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Apr 16, 2024 · If your child does receive an offer from your first choice of school, a parent or carer must formally accept the offer by the given deadline.
Mar 1, 2024 · If you are not happy with the offer your child has received, what choices do you have and can you appeal a decision? ITV News explains.
- Step 1: Try Not to Get Stressed in Front of Your Child
- Step 2: Don't Reject The Place You Have Been Offered
- Step 3: Get Your Child on The Waiting List For The School of Your Choice
- Step 5: Find Out When The Appeal Deadline Is
- Step 6: Assemble Your Evidence and Documentation
- Step 7: Send in Your Appeal and Prepare For The Hearing
- Step 8: Wait For The Verdict
- What Happens If You Lose An Appeal?
Keep calm – easier said than done, we know! But no matter how devastated you're feeling, try not to let your child pick up on your worries and stress. It's probably also wise not to them overhear you expressing any negative views of the school where your child has been offered a place. If your appeal is not successful, your child may well end up go...
Accept the school place you have been offered, so you have a safety net. You don't want to lose that place and then, if your appeal is unsuccessful, end up with a place at another school you may be even less happy with – or (unlikely but not impossible) no place at all. Accepting the place you have been offered won't affect your appeal.
There's a lot of movement on primary-school waiting lists, even with the most popular schools – families with a place may move to a different area, for example, or they may decide to send their child to private school instead. The waiting list for your chosen school may be operated by the school itself or by your local council. Your offer letter ma...
Your offer letter will tell you what to do if you are not happy with the school place you have been offered. This should include information about how to appeal, including where to send your appeal, what documentation you'll need to supply, and the deadline for appealing. The admission authority must allow you at least 20 school days – from when th...
You'll need to submit your appeal in writing and clearly explain why you think your child should attend the school in question – and what the impact will be on them if they don't. It will help if you submit supporting information and documentation that backs up the case you are making. This documentation may include letters or reports, maps showing...
Your appeal case must be heard within 40 school days of the deadline you were set for sending in your appeal, and the admission authority must give you at least 10 school days' notice of when and where the hearing will be taking place. The panel will also decide the format of the appeal hearing: it may take place in person or remotely by video call...
You will usually find out, in writing, within 5 school days whether your appeal has been successful or not. The panel will uphold your appeal if it find the admission arrangements weren't properly applied or if the negative impact on your child of not attending your preferred school is stronger than the case put forward by the school. The panel's d...
Don't despair! If you lose, you can still put your child's name on the waiting list for your school of choice. Bear in mind that a lot can happen between spring and autumn, and places may become available. You should be able to remain on the waiting list as long as you like – which means even if a place doesn't become available before the start of ...
Apr 19, 2022 · 1. Accept it. This is does not signal to the LA that you are happy, it just locks in a "last resort" option. It has NO impact on waiting lists - you get no preferential treatment on lists or at appeal if you turn the place down, nor are you negatively impacted if you have accepted a place.
Jan 20, 2023 · If you or your child applied to a school sixth form and it does not offer your child a place, both you and your child can appeal the decision.
Feb 25, 2021 · The good news is that there are options if your child is not offered a place at the school you were hoping for or if it later turns out the school doesn’t live up to your expectations.
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Every year, a number of parents face the nightmare of not being offered a Reception place for their child in any local school. We explain what to do if the worst happens. When you're applying for school places, it's natural to worry that your child won't be accepted by any of your preferred schools.