Edward
Bartender
- Messages
- 25,116
- Location
- London, UK
True upper class people don't worry about getting into good schools. They get into good schools as legacy admissions. It's the middle and upper-middle strivers and climbers who panic about such things, despite the fact that no matter how hard they strive and climb, the very fact that they have to strive and climb permanently marks them as Not Upper Class. There's a line there that no amount of money and education can ever cross.
Yes, it is a peculiarly middle-class fixation. My folks were (luckily) fairly reasonable about it, but having clawed their way up from the Working Classes, they were very keen that I better myself where possible. In common with my middle class peers in the eighties, it often felt like at least half of my free time was spent doing things "to go on [my] CV for University". From the age of about six. This all becomes even more laughable once you see it from the other side and realise how little the system cares about anything other than academic ability and ability to pay (where appropriate). And quite rightly too. Far too many kids going to piano lessons they hate or in which they are at best disinterested because somebody thinks it looks good on a CV. A lot of kids I knew had a lot of the arts ruined for them as a direct result.