If your child does not pass the 11+, they will attend a non-selective secondary school, and that is genuinely going to be alright. The result does not determine their long-term success, and plenty of high achievers went to comprehensive schools. There are still options to consider, including an appeal, a later transfer test, and independent schools. But the most important thing is not the next form you fill in. It is how you respond, because your reassurance shapes how your child carries this.
- Your child will attend a non-selective secondary school.
- The 11+ result does not determine their long-term success.
- Options remain: an appeal, a 12+ or 13+ transfer test, or an independent school.
- How you respond, with warmth and reassurance, matters most of all.
What it means
In practical terms, your child will go to a non-selective secondary school rather than a grammar. That is the whole of it, and it is a path that millions of children take and thrive on.
It is not a judgment on your child's ability or their future. The 11+ measures performance on a particular type of test on a particular morning, and that is a narrow snapshot, not a verdict.
Your options
A few routes remain open if you want to explore them. You can lodge an appeal, though it is worth knowing the realistic odds before you do, which our guide on whether you can appeal an 11+ result sets out honestly.
Some areas also run a later 12+ or 13+ transfer test, which gives a second opportunity, and many families consider an independent school as a backup. None of these is essential, but it helps to know they exist.
Children take their cue from you. Praise how hard they worked and how they coped, and frame the result as one data point, never a verdict on how clever they are. That message protects their confidence far into the future.
How to talk to your child
Keep the conversation warm and steady. Acknowledge the disappointment honestly, then move the focus to effort, resilience and everything that lies ahead.
Avoid dwelling or replaying what went wrong. A child who hears "you worked so hard and I am proud of you" recovers far faster than one who senses they have let anyone down.
Comprehensives can be excellent
A grammar school is not automatically the better option. A strong comprehensive can deliver equal or better outcomes depending on your child, and the right fit matters more than the label on the gate.
If you find yourself comparing options, our guide on whether grammar schools are better than comprehensives may help you weigh it calmly rather than anxiously.
Moving forward
Whatever school your child starts in, momentum helps. Keeping a light learning habit going protects the skills they built and eases the move to secondary school.
A few minutes of daily practice with Pip keeps maths, English and reasoning sharp, so your child walks into Year 7 feeling capable, wherever they are headed.