MaizieD
^No it doesn’t. My own children achieved very well, chartered accountant/financial manager, barrister, doctor. We were teachers, went to ordinary state schools, the children of working class parents.^
The article wasn't about the prospects of the already achieving middle classes, maddyone It's thesis was that the 'working classes' are where they are because they are not bright enough to achieve and that their children will not achieve either because their breeding makes them also not bright enough to achieve. Though his conclusion is startlingly at odds with his thesis.
It's interesting though that you stress your working class origins. Why should the current generation be any different from yours?
Incidentally, my DD is a university lecturer. Achieved solely via state education.
I understand exactly Maizie. I was addressing a comment which claims privately educated children do well due to networking. I was showing that my children did well without networking. I’m really pleased that your child did well at state school, because all children should be able to access a fantastic state school. In my area unfortunately, the state schools are not excellent, they are very average, so we chose private education. My husband already taught in a local independent school and I taught in a state infant school, and it was difficult financially for us, but we managed.
We did come from working class origins. My father an engineering fitter, my mother a teaching assistant. My father in law was a bricklayer, my mother in law a cleaner.