National offer day 2019: Primary school places to be revealed

Parents are due to find out which primary school their children will be attending from this autumn, but while the day will bring joy for many families, others will be coping with disappointment.
91% of primary pupils were offered their first choice in 201891% of primary pupils were offered their first choice in 2018
91% of primary pupils were offered their first choice in 2018

Hundreds of thousands of four and five-year-olds across England are set to be allotted school places, on what is commonly known as National Offer Day.

Department for Education figures showed 91% of primary pupils were offered their first choice in 2018, while 97.7% were offered one of their top three choices.

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READ THIS: Majority of Lancashire four year olds get into a school of their choiceMinisters said the number of children being offered their first choice of primary school had been improving since 2014.

However, heads warned that the offers system was not working properly in some areas.

National Association of Head Teachers' general secretary, Paul Whiteman, said: "Local authorities are responsible for ensuring sufficient school places, but the powers and resources necessary for them to do so have been removed," he said.

"Instead, planning is haphazard; decisions are being made in isolation and new schools and new school places are not always being commissioned in the areas they are most needed."

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The Government claims parents can feel "more confident than ever before that their children will get a world-class education".

School standards minister Nick Gibb said 87% of primary schools are now being judged as good or outstanding, compared to 67% in 2010.

"Any school place offer day is a big event for families, but parents should be reassured that the improvement in the school system means that they would probably find the schools themselves unrecognisable from a generation ago," he said.

"The curriculum has been revitalised, the phonics check is helping thousands of six-year-olds become fluent readers, the Teaching for Mastery programme means many pupils are being taught maths using world leading techniques and the gap between disadvantaged pupils and their peers is falling.

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"What this means in practice is that even in instances where parents aren't getting the news they hoped for today, the likelihood is that their child will be attending a school which will provide a first-class education."