publication date: Sep 28, 2011
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author/source: Harriet Elliott
I am a reluctant
self-help book reader and so I was dubious about a book with “
survival guide” in its title. And surely a guide that covers a
subject that is a little
nerve-wracking for most, but is such a
rite of passage for any parent, and always has been, would be redundant?
I was wrong.
The Starting School Survival Guide starts from how to
choose a school and ends with moving onto the
next stage ie Year 1. It covers lighter-weight matters such as
parental playground cliques and much more
serious ones like
bullying. Whilst much of it is relevant to
independent education, it does assume that its
reader has chosen a
state school for their child.
Its author,
Sarah Ebner, is a respected
Times journalist who has written a
popular education blog. Given her background, it probably isn’t surprising that the
bite-sized format of the book
– real-life quotes and
straight-talking and
warm language – means that the
guide is easy to dip into,
easy to digest and easy to navigate.
I found that the
book actually offered a
real spectrum of information and opinion. There was a lot in the
meatier chapters that really helped my understanding of the system, for example
Actual Learning was great at putting the
National Curriculum facts into a
parental perspective. This is essential as most of us were at this
stage of school over 30 years ago, a lot of
how you learn has changed.
Much of the content was
simply reassuring – yes, if you are worried about something go and
speak with your
child’s teacher – sounds obvious but seeing it in black and white makes it
more reasoned somehow. And even the lighter-weight chapters such as
Navigating the school cliques for parents are written entertainingly enough to be
recognisable and successfully
make their point.
But what I felt was
The Starting School Survival Guide's greatest
strength was that it acted as a
wake-up call to me. It cleverly (and maybe unwittingly) painted the
full picture of the reality of being a
parent of a child starting in
Reception in 2011. So whilst I did not necessarily
need all its words of comfort, I put it down
realising that my
son’s experience of
primary school is going to be
very different from my own and perhaps that is the
greatest thing a parent can learn.
PWT rating: ♥♥♥♥♥
The Starting School Survival Guide: Everything you need to know when your child starts primary school is available from Amazon.