread have done that? I think not.
You are as guilty as the Mail of conflating unrelated suppositions to weave a pejorative narrative.
You right wingers are all the same All of you. Fact.
There is nothing wrong with private education. But this is the classic hard left hypocrisy. Rage against the machine that’s it’s not ok for everyone else but it’s fine when it’s for them. It’s one of the reasons why communism failed. Full of shit. Whose the other extremist left winger who fought against private eduction the sent her son to one. That’s it. Abbott. Complete and utter trash. **** themAn arch-Corbynite city councillor in charge of schools policy who rails against privatisation sends his daughter to the most expensive private girls' school in the country, MailOnline can reveal.
Councillor Nick Childs, the deputy leader of Brighton and Hove City Council, has a daughter who attends £40,000-a-year Roedean school in Sussex.
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-7231707/EXCL-Corbynite-councillor-charge-schools-sends-daughter-40-000-year-Roedean-School.html
Mr Childs has tweeted in response:
1. I'm surprised that people in his position don't see the possible accusations of hypocrisy that might result.
2. How on earth does a trade union official afford school fees for Roedean?
Has he 'railed against private education' then?
Because everything that article highlights, centres on his opposition to the takeover of state schools by profit-making private organisations, which is a completely different argument altogether.
No hypocrisy here at all, I'm afraid. The rancid Daily mail and its hard of thinking readership need to try a little harder.
Thought you might say that. Hypocrisy of the highest order and as others point out how does a union official afford it? Another champagne socialist. He slams a fetish for privatisation whilst sending his daughter to the most expensive girl school in the country. Nope no hypocrisy there! Privatisation fetish won't provide our children with good education. Except his daughter, eh? No hypocrisy? You spin it how you like. Enjoy your champagne.
https://images.app.goo.gl/hFCtY1p2eqfXDPQw7Another one who struggles with simple comprehension.
The arguments over the privatisation of state schools into for-profit academies is literally NOTHING whatsoever to do with the benefits, ethics or otherwise, of independent public schools. It is utterly unrelated.
Thought you might say that. Hypocrisy of the highest order and as others point out how does a union official afford it? Another champagne socialist. He slams a fetish for privatisation whilst sending his daughter to the most expensive girl school in the country. Nope no hypocrisy there! Privatisation fetish won't provide our children with good education. Except his daughter, eh? No hypocrisy? You spin it how you like. Enjoy your champagne.
Another one who struggles with simple comprehension.
The arguments over the privatisation of state schools into for-profit academies is literally NOTHING whatsoever to do with the benefits, ethics or otherwise, of independent public schools. It is utterly unrelated.
If I ever have the time of inclination to trawl political threads on NSC looking for evidence I hope someone smothers me in the night to put me out of my misery!
I might give this thread a bounce one day though.
Read posts with interest. A lot of contrary and strongly held views.
Very surprised to see the justification of a Labour councillor paying for his child's education; yes it is his money but private education is firmly on his party's hit list of don't likes. Is he going to visit folk's houses when on the stump at the election and argue that PE should be abolished, or at least the charity exemption removed? The latter is certain to be in Manifesto, the former possible. How can he truly promote his party's policies with a clear conflict of interest?
I see nowhere the question whether the daughter herself is content with this arrangement. It is his money, but surely her happiness is more important. What does she think?
And sad to see so many resigned to 'if I had the money I would do the same'. Why? You pay your taxes, you have a right to your child's free education. What does PE actually buy? I reckon three things: smaller class sizes with more motivated teachers; better facilities; and (above all) positive peer pressure.
Unpick those : smaller class sizes are (as some posters point out) actually a real problem for many PE students at uni; better teachers I get but there are ways round this: additional tuition at a fraction of the cost of the whole package of PE being the most obvious. Better facilities similarly can be overcome by paying for specific needs: sport, drama, music, skiing holidays, again targeted and at a substantially lower cost.
Positive peer pressure is actually the biggest of the three. The problem is that this defines students into a conclave of like folk whose parents are, by definition, well off, or just happen to be fortunate enough to win a scholarship (minority). They simply don't have the life experience of encountering less advantaged students. Our youngest son is an A&E doctor in North London; his job is not easy with the ever present problem of gang warfare and its consequences, but he says that very few PE Medics even choose A&E. It becomes self selective, and means many educated privately have a blinkered view and a sheltered life (not all, just many and I accept this has been mitigated recently; mitigated but not fundamentally changed).
So support the state system. Use some intitiative and funds where it fails but don't cop out. Save yourself a lot of dough and use it wisely. Above all, ask what your children want.
Another one who struggles with simple comprehension.
The arguments over the privatisation of state schools into for-profit academies is literally NOTHING whatsoever to do with the benefits, ethics or otherwise, of independent public schools. It is utterly unrelated.
As soon as 'Champagne Socialist' is mentioned, you know that person has absolutely no idea what they're on about. Today, it's you. It's just about the most meaningless phrase there is, devoid of an merit and intelligent forethought, and certainly not one you can back up.
Try thinking for yourself, rather than using your vast ocean of prejudices to try (and miserably fail) to score a cheap point.
I can see it's becoming hard work for you explaining this simple concept over and over and over and over again, and yet finding easily-triggered, gullible non-thinkers failing to grasp it first, second or multiple times. To be fair, he's not the only one. I guess you could try it in Gammon-English - see if that works any better...?