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The advantages of starting in a preparatory school
There are 580 members of the Incorporated Association of
Preparatory Schools (IAPS) in the UK and Eire, with a combined
total of around 150,000 pupils. In addition, there are some 30 schools
overseas in membership. IAPS schools include boys', girls' and coeducational;
boarding, day and mixed; urban and rural schools;
individual and with senior schools attached. The size varies from over
400 to under 100, with the majority between 150 and 250, considerably
smaller than their senior school counterparts. Most schools are charitable
trusts, some limited companies, and a declining number are proprietorial.
In choosing a prep school, above all visit a number before you finalise
your choice.
Preparatory schools generally take children from the age of seven to
13, unless they have a pre-prep section. They are normally prepared to
accept entry at any age in between, with seven, eight, 8, and 11 the most
popular and convenient. They can offer full, weekly and, on occasions,
flexible boarding, which allows parents rather more access to their
children at weekends, something that can be appreciated by the dual
career parent.
Entry is usually dependent on an interview with the head, and a
satisfactory report from the previous school. Some schools set verbal and
written tests in English and mathematics. Details on the entrance
requirements can be obtained from the individual schools.
Almost all preparatory schools prepare pupils for the Common
Entrance Examination, which is used for transfer to their own senior
school or other senior schools at the ages of 11+, 12+ and 13+. The
syllabuses are devised and monitored by an Examinations Board, which
comprises members of the Headmasters' and Headmistresses'
Conference, the Girls' Schools Association and the IAPS. The papers are
set by the board, but are marked by the first-choice school for which the
pupil is entered.
Preparatory schools also prepare pupils for scholarship examinations
to senior schools. There a very wide range of entrance scholarships –
Musical, Choral, Art, and Design and Technology and other educational
awards and bursaries available, and details are summarised in the
Independent Schools Yearbook, which can be found in most public
libraries. Full details can be obtained from each individual school.
Summary
• A smaller individual preparatory school is set up to prepare its
students for entry into any one of a number of senior schools in
totally different locations,
• It allows the parents to delay the choice of a senior school, and
crucially to have more appropriate advice and evidence on the kind of
senior school most suitable for their child.
• It also gives parents more flexibility on where to live in relation to the
postings they have at the time, and whether the child should board or
be a day pupil.
• The individual Prep School, because of its relatively smaller size and
setting, will tend to have a more family and friendly atmosphere than
its larger school counterparts.
• There will also be more opportunities to be a bigger fish in a smaller
pond, and to be prepared more effectively for the greater competition
there is going to be eventually for places in teams, plays, orchestras,
and choirs in a senior school.
• Many of the essentials of an all round education are instilled here,
and cannot be left until it is too late in adolescence.


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