I disagree with a number of you about the rightness of being able to pass on privilege to your children while a very large number of children in our society are fundamentally disadvantaged in a startlingly unequal system. If we had a more equal society, like say, Denmark's, providing options for individuals to exercise personal preferences would be OK.
I agree, if we had a more equal society - we don't, though. Should I sacrifice my children's prospects for that, or should I bring them up with both the capacity (from their schooling) and the drive (from my parenting) to create a more equal society?
Currently, parents dissatisfied with state provision who are rich enough can save their children from suffering at its hands by paying. I think this entrenches inequality in society and is unfair.
In many instances that's the outcome, but I'd suggest that it's rarely the intention - certainly, I don't come from privileged background, there is no significant privilege to entrench.
There would still be the opportunity to give your children unfair advantages over their peer group if private schools were abolished and there would still be inequality due to location and selection policies, but I still think it would be a change for the better.
This would be sacrificing some degree of access to better educational outcomes and restricting it to an even more select few; if the intention is to remove embedded privilege, making something even more exclusive is not going to achieve that, making it even more accessible should be the goal.
Standardising mediocrity is not necessarily the outcome.
It is. Again, it's not the intention, but it's what the effect would be - if you remove from private education the freedom, improved funding and employment incentives that make it better, you just end up with more of the mediocrity that you already have in a system that is increasingly designed to attain mediocrity and is largely uninterested in anything more.
The products of Eton we've had running the country recently are supposed to be the cream of the crop, aren't they? I went to a comprehensive in the 70s and I don't think I could have made a worse job of it.
Eton =/= 'all of private education'. If there are too many Eton old-boys in positions of power, let's look at why, let's not shut down all the other private educational establishments that do wonders across the country.
Of course where I went to school "be Prime Minister" wasn't an acceptable answer to the question "what do you want to do when you grow up?"
And there, right there, we have a prime example of the cult of mediocrity. Why wasn't it an acceptable answer? I'd guess it would be viewed with wry amusement in most state schools today, but why - someone has to do it, we can look at the likes of Theresa May and Boris Johnson and see that it doesn't take a member of MENSA, by any stretch.
O.