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Open brewin.co.uk Call +448452132000 click to zoom in Go to page 8 Go to page 5 Go to page 34 Go to page 16 Call +442079610250 Look up postcode SW1H 9HP Go to page 32 Go to page 28 Send email to spipe@pressholdings.com Go to page 26 Go to page 11 Call +442079610200 Go to page 22 Go to page 18 Go to page 30 Go to page 25 Go to page 21 Open www.spectator.co.uk Go to page 14 click to zoom in
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WE LOVE INDIVIDUALITY.

At Brewin Dolphin, you won’t find yourself shoehorned into a portfolio that doesn’t quite fit your investment requirements. We’re independently owned, with no in-house funds to ‘push’ or ‘sell’, and our investment managers are free to choose from the whole market. So you can rest assured your portfolio will always reflect your own specific circumstances and your own unique wants and needs. This approach helps us live up to our simple, guiding principle: that the first thing we earn is your trust.

Investments may fall as well as rise and you may get back less than you invested.

0845 213 2000 brewin.co.uk Brewin Dolphin is a member of the London Stock Exchange and is authorised and regulated by the Financial Services Authority No.124444 Independent thinking British education is in a state of flux and uncertainty. This summer’s A-level results have prompted concerns about the number of university places, as too many well-qualified applicants seek to get started in higher education before university fees rise next year. At the school level, moreover, many troubling questions persist: are grades still inflating? Can Michael Gove’s free schools rescue the state sector? How can Britain possibly build 420 new primary schools in each of the next four years in order to meet demand?

Amid this anxiety, however, the excellence of Britain’s independent schools remains a source of reassurance and pride. This supplement, kindly sponsored by Brewin Dolphin, pays tribute to that achievement. It aims to help those contemplating private education, for themselves or their children, and to teach the uninitiated about what is going on in Britain’s best schools.

In these pages, Fraser Nelson instructs parents of young children looking to pick the right school; Ross Clark defends the embattled A-level system; and Jamie Mathieson tells university applicants how to maximise their chances of getting in. Ralph Townsend, the headmaster of Winchester, discusses the advantages that independent schools offer in the provision of spiritual education, and actress Rachael Stirling describes the head start she was given as an aspiring thespian at Wycombe Abbey.

There is plenty more, too, all intended to entertain and inform, and to show us that good private education should not be regarded as something to be ashamed of, but rather as an inspiration.

Choosing a primary Fraser Nelson

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Editor Freddy Gray Drawings John Jensen

Supplied free with the 3 September 2011 edition of The Spectator www.spectator.co.uk

The Spectator (1828) Ltd, 22 Old Queen Street, London SW1H 9HP, Tel: 020 7961 0200, Fax: 020 7961 0250 For advertising queries, email: spipe@ pressholdings.com

Defending A-levels Ross Clark

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Getting in to uni Jamie Mathieson 11

Christian values Ralph Townsend 14

Boarding works Rachel Johnson 16

Boy wonders J.R.H. McEwen 18

Girl power ary Wakefield 21

The value of Eton Douglas Murray 22

Internships

Philip Delves Broughton 25

My first theatre Rachael Stirling 26

Greek drama Will Gore

Rugby’s Olympian Ian Buruma

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Choral scholars Will Heaven

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Uniform policies Sophia Martelli 34

IN ASSOCIATION WITH BREWIN DOLPHIN | 3 september 2011 | guide toindependent schols

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