Trig said:
scorer said:
schtipps.
I was a forces kid and was brought up mainly in germany (Kings School) and Berkshire.
I feel bitter that I was not sent to boarding school and wished my parents had been tougher with me. Basically they offered me the opportunity to go and I said no, and unfortunately I won the day. I moved secondary school 4 times in five years with last move being at the christmas before my o levels. I didn't care then. But my god, had I known then what i know now (we all say the same i know) i would have gone to boarding school.
Without being judgemental and stating what is best for your children, i suggest you sit them down and discuss it at length.
It is very difficult for kids today anyway so they really do need the support and guidance from their parents.
Thats my view FWIW!
Almost exactly the same as me, I was lucky though because I was just into second year at secondary school when my dad got out of the Army. I got stability at the end of the day, but it came at a price. The curriculum that they were using in Berlin was out of sync with the school I ended up going to, so instead of being in all the top sets (as I was in Berlin) I was 3-6 months behind the rest of the year and when it came to the time where you were divided into the GCSE groups at the start of third year I got lumped in with the reprobates and people that end up on Jeremy Kyle.
I loved living abroad with my parents and think I am richer for the experience.
My advice to you Sctipps is whatever you do, do it as early as possible so your kids get a chance to settle into the rhythm of boarding school. My dad was away for months at a time doing the whole action man thing, but I never resented him for it because it just made it better when he was around.
Trig
You know whats best for your kids schtipps but fwiw here's my story....a slightly different scenario
My dad joined the navy when I was 8, my siblings were 6, 4 and 2 respectively. When I reached 10 our family moved to the place he was most likely to be posted and this is where we stayed for the next 7 years. I had previously attended 3 different primary schools and never had a problem settling in.
When the time came for secondary school I was given the option of attending boarding school and decided against it. From that point my dad worked away from home and depending on how far away it was we saw him at weekends, sometimes as infrequently as once a month. Ironically we actually saw less of him during the 4 years he was based at 'home', and obviously very little of him when he was sitting in the south atlantic during the Faulklands conflict
The year of my a-levels, my sister's GCSEs, he was posted abroad and mum & dad moved to the middle east with my brothers (aged 13 and 11 at the time) who settled in very well to the local english speaking school for ex-pats, and I know that they value the experience which that gave them enormously. My sister and I remained in the UK and stayed in a B&B, not as bad as it sounds, while we completed our exams after which my sister joined them.
I honestly say now that
I wouldn't have changed it for the world, though it was difficult at the time. I do think the key is a stable secondary education though and I'm sure my siblings and I am more rounded individuals for this experience than we would otherwise have been. I have to acknowledge that this is unlikely to work for every family though.
Only you know whats best for
your family and
your children but I will add that most kids are more likely to get the best out of their secondary education if they are involved in the decisions and understand why those decisions are being made. Kids are not stupid after all and 'right your off to boarding school'
could in
some circumstances create more of a problem in the future. I know I am very happy with the education I received as a result of being allowed to 'own' it. Obviously the quality of the schools available to you will also have a bearing on this and in that respect I was also very lucky.
All the best to you and your family in this. It won't be long before my brother will be pondering the same questions as you are now with his children, he has moved his family over the summer and his elder daughter has found this new term at a new school fairly unsettling.