Khandro and naomi..don't be bl00dy condescending !
I was born in 1953 and therefore went to a primary school in 1958 and took my 11+ in 1962-3. Having narrowly failed that exam, I spent half of my secondary education at a Secondary Modern School. Quite a good school as it happens. The school, tried its best but it lacked certain things that kids today would see as universal and perfectly normal.
For instance, we had a science classroom only, not a Physics, Chemistry or Biology Lab. We didn't have a Language Lab either. But if any of the top pupils, of which I was rather a reluctant one, showed an aptitude for any of these subjects, we were, if we were lucky and our face fitted, put on a bus a couple of times a week and sent up to the Grammar School, 10 miles away, in which we were sat at the back at the back of the relevant class. You could tell who we were because we were the ones that didn't have the expensive school uniform that the Grammar School pupils had.
If, at the Secondary School, you wanted to take O levels, well tough, because they only did CSE's. After all, what did we need with a good education...we were just working class boys, fit only for apprenticeships, such as carpenters, plumbers, and electricians. The girls faired even worse.
All the best Teachers taught at the Grammar School, while the ones deemed not to have done so well at Teacher Training School went to the Secondary Modern. As I said before, my Secondary School was rather a good one and did its best. But there was never a moment when I wasn't made to feel anything other than a disappointment to have failed the 11+ at the tender age of 9-10 years old. For most kids, that failure meant the parting of the waves, that lasted the rest of our lives.
In the second half of my secondary education at age 14, I moved to Wales and attended a Comprehensive school for the first time. What a breath of fresh air ! If I needed to study Physics, as I wanted to, it was a short trip up the corridor to the Physics Lab.
As it happened I did rather well at Physics, and my eventual career was reflected in that, having passed the O Level at Grade A.
Comprehensive education provided the best chance any that us working class kids ever had of making something of our lives, and I will defend that to my dying breath. The net result of Comprehensive education was the huge increase in university places for working class kids, that exploded in the 60's and 70's. Lets not forget that less than 20% of kids passed the 11+ and that most us therefore went to Secondary Moderns.
To answer naomi's point, the Tories seem to find no problem in finding the time to privatise the electricity, gas, water and telecoms industries. So I'm not sure, if the bl00dy Grammar Schools were so close to their hearts, why they couldn't make the extra effort to bring them back. after all, its not as if the Labour party of the time could do anything about it.
In reality, the Tories had accepted that Comprehensive education was the way forward, and to turn the clock back to the 1950's would have been a retrogressive move. Even with these daft "Free" schools, they still favour Comps.
If you and anybody else had a good Grammar School education, than I am pleased for you. But for the great majority of us kids in the 60's, the Comps were the best thing that ever happened.
So, maybe us "working class kids" didn't do badly after all !