Schools

The Cost of Selection: Grammar Schools, Tutoring and Educational Inequality

Published June 21, 2026
This Guardian advice column highlights the intense pressure faced by families navigating England's selective education system. A concerned parent describes their eight-year-old daughter, who is academically gifted but attends a state school with large classes and limited resources. Whilst they provide enrichment at home, they cannot afford the private tutoring that local families use to secure grammar school places—creating fears that their child will be left behind in underperforming secondary schools through no fault of her own. The letter touches on deeper issues of intergenerational educational trauma, with the parent acknowledging their own dyslexia diagnosis and underachievement at school. However, the core concern centres on systemic unfairness: the advantage wealth buys in admissions to selective schools, and the postcode lottery of state secondary provision. It illustrates how grammar school systems can inadvertently perpetuate social inequality, particularly when success depends on private investment unavailable to many working families. For local authorities and cabinet members responsible for education, this case underscores the tension between parental choice and equitable access. It raises critical questions about how councils support highly able pupils in non-selective areas, the role of admission policies in exacerbating disadvantage, and whether current funding models adequately resource mainstream schools to challenge their privately-tutored peers.

AI-Generated Summary

This article was automatically curated and summarised by AI from public sources. Links to original sources are provided where available.

Share this article: