They often include verbal and non verbal reasoning tests as well as maths and English. Grammar schools say they're working with academics to make the tests "tutor proof" but most experts believe this can't be done. The most expensive option is parents who educate their children privately throughout their primary years in order to give them a better chance of getting a grammar school place. The figures suggest this tactic works. Around 13% of grammar school pupils nationally have previously attended a private prep school. That's four times more than the proportion who are eligible for free school meals. These advantages, conferred by money, are one reason why grammar school intakes are disproportionally affluent. There is little that grammar schools can do about the private tutoring business, but some are trying to find other ways of compensating. Admission policies are a key part of this, and are also clearly a focus of some of the government thinking on grammar schools. Some schools have altered the priority they give to poorer children who have passed the test threshold. Most have not. The Schools Minister Nick Gibb gave a clear signal in his BBC interview today that one option they are looking at with interest is quotas. None of this is likely to quieten the broad coalition of opposition that includes most teachers, academics, and quite a few Conservative MPs. They will still argue that grammar schools are about excellence for the few, not the many. Read more: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/education-37691778
Grammars: Excellence for the few not the many? - BBC News
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