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Going for a song: choir scholarships
Anna Selby looks at a little-known type of scholarship that will help keep the school fees down - if your child has the voice of an angel, that is
In the mid-1980s, the private sector was educating around 56,000 pupils. Now, that number has risen tenfold to over 600,000. As the figures rise, more and more parents are finding that school fees make up a significant proportion of family expenditure - to the extent that they run house prices a close second in dinner party chat. It is hardly surprising then that there is the keenest competition for the few bursaries and scholarships still available since the demise of assisted places.
Yet there is one form of scholarship that is actually short of candidates - choristerships. This is particularly surprising as not only are they unusually generous, but they also start at a uniquely early age and see children through their entire prep-school life. So, what's the problem? According to Jane Capon at the Choir Schools' Association, most parents simply aren't aware that choristerships exist. 'We're living in an increasingly secular society and people don't actually go to churches or cathedrals and hear choirs sing.'
Bad press
Truro Cathedral has initiated an outreach scheme with 80 children from local schools, in the hope that it will find a budding chorister amongst them. But even if it does, there may be parental resistance to the idea. Unfortunately for choir schools, while all over the country they are quietly - and usually very successfully - going about their business, the only time we do get to hear about them is when they're in trouble.
The current Westminster Abbey Choir School scandal - where five boys have left and more are rumoured soon to follow - confirms all our worst liberal prejudices about boarding schools. An enquiry is going on into the 'bullying and emotional abuse' of boys by staff, with children being harangued in the middle of the night and sent to bed in tears, not permitted to telephone their parents.
Changing practices
The brutal Tom Brown's Schooldays image is thankfully far from the reality in most cases, however, and chorister boarding takes place in small, cosy dormitories with large playrooms filled with toys and train sets. Because practices have to be fitted in around all the other demands of the school day, choristers have traditionally boarded and mostly they still do. However, there has been a strong trend away from all boarding over the last decade and this has hit choir schools hard, particularly as they require boys to board from such a young age, starting at eight or even seven. (Not only are smaller boys more likely to suffer severe homesickness, parents are reluctant to miss out on their childhood with a regime that allows them, in the most extreme cases, access only for tea on Saturdays.)
Maggie Hartley, whose two sons have both been choristers at the (non-boarding) Temple, regards the idea of boarding with horror. 'We'd never have sent them away,' she says. 'We love them too much.'
This is a common cri de coeur and, hardly surprisingly, the non-boarding choir schools are being regarded more favourably - though they often require more of a commitment and a sizeable investment of time from choir parents, simply getting boys to practices and services on time. Day places are still in the minority, however, offered by, amongst others, Hereford, York, Tewkesbury, New College Oxford, Bristol, Norwich, Gloucester and the Temple and Chapel Royal in London. A few choir schools also take girls.
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