Deferred entry to school
Provision must be made for the admission to school of all children in the September following their fourth birthday. Where a place at a school has been offered:
- Your child is entitled to a full-time place in the September following their fourth birthday;
- You can defer the date your child is admitted to the school until later in the school year, but not beyond the point at which they reach compulsory school age and not beyond the beginning of the final term of the school year for which it was made; or
- If you wish your child may attend part-time until later in the school year but not beyond the point at which they reach compulsory school age.
A child reaches compulsory school age on the prescribed day following his or her fifth birthday (31 December, 31 March and 31 August).
Admission outside normal age range
In Solihull it is usual for children to be taught in the year group according to their chronological age. This is entirely appropriate for the vast majority of children whose needs can be supported by experienced school staff and the opportunities offered by the early years foundation stage curriculum.
Occasionally, it may be in the best interests of the child to teach him or her out of their chronological year group. This may be because of serious illness or severe learning difficulties.
Parents of summer-born children, defined by the DfE as children born between 1 April and 31 August may request that their child be taught out of the normal age group. This request may be supported by professional evidence such as a speech and language therapist or it may simply be the parent’s statement as to why they are making their request.
Parents wishing to make a request are advised to follow this process:
- Apply for a place for your child’s normal age group at the usual time
- Submit a request for admission out of the normal age group at the same time and by the closing date, by emailing admissions@solihull.gov.uk for local authority school or direct to an academy or voluntary aided school
- Admission authorities will respond to the request before national offer day
- If the request is agreed the application for the normal age group will be withdrawn before a place is offered
- If the request is refused the application will proceed for the normal age group and you must decide whether to accept the offer of a place, or to refuse it and make an in-year application for admission once your child reaches statutory school age
- If your request is agreed, this is not an offer of a school place, you must make a new application as part of the main admissions round the following year
One admission authority cannot be required to honour a decision made by another admission authority on admission out of the normal age group. Parents, therefore, should consider whether to request admission out of the normal year group at all their preference schools, rather than just their first preference school.
Once a request is submitted, the admissions authority is responsible for making the decision about whether the child should be admitted out of their normal age group. For maintained schools this will be the local authority, for voluntary aided schools or academies this will be the Governing Body or Trust.
The admissions authority will take account of the child’s individual needs and abilities to consider whether these can best be met in reception or year one. In effect, this means that the authority is making a decision about whether it would be in the child’s best interest to miss the reception year.
In making this decision the admissions authority will take account of:
- The views of the parent
- Information on the child’s academic and social and emotional development
- The child’s medical history and views of medical professionals, if relevant
- Whether the child was born prematurely and to which year group it would have fallen into if it was born on time; and
- The views of the Head Teacher
Parents have a statutory right to appeal against the refusal of a place at a school for which they have applied. This right does not apply if they are offered a place at the school but it is not in their preferred age group.
If you are unhappy with the decision that has been reached following your request, you can make a complaint using the local authority complaints procedure for maintained schools or the schools complaints procedure for voluntary aided schools and academies.
If you are not satisfied with the way the local authority has handled your complaint, you may then refer their complaint to the Local Government and Social Care Ombudsman. In the case of an academy, you may refer your complaint to the Education and Skills Funding Agency who will consider the complaint on behalf of the Secretary of State for Education.
The Department for Education has issued advice and guidance for parents of summer born children.