0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
Exactly, BFYP. (as an aside, it turns out the breakfast club you mentioned isn't the one my oldest went to; he was at the bigger school round the corner).Some denominational schools are fairly light-touch but others are very didactic and therein lies the problem.
Quote from: Mike_F on July 02, 2024, 04:32:12 pmExactly, BFYP. (as an aside, it turns out the breakfast club you mentioned isn't the one my oldest went to; he was at the bigger school round the corner).Some denominational schools are fairly light-touch but others are very didactic and therein lies the problem.Ah makes sense. I was also wrong on the breakfast club price from next year £6.25 per person, crazy. The company I worked for in the past used to charge £1.50.....
Quote from: big fat yorkshire pudding on July 02, 2024, 04:38:14 pmQuote from: Mike_F on July 02, 2024, 04:32:12 pmExactly, BFYP. (as an aside, it turns out the breakfast club you mentioned isn't the one my oldest went to; he was at the bigger school round the corner).Some denominational schools are fairly light-touch but others are very didactic and therein lies the problem.Ah makes sense. I was also wrong on the breakfast club price from next year £6.25 per person, crazy. The company I worked for in the past used to charge £1.50.....Is 'care ' time included in that or is just a slice of toast?
Does a CofE school class as faith school?
A lot more than that. For reference some schools round here charge 50p a day and like I said, the private company I worked for charged 1.50 and made a very healthy margin on that.
It's an interesting argument and not one that I've given a great deal of thought about to be honest. A counter point to your argument could be that your view is based around your own belief (or lack of) any religion? In other words, you think faith schools should be reined in, because you don't believe? However, to those who do run these schools, the existence and teachings of religion are based on the belief that it is fact? I'm not saying that this is my view in particular, and I do have a bit of sympathy with your opinion, but it's an interesting debate. For the record though, there's 2 faith schools quite close to me (Catholic and Islam) and both seem to be excellent from what I can gather.
Quote from: Herbert Anchovy on July 02, 2024, 05:32:25 pmIt's an interesting argument and not one that I've given a great deal of thought about to be honest. A counter point to your argument could be that your view is based around your own belief (or lack of) any religion? In other words, you think faith schools should be reined in, because you don't believe? However, to those who do run these schools, the existence and teachings of religion are based on the belief that it is fact? I'm not saying that this is my view in particular, and I do have a bit of sympathy with your opinion, but it's an interesting debate. For the record though, there's 2 faith schools quite close to me (Catholic and Islam) and both seem to be excellent from what I can gather. I'm an atheist but I absolutely believe that the right to choose to practice any religion or none at all is a fundamental pillar of our society. What I don't agree with is children being indoctrinated intro specific faiths through their schools which should focus on a balanced and consistent education rather than promoting specific views or ideologies on deities.The fact that two good schools near you are faith-based is part of the problem. Why should parents have to expose their children to specific religions in order to get them into better schools? I know several people who are not at all religious but had their kids baptised as catholics because of the two primary schools in their area, the catholic faith school delivers stronger results than the non-denominational state school. It's a farce that shouldn't exist in 2024.
Quote from: big fat yorkshire pudding on July 02, 2024, 08:13:33 pmA lot more than that. For reference some schools round here charge 50p a day and like I said, the private company I worked for charged 1.50 and made a very healthy margin on that.It would be easier to just answer exactly what you were offered for your money instead of hedging around it pud.edited
Quote from: SydneyRover on July 02, 2024, 08:16:49 pmQuote from: big fat yorkshire pudding on July 02, 2024, 08:13:33 pmA lot more than that. For reference some schools round here charge 50p a day and like I said, the private company I worked for charged 1.50 and made a very healthy margin on that.It would be easier to just answer exactly what you were offered for your money instead of hedging around it pud.editedI did answer the question, the kids go in to a hall, sit and eat toast and do a bit of colouring, not a lot to it.What do you think it should cost?
45 minutes. Would you agree with this being free or should it always be paid?
Ses again Sydney you are picking rhe argument with me because you don't like me as a poster.It makes very little difference to me as I just go to work after school starts, I'm salaried not paid by the hour. But to someone on hourly pay perhaps minimum wage that's a lot of money to spend, probably more than they actually earn and that's a problem for them. So instead of your little digs at forum posters think about the issue.The good news for those people is that Labour will win the election and their policy is not that these clubs should be cheap but actually they will be free to all kids, because like the tories on nursery care they've seen it's an issue for low paid families.