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The Appeals Guide to School Admission Appeals

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school appeal (admission appeal)?

School Admission Appeals

School admission appeals are available to any parent who has been refused a place at one of their preferred schools.  This applies to primary schools, secondary schools and maintained grammar schools, although different rules apply to sixth forms and fee-paying schools.  Special rules also apply where the appeal is for a place in a Reception, Year 1 or Year 2 class where there are already 30 children (“infant class size appeals”).

 

The admissions authority (usually the local authority, sometimes the school governors) must admit a child and comply with parental preference unless doing so would prejudice the efficient use of resources or effective teaching of other children at the school.  The school should set its admissions limit at the level beyond which prejudice would arise.  If the year group is below the limit, the child ranking highest under the admissions policy must be admitted.  If the year is full, the place will be refused.  The school will not override the limit, even if they would like to admit another child.

 

However, if the parent appeals, an independent appeal panel can override the limit.  The panel can allow the appeal if it thinks that the school’s  arguments in support of the limit are not good

enough, or because the parent’s arguments are stronger, or because the place was refused in error.  For grammar school appeals, the panel can look at evidence of the pupil’s academic ability.  For infant class size appeals, the panel can only allow the appeal if a child was deprived of a place by an error or if the decision to refuse was one that no reasonable authority could have reached.

 

The appeal panel consists of three independent members, whose decision is final.  There is no appeal to a higher tribunal, except by judicial review in the High Court if the appeal panel’s decision was unlawful, procedurally flawed or irrational.  The Local Government Ombudsman can also investigate possible maladministration.

Only one admission appeal can be brought in any academic year, unless there has been a material change in circumstances.  Although there is no legal deadline for parents to lodge appeals, it should be done as soon as possible.  Appeals lodged after the authority’s cut off date may not be heard at the same time as other appeals, so the school may be even more full by the time the appeal is heard.

 

Admission Appeal factsheet - COMING SOON