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You want to learn - tough

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    #11
    Originally posted by Platypus View Post
    Keep the kids at home and anaesthetise them with ciggies and cider and Sky Sports, same as their parents. Most of 'em will never get jobs ever anyway, and will just be dole scroungers, so why bother educating them?

    EDIT: the chavvy ones anyway. Nice middle class kids whose parents are seeing house price increases should obviously be educated
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      #12
      "More than a fifth (20.4%) of primaries are full, or over capacity."

      Or

      Nearly 80% of primaries are undersubscribed.

      Comment


        #13
        Originally posted by mudskipper View Post
        "More than a fifth (20.4%) of primaries are full, or over capacity."

        Or

        Nearly 80% of primaries are undersubscribed.
        Hehe, way to over-inflate a 'problem'...

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          #14
          Originally posted by mudskipper View Post
          "More than a fifth (20.4%) of primaries are full, or over capacity."

          Or

          Nearly 80% of primaries are undersubscribed.
          Every school should ideally be slightly undersubscribed to enable people to move.
          Originally posted by MaryPoppins
          I'd still not breastfeed a nazi
          Originally posted by vetran
          Urine is quite nourishing

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            #15
            Originally posted by mudskipper View Post
            "More than a fifth (20.4%) of primaries are full, or over capacity."

            Or

            Nearly 80% of primaries are undersubscribed.
            as they have steadily pushed up the capacity by holding lessons in the corridor I'm not entirely sure you are being serious?
            Always forgive your enemies; nothing annoys them so much.

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              #16
              You want to learn - tough

              Originally posted by d000hg View Post
              Every school should ideally be slightly undersubscribed to enable people to move.
              You also have people moving away in most places though.
              Moving children into the upper classes is usually not the issue though, at least around here it's not. It's new reception classes that are overflowing. When moving my older stepdaughter from one school to another (into year 3) no school was full. It was the little one, only starting out who had issues getting into the better schools.

              I find this report doesn't illustrate the real issue very well. In most places it's not a case of kids not getting into any school, it's about them not getting into the more popular ones. Well tough, I wouldn't call that a problem as long as there are local alternatives. It's when an entire region is 'full', when I start to find it worrying, but there's not much evidence of that so far. It's pretty obvious that the 'better', more popular schools would tend to be oversubscribed. That in itself doesn't say much about the shortage of resources.

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                #17
                Originally posted by vetran View Post
                as they have steadily pushed up the capacity by holding lessons in the corridor I'm not entirely sure you are being serious?
                Wasn't being serious or joking - just interpreting the stats in a different way.

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