Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Good luck getting into CofE school. We lived next to the best one but had to go private as lottery/waitlist. Top private but still a lot more$. No regrets.
Also where will you live? Some parts of London aren’t London let’s be honest.
We would be paying for private. Sorry this is all new to me- are their private CofE schools? Is it difficult to get into a private primary school?
DH's job would be in the city of London. My dad grew up in Mayfair, not sure we can afford that but we have friends in Hampstead and they seem to like the area. My parents would live separately but would prefer to be near us.
I'm no expert but I attended school as a child in England. CoE schools are what we would call public schools. Public schools are religious in the UK. My village school had chapel and we all said the Lord's Prayer. That's just how it was.
Getting places at your local school (aka our American public school) is very difficult and my expat friend ended up having to send her children to school across London, even though there were many local schools including one right in their house. Getting into what we'd call private school is both easier and harder: there isn't the same admissions process we have here, BUT you put your child's name down many years in advance (used to be at birth, don't know if that's still the case). So that could be very challenging too.
Anonymous wrote:This is OP, thank you for the feedback. This would be an indefinite move- we could come back any time or also stay for as long as we want. We would rent out our house here as we have a fixed low interest rate. We live in an incredibly expensive area so London would be the same if not cheaper for some things. Weather isn't an issue for us.
Would be be doing this if Tuesday had gone differently? No probably not. And I'm not naive enough to think England is a Jane Austen novel/Bridget Jones movie. My dad is British and left for a reason so I'm pretty eyes wide open about it and that's actually my biggest hesitation. I'm worried I won't adjust well to the lower quality of living, I'm worried my anxious kids will have a hard time adjusting, I'm worried we will regret it. But I'm also incredibly worried about what's going to happen here and this seems like a door to something else I should try to at least think about walking though.
Anonymous wrote:OP you need to look up all these questions on Mumsnet. It’s the British equivalent of DCUM and actually much more widely used and comprehensive. There are entire forums there dedicated to private schools in London, how to get in, the entry tests, differences between schools, comparing private to the various forms of state schools, etc. Getting into a good private school in the right neighborhood in London is not so simple, and you are late in the year for starting admission for next fall. I’d start there.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Good luck getting into CofE school. We lived next to the best one but had to go private as lottery/waitlist. Top private but still a lot more$. No regrets.
Also where will you live? Some parts of London aren’t London let’s be honest.
We would be paying for private. Sorry this is all new to me- are their private CofE schools? Is it difficult to get into a private primary school?
DH's job would be in the city of London. My dad grew up in Mayfair, not sure we can afford that but we have friends in Hampstead and they seem to like the area. My parents would live separately but would prefer to be near us.
I'm no expert but I attended school as a child in England. CoE schools are what we would call public schools. Public schools are religious in the UK. My village school had chapel and we all said the Lord's Prayer. That's just how it was.
Getting places at your local school (aka our American public school) is very difficult and my expat friend ended up having to send her children to school across London, even though there were many local schools including one right in their house. Getting into what we'd call private school is both easier and harder: there isn't the same admissions process we have here, BUT you put your child's name down many years in advance (used to be at birth, don't know if that's still the case). So that could be very challenging too.
sorry for the typos. My friend's family was an expat family in pharma so they had lots of relo help, etc., but getting school places for the two children was still very difficult and they didn't know which school the kids would go until, I think, the day before school started. They were freaking out because of course the kids need a particular uniform depending on which school they go to, and they couldn't even start shopping. It felt like it might not work out but then ultimately it did, but hugely stressful especially for the kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Good luck getting into CofE school. We lived next to the best one but had to go private as lottery/waitlist. Top private but still a lot more$. No regrets.
Also where will you live? Some parts of London aren’t London let’s be honest.
We would be paying for private. Sorry this is all new to me- are their private CofE schools? Is it difficult to get into a private primary school?
DH's job would be in the city of London. My dad grew up in Mayfair, not sure we can afford that but we have friends in Hampstead and they seem to like the area. My parents would live separately but would prefer to be near us.
I'm no expert but I attended school as a child in England. CoE schools are what we would call public schools. Public schools are religious in the UK. My village school had chapel and we all said the Lord's Prayer. That's just how it was.
Getting places at your local school (aka our American public school) is very difficult and my expat friend ended up having to send her children to school across London, even though there were many local schools including one right in their house. Getting into what we'd call private school is both easier and harder: there isn't the same admissions process we have here, BUT you put your child's name down many years in advance (used to be at birth, don't know if that's still the case). So that could be very challenging too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Good luck getting into CofE school. We lived next to the best one but had to go private as lottery/waitlist. Top private but still a lot more$. No regrets.
Also where will you live? Some parts of London aren’t London let’s be honest.
We would be paying for private. Sorry this is all new to me- are their private CofE schools? Is it difficult to get into a private primary school?
DH's job would be in the city of London. My dad grew up in Mayfair, not sure we can afford that but we have friends in Hampstead and they seem to like the area. My parents would live separately but would prefer to be near us.
Anonymous wrote:Hell, yes, go! The morning after the election I had my husband looking for job posts overseas. Living almost anywhere other than the USA for the next four years is better.
Anonymous wrote:Good luck getting into CofE school. We lived next to the best one but had to go private as lottery/waitlist. Top private but still a lot more$. No regrets.
Also where will you live? Some parts of London aren’t London let’s be honest.