Jump to content

How to find out longest distance offered for a school last year, after the waiting list offers made


Recommended Posts

I know in the primary schools guide published it provides the longest distance offered last year for a each school. Am I right in thinking this distance was for the initial allocation only? How can I find out what the final distance offered was after all of the movement on the waiting list? I know this will vary from year to year, but I am just trying to figure out if I have a reasonable chance of getting into a particular school.


Thanks.

Hi nymom, yes you are right and it is a problem for parents trying to figure out their chances for future years. As far as I know, the furthest distance offered at the final allocation (after the shakedown) is not made available by the LAs.


So that is why the edf is so useful! There is a lot of anecdotal information on here about people's experiences of the waiting lists, and if you keep a close eye on the relevant threads, (and maybe a few PMs to figure out people's exact locations!) you'll probably be able to gather the data you need.

Hi Nymom,

you are correct in supposing that the last place offered distance is for national offer day. There are no distances available for after that as the waiting lists move continuously and basically whoever is at the top of thee waiting list is offered a place when one comes up. Those getting places from the waiting list could live closer than the last place offered distance if they are late applicants (there are many of these in Southwark eg through relocation). Also, some families may have forgot to tick the sibling form and those children move up to the top of the list, the same as those designated with social/medical need after the offer day. As there is continual movement on the waiting list going into reception and beyond, it is not possible to generate this information. If there are alot of new applicants living close to a school, the last place offered distance could shrink for these new applicants (as all applicants will be ranked and highest ranked candidates get any places available). Be aware that if you are on a waiting list, you can move down as well as up.


I would certainly not rely on waiting list movements for primary school when applying for schools. Also, be aware that last distance offered places can vary alot from year to year (eg Heber's distance is significantly lower than last year). Bulging tends to cause last distance offered distances to expand for that year, and then shrink below the typical distances due to larger numbers of younger siblings particularly 2-3 years after the bulge. I would suggest applying for your closest schools, in order of preference and choosing 6 (and possibly putting down church schools even if you are not religious as if the don't have enough children of Faith, they go on distance). Also be aware that larger schools tend to have higher last distance offered distances than smaller ones.

Renata

Hi. Thank you for this information. I applied this year and put down all of my closest schools for my son. I did not get first choice school, which is heavily oversubscribed, and I am trying to work out if I have a reasonable chance of getting in. My first choice school is actually the closest non faith school to walk to, but not the closest via the straight line method. My closest using the straight line method is about 350 m away, but about a mile to walk to due to the street layout of the area.

The family directly over the road to me go to the first choice school, but the children are older and I think the distance has significantly reduced since then.

I guess I will have to wait and see!

Hi there,


Does anyone have an idea roughly of the furthest distance non church place offered at St John and St Clements in the past few years, the southwark website doesn't have that info as it is a church school.


Thanks in advance.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • Really, I must have missed the huge demographic coming and going from M&S food 😉
    • Finally mended! I wonder if Ellie Reeves contacting Thames Water helped...
    • My phone doesn't show a URL for the forum at all!
    • OK, I have been extremely stupid. This is a long and sorry saga, so unless you are into schadenfreude,  or know about laptops and might actually be able to help, you probably need to stop reading here. I got a new laptop last May, with a 2 year guarantee from John Lewis (that was my first mistake, but the laptop met all my requirements at a very good price). I hate OneDrive, and I  had been using Carbonite for backing up files.  When I got the new laptop, the files from my old laptop which had been backed up on Carbonite were downloaded onto it. For tedious reasons originally related to problems with my old laptop, files and folders were duplicated all over the place. Sorting this out wasn't top of my priorities. In an attempt to at least keep new files,  and files edited since I bought the laptop, in one place and completely separate from all the old duplicated  files, I saved them all into folders  on the SSD. However, I didn't restart the Carbonite backup, because my intention was to sort out all the duplicate files first. About a fortnight ago, I bought an external hard drive. My intention was to copy everything on the new laptop onto it before I started deleting any of the duplicate files. I hadn't done that yet because I had to finish doing my accounts and then do my online tax return. So the copying was next on my To Do list. The inevitable happened. Out of the blue, my laptop went into complete meltdown. I was editing a spreadsheet and went into settings to turn the brightness up. I checked the brightness was ok on the spreadsheet, came out of settings, and suddenly everything went black. I did all the obvious things, then googled other possible fixes, including specific to my laptop model, but nothing worked. On starting the laptop, the Lenovo logo came up, the little white circle turned round, the red light for face recognition flashed, then zilch.  But clearly it wasn't a problem with the physical screen, as it displayed the logo. It wouldn't start in safe mode either. I thought I might either have accidentally changed some setting, or else it might be connected with a recent update  I couldn't try some of the tests suggested, eg removing RAM, because anything involving physically unscrewing my laptop would invalidate the guarantee  I am a member of Which Tech, so I contacted them. Obviously their hands were rather tied as they couldn't connect remotely to the laptop as there was no display. They said I couldn't have clicked on some other setting by mistake, as the display section only related to the display. They said they thought it was probably an issue with either the operating system or the mother board, or a component of them. They said it should be possible to identify the fault without losing my data. Given the involvement of John Lewis, I said I thought this was unlikely, as they had once told me to do an unnecessary factory reset on my old laptop and told me this wouldn't lose my data, which I had queried at the time,  and had to pay me compensation. So at this point I phoned John Lewis, to be told a repair would take "up to 28 working days" and no they wouldn't supply a replacement laptop during that time. I decided to take the laptop to John Lewis rather than have it collected, so their tech people could look at it first. So then the JL tech person said I must have clicked on  Bitlocker by mistake and locked myself out out of the laptop. I thought this was highly unlikely. Anyway, pursuing this line of thought did not help, and she was still unable to get into it by putting in the Bitlocker code. So then we had the data saving conversation. She said the company the laptop would go to was approved by Lenovo. She said they would do a factory reset first regardless. I said could they not try to identify the fault first. She said no. I said could I not request that they did. She said no. She said I could pay £150 for data retrieval, which could be done first. She said it would require removing the hard drive. She said if anybody else did this it would invalidate the guarantee. So. I have brought the laptop home to think things over. But I'm not willing to pay £150,  because the important files I can reconstruct by other means, and I have hard copies of most of them, it's just a time consuming pain. I have contacted Carbonite to see if they have any way of backing up the non backed up data even though I can't get into the laptop. If you have managed to reach the end of this post, congratulations 🤣 and do you have any bright ideas? I have typed all this on my mobile. It has taken a very very long time 🤣
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...