![]() |
Moving my Son back at end of UK Year 10 (GCSE's)
Hi all - The planets may have aligned themselves after years of wanting to return to the UK, so that I am in a position to return with my Son end of April 2026.
He was born Feb 2011 and so at the time of returning to the UK he would have just started Year 10 in Australia - But would be starting UK school towards the end of year 10. So, his first full UK school year would be UK year 11 2026/2027. I am wondering if this would severely hamper his GCSEs? As far as integrating goes, he won't have any problems, he is very outgoing and has a big personality - But he isn't a strong student and if we remained in Australia, he would want to finish high school as soon as possible to head to trade school as he wants to be an electrician. Thanks in advance for any thoughts and feedback. |
Re: Moving my Son back at end of UK Year 10 (GCSE's)
Originally Posted by Aus2UK
(Post 13320105)
Hi all - The planets may have aligned themselves after years of wanting to return to the UK, so that I am in a position to return with my Son end of April 2026.
He was born Feb 2011 and so at the time of returning to the UK he would have just started Year 10 in Australia - But would be starting UK school towards the end of year 10. So, his first full UK school year would be UK year 11 2026/2027. I am wondering if this would severely hamper his GCSEs? As far as integrating goes, he won't have any problems, he is very outgoing and has a big personality - But he isn't a strong student and if we remained in Australia, he would want to finish high school as soon as possible to head to trade school as he wants to be an electrician. Thanks in advance for any thoughts and feedback. |
Re: Moving my Son back at end of UK Year 10 (GCSE's)
Originally Posted by old.sparkles
(Post 13320120)
I'm not so sure he would be able to sit GCSEs since these need to be selected during year 9 but some schools do offer 1 year GCSEs so it may be possible but likely at limited number of options.
My concern would be the OP’s son getting the grades needed to progress to an electrician course/apprenticeship for years 12 & 13 if he’s not terribly academic and would be cramming the whole curriculum in to a year. But perhaps they could get some study books ahead of the move, or tutoring, so that he’s not catching up quite so much. |
Re: Moving my Son back at end of UK Year 10 (GCSE's)
Thanks for feedback - And I appreciate the concerns (I share them too). I might email some school and see if I get a reply and/or some feedback from their perspective.
The other option is we stick it out for another 3 years in Australia until my Son finishes year 12 with hopefully a good enough SACE score to translate into something useful in the UK. But that will see his older sister and Mother moving to the UK next December when his sister has finished year 12. |
Re: Moving my Son back at end of UK Year 10 (GCSE's)
Originally Posted by Aus2UK
(Post 13320171)
Thanks for feedback - And I appreciate the concerns (I share them too). I might email some school and see if I get a reply and/or some feedback from their perspective.
The other option is we stick it out for another 3 years in Australia until my Son finishes year 12 with hopefully a good enough SACE score to translate into something useful in the UK. But that will see his older sister and Mother moving to the UK next December when his sister has finished year 12. Best of luck. |
Re: Moving my Son back at end of UK Year 10 (GCSE's)
Originally Posted by christmasoompa
(Post 13320128)
Or Year 8 - my children’s school did them over 3 years, not 2. There were several kids that joined my children’s school and did GCSE’s after a year or less of studying so it is possible. The school can’t refuse to take him so he wouldn’t need to find somewhere that offers 1 year courses. It would be straight in to the deep end though as most schools do mocks in November and January, and have completed most of the content by then. But him arriving in April will help.
My concern would be the OP’s son getting the grades needed to progress to an electrician course/apprenticeship for years 12 & 13 if he’s not terribly academic and would be cramming the whole curriculum in to a year. But perhaps they could get some study books ahead of the move, or tutoring, so that he’s not catching up quite so much. |
Re: Moving my Son back at end of UK Year 10 (GCSE's)
Originally Posted by Pollyana
(Post 13320206)
There might also be the option of going to Sixth Form College for years 12/13, and studying BTECs, as well as GCSE resits if necessary, that might help for something like an electrician's role.
|
Re: Moving my Son back at end of UK Year 10 (GCSE's)
Originally Posted by christmasoompa
(Post 13320208)
Absolutely, that was one of the options I was thinking of. But lot of sixth form colleges are reluctant to take those that need to resit their English/Maths, for that he may be better off with an apprenticeship.
Several options out there in any case. |
Re: Moving my Son back at end of UK Year 10 (GCSE's)
Originally Posted by Aus2UK
(Post 13320105)
Hi all - The planets may have aligned themselves after years of wanting to return to the UK, so that I am in a position to return with my Son end of April 2026.
He was born Feb 2011 and so at the time of returning to the UK he would have just started Year 10 in Australia - But would be starting UK school towards the end of year 10. So, his first full UK school year would be UK year 11 2026/2027. I am wondering if this would severely hamper his GCSEs? As far as integrating goes, he won't have any problems, he is very outgoing and has a big personality - But he isn't a strong student and if we remained in Australia, he would want to finish high school as soon as possible to head to trade school as he wants to be an electrician. Thanks in advance for any thoughts and feedback. |
| All times are GMT -12. The time now is 8:36 pm. |
Powered by vBulletin: ©2000 - 2026, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright © 2026 MH Sub I, LLC dba Internet Brands. All rights reserved. Use of this site indicates your consent to the Terms of Use.