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DIFFICULT CHOICES, BUT HELP IS AT HAND
– David Lyscom, Chief Executive of the Independent Schools Council, discusses the role of the
ISC in helping Service families find the right advice in searching for the right school.
Parents are faced with a bewildering choice
in the education sector these days – state
or independent, day or boarding, single sex or
co-educational – and most of these choices are
available at all ages. While independent
education is not an option for many, surveys
suggest that more than half the population
would – if they could afford it – send their
children to an independent school. Some good
news for parents is that the fall in inflation and
the onset of economic recession mean that
most schools will be looking very carefully at
the size of fee increases this year and will take
account of parental concerns. Further good
news is that the recession has not forced lots of
school closures, despite what you might read
in the press, so the choice of schools is as large
as ever.
As a former Diplomatic Service parent, I
have faced the same difficult challenges and
choices that confront Service families on how
and where to educate their children. While in
normal circumstances parents have a broad
menu of education options, most of them do
not need, or indeed want, to exercise choice.
That is not the case for those of us serving the
UK overseas.
Boarding education has experienced a
renaissance in recent years, and the
government has recognised the benefits that
boarding can offer by announcing financial
support for particular groups of children to
attend boarding schools. My choice for my
own children was the independent boarding
sector. The key reason was to provide
continuity in education and in their social
environment. I had observed first hand the
challenges that relocation can mean for
children, and the problems they had had to
overcome in dealing with them. Confidence
can suffer and, with that, academic
performance and well-being. Moving around
the world also meant that the quality of a
British education could not necessarily be
guaranteed. One thing that the independent
sector can offer is high standards of academic
teaching coupled with extensive extracurricular
activity and a caring environment.
Many ISC schools give discounts to
service families. Individual schools often give
details in their prospectuses. Even where this
is not the case, it is always worth asking
whether discounted fees are available.
Although it is tempting to go for the largest
discount, the overriding priority is to choose
the right school for your child. The best advice
is to do careful research and then to visit a
short-list of three or four schools. It is often the
case that parents (and children) can sense
whether the school is the right one. Different
schools suit different children, and – apart
from the feel of a school – it is not sensible to
choose a highly academic school for an average
pupil, or a school with not much in the way of
playing fields for a child who loves team
sports. Look at the school’s academic range
and expectations; its concentration (or not) on
sport, drama, art and music. If possible, find
parents with children at the same school and
talk to them.
Other factors are transport and
accessibility. If parents are abroad, and the
children will be flying out three times a year,
the location of a school, or the airport service it
offers, can make a difference of several days
each year to the time that children and parents
have together. It can also mean that parents do
not have to rely on grandparents or friends for
logistical help.
As part of the research process, it is well
worth using ISC’s information and advice
service (ISCias). This incorporates a
comprehensive search facility at www.isc.co.uk
using the central ISC database of almost 1300
accredited schools, with details of each school.
This search facility allows you to create your
own shortlists of schools by inputting the
criteria that are important to you. For example,
a search for a senior girls’ boarding school in
Kent, Sussex or Surrey produces a list of 18
schools. The same search for Lancashire or
Yorkshire produces only three schools.
However, if you search for co-educational
schools in Lancashire and Yorkshire there are
20 schools. This facility also enables parents to
search for schools that provide financial
assistance options, including HM Forces
bursaries. The ISC website is thus a quick
means of getting to a short-list of possible
schools, and there are the usual links from our
website to individual school sites.
In addition to the information on the ISC
website, ISCias provides a national helpline,
0845 SCHOOLS (7246657), which is
manned from 9am to 5pm, five days a week.
There is also an email facility,
information@isc.co.uk. Helpline staff have
access in real time to a comprehensive
information database, and also have a mass of
reference material on a range of topics related
to independent schools. Helpline staff also
have links with charities, grant-giving trusts
and other useful bodies.
Please do get in touch if you need
assistance of this sort. It did not exist when I
was researching for my own children and I can
fully appreciate the difference it could make
for today’s prospective Service parents.
David Lyscom studied economics and statistics
before entering HM Diplomatic Service.
His last overseas mission was as UK
Ambassador to the Organisation for Economic
Cooperation and Development (OECD) in
Paris. Before that he was HM Ambassador in
Slovakia. He also served overseas in Germany,
Austria, Canada and Saudi Arabia, and several
times in the FCO in London. He attended
Latymer Upper School, London, and Pembroke
College, Cambridge. He became Chief Executive
of the Independent Schools’ Council in
September 2008.



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