st christophers
My grandson lives in rosegrove and my daughter has applied to get him into st christophers school accrington where i live but the school rules seem to stipulate that he must have being going to church for last 2 years which he hasn't but he has been going to a church of England school in Padiham since he was 5, is there any way round this rule? ???????
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Re: st christophers
I do not think so Mick. This ruling has been in place for years. It is the same with St Wilfrid's Blackburn. Pupils and parent or parents must be regular attenders of a church not necessarily Church of England. St Wilfrid's was always much harder to get in than St Christopher's but in recent years they have tightened their rules for intake.
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Re: st christophers
The only way i can see is to lie.;)
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Re: st christophers
That would not work as the minister of which ever church you say you attend has to sign a form confirming your attendance.
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Re: st christophers
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Re: st christophers
The only other way it's move. Some pupils who live close by will get in on this criteria.
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Re: st christophers
The admission policy for St Christophers is on their website here but the dates appear to be for last year http://www.st-christophers.org/user_...nal%20lois.pdf
It's not the child that has to attend Church, it's the parent with the greatest attendance that counts. As a general rule if one of the parents has not attended Church 4 times a month for the two year period stated and a vicar will sign the supplementary admission form to prove this then it's unlikely the child will get in. SOme three times a month get in some years but not always. Why does your Daughter want him to go to this school? If she does not attend Church or can use wither of these two then your grandson will not get a place and putting it down on the application form would be a waste of a choice Quote:
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ANyone putting it down as a choice when they don't think they meet on of the criteria is wasting that choice and you only get three. |
Re: st christophers
As said in other posts - It is the parent who has to attend church for a minimum of 2 years prior to admission. Three times a month may not be enough.
In some churches you have to sign a register as proof of attendance. You do not have to be local as there are many pupils that travel from Burnley and Colne to the school. |
Re: st christophers
You are correct Spider61 about not needing to be local to the school. My own two children went to St Wilfrid's in Blackburn and I live in Burnley. There used to be two double decker buses a day went from over this way.
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You could always remind them that God is everywhere and that you do not need to go to a church to find him (her), if they believe that then they believe in imaginary things (lol).
You can home school, how about home worship? Setup a prayer room at home, take lots of pics and invite the school to see it to show that you have been attending home church :) |
Re: st christophers
Your home Church wouldn't fit into the admission procedure so no point wasting your time with that one.
Admission procedure states: Quote:
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Re: st christophers
BTW - as an aside - My youngest 2 kids went to a catholic school, but only because we went to the school and talked to the head asking for entry, not because we went to church (at all).
So it may be worth talking direct to them as the head will\may have powers over the entry policy. |
Re: st christophers
rules have become more complex because more and more people try defrauding the system and go to extraordinary lengths to do so
out of curiosity does anyone know why schools have catchment areas outside of the area? Arnt there enough children in the area to fill our schools ? |
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