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The education of service children - the boarding option
We in the Services have three options: our
children have a disruptive education; we
board; or we live apart from our families.
None of these is ideal for most people.’*.
SSuch was a recent indictment of the
choice facing Service parents starting to
educate their children. This Guide aims to
provide an outline of the various boarding
options, sources of where to find the essential
information, and how to make the best of all
the opportunities, both short and long term,
of a boarding education. Not everybody
wants to board, but the alternatives of
moving school with every change of posting
can seriously disrupt continuity of education
and eventual realisation of potential.
Boarding, therefore, deserves serious
consideration.
Although the majority of Service children
are educated in LEA – maintained day
schools in the UK, ‘there are some 550
accredited boarding schools in membership of
either the Independent Schools Council or the
Boarding Schools Association.
Currently,
out of a total boarding population of
around 72,000, some 10,800 Service
children (15%) board in these schools.’*
Their parents are helped by the
Continuity of Education Allowance, which
provides assistance with meeting the boarding
fee. Consequently, Service children make up
a vital proportion of those boarding, and
their needs and special circumstances are well
understood within the schools.
Boarding is one of the greatest strengths
of British education. This Guide considers
some of the key issues facing all Service
parents, and elaborates on many of the pros
and cons. It emphasises the advantages of
planning ahead and carefully researching the
possibilities. Above all, it is aimed
specifically at the Service parent and it
illustrates the very wide range of boarding
opportunities not always appreciated by the
average parent.
We would like to thank all our
contributors, particularly the Chief of the
General Staff for his Foreword, our new
contributors, and the parents and pupils for
their forthright comments on how boarding
works in practice. We hope you will find it
helpful; we welcome your feedback and your
suggestions on how future editions can be
improved.
* House of Commons Defence Committee’s Educating Service Children Report, September 2006.



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