Um
CatchnPass, under that rule the thread would be called "Proud Parents Thread".
We already have one.
Lots of assumptions are made about Scholarships and Busaries. Lots of people on sidelines will intimate that their little Johnny is on a busary etc when they are paying full fee simply to impress others. Others make assumptions about the nature of the "bursary" when they hear that word.
For example, one of my lads was at a party the other night, and one of the guests there was mouthing off to him about how he was in Newington 1st XV, NSW Schoolboys AND in Sydney Uni Colts 1sts this year. Funnily enough a quick browse through any of these team lists does not reveal a name that features on all three, nor was this boys name on any one of them.
This kid isn't Robinson Crusoe in either misrepresenting or over-inflating his achievements. Have you ever read CV's of job applicants?
I can recall back in the day not long after the movie Top Gun came out, nearly every 20 something year old boy in certain entertainment precincts was claiming to be down in Sydney on leave from RAAF Williamtown where they flew FA-18s. Each one of the 10 or so planes up there would have had about 1000 pilots allocated to fly it! I digress.
Many of the fee relief/bursary/scholarships for imports are not fully gratis, and as far as I know, these are quite rare, even for the worst serial offenders.
Many are expressed as a x% reduction in fees, or simply "you just pay us what you were paying at <insert other private school>".
Here is a poser for today for those interested in hypertheticals:
Consider a boy at school x. Parents paying full freight in Year 7 and 8 with intentions of refinancing the house each year when the annual demand for a 5% increase in fees arrives each year from School X. Little Johnny makes Sydney Junior U15 and NSW Junior U15 in Year 9. School X is impressed with his achievements and they (or a third party associated with that school) decide to offer some form of fee relief (pick a figure between 5% and 100%) doesn't matter. The parents accept that kind offer from the school/third party.
Does this scenario breach of the AAGPS Heads of School Agreement? The boy was already enrolled at the school, so there was no inducement offered to get him to enrol. He was not imported from another school, or a late entry to that school.
Tin Foil Hat time, Here's how it works. Inspired by the Sydney Uni Player points reduction strategy. Get the families in and paying full fees for their first year at the college, preferrably Year 7 but could be year 10. Offer the scholarship/bursary/fee reduction/subsidy in subsequent years. This works well with those families who can (just) afford to stump up with one or two years fees, but I need to think more about how a plausibly deniable booster arrangement could work for those unable/unwilling to stump up with the cash for the first year.
If you can find some old boys prepared to pay $100k for an oxygen tent, then I'm pretty sure that it wouldn't be too hard to implement the above.
It comes down to honour and ethics, and the value placed on winning games as opposed to developing young men.