Tag: 2011

  • PRESS RELEASE : New free schools are a popular choice for parents [September 2011]

    PRESS RELEASE : New free schools are a popular choice for parents [September 2011]

    The press release issued by the Department for Education on 5 September 2011.

    • Two thirds of schools oversubscribed for their first year
    • Demand for some schools three times more than places available

    Thousands of parents have applied to send their children to the first 24 Free Schools that are aiming to open in next month. This comes as latest analysis by the Department for Education shows that Free Schools are targeting deprivation, with half of the schools located in the 30 per cent most deprived communities.

    15 of the 24 schools are oversubscribed for their first year, with some seeing more than three applications for one school place.

    For example:

    • Moorlands School, Luton, received 420 applications for 115 places.
    • The West London Free School, Hammersmith and Fulham, received over 500 applications for 120 places.
    • Sandbach School, Cheshire, received 340 applications for 210 places.
    • St Luke’s Church of England Primary School, Camden, received 54 applications for 15 places.

    Department for Education analysis published today also shows that Free Schools are targeting deprivation. Based on Super Output Areas – the most accurate reflection of a school’s local community – the analysis finds that of the 24 Free Schools opening in the next two weeks:

    • Over a third (9 schools) are located in the 20% most deprived communities.
    • Half the schools (12 schools) are located in the 30% most deprived communities.

    The figures clearly show that the Free Schools policy has already been a success in creating schools in disadvantaged areas and where there is a need for new places. Many of the Free Schools opening this September have been set up because passionate teachers and charities want to support the very poorest pupils who live in communities where results and aspiration have been low for generations.

    Free Schools will be good, local schools funded by the Government, but have greater freedoms than local authority run schools. They are run by teachers – not local councils or Westminster politicians – and have freedom over things like the length of the school day, the curriculum, and how they spend their money. These schools are opening because of real, local demand from parents for a new or different type of education to benefit local children and their families. They will meet parents’ simple desire for good, local, state funded schools that have strong discipline and – in many cases – small class sizes.

    The teachers running the outstanding Cuckoo Hall Academy, for example, have decided to set up a Free School – Woodpecker Hall Primary Academy – so they can reach more children in a part of North London that needs good new school places, and where the number of pupils on Free Schools Meals is high.

    Patricia Sowter, executive principal of Woodpecker Hall Primary Academy, talking about her previous experience before setting up a Free School said:

    It would break my heart. I couldn’t give places to half of the children in the nursery class because of local authority admission rules. I remember one Asian family whose mother had tears in her eyes as she pleaded with me to take her daughter. I knew I had to do more to help these parents get what was best for their children. I knew these children could succeed, despite the deprivation and despite what seemed to be a mindset of low expectations at the local authority.

    Under the Coalition Government’s new plans, Free Schools will also be able to prioritise the most disadvantaged children (eligible for Free School Meals) in their school admissions arrangements. With the Pupil Premium – worth £430 per pupil this year – there will be an even greater incentive for Free Schools to attract pupils that are most in need of high-quality education.

    From initial proposal to opening, the first Free Schools will have taken between ten and 15 months to set up from submitting initial application forms. In the past, it took between three and five years to set up a maintained school, with parent-promoted schools taking up to nine years. It also took five years to open the first 50 Academies. The Government is shaving years off this to respond to the urgent demand from parents, and to drive up standards more quickly – especially for the poorest pupils.

    Schools Minister Lord Hill said:

    What parents want is the chance to send their children to a good local school with high standards. These new free schools are designed to achieve exactly that and we are committed to opening many more in the next few years.

    For too long, politicians in Westminster have assumed they know best and that more political control means better results. The opposite is true. Good schools know better than politicians how to run their own affairs and that’s why we’re confident these free schools – which give them real independence – will offer local children a great education. It’s not surprising many are oversubscribed.

    Notes to editors

    1. As of 1 September, the Free Schools that are oversubscribed this year are:
    • Aldborough E-ACT Free School, Redbridge
    • ARK Conway Primary Academy, Hammersmith & Fulham
    • Batley Grammar School, Kirklees
    • Bradford Science Academy, Bradford
    • Canary Wharf College, Tower Hamlets
    • Discovery New School, West Sussex
    • Eden Primary School, Haringey
    • Langley Hall Primary Academy, Slough
    • Maharish School, Lancashire
    • Moorlands School, Luton
    • Sandbach School, Cheshire
    • St Luke’s Church of England Primary School, Camden
    • The Free School Norwich, Norfolk
    • West London Free School, Hammersmith & Fulham
    • Woodpecker Hall Academy, Enfield
  • PRESS RELEASE : Record number of under-performing schools to become academies [September 2011]

    PRESS RELEASE : Record number of under-performing schools to become academies [September 2011]

    The press release issued by the Department for Education on 5 September 2011.

    • 1,000 new academies have opened in the last year

    More children will have the opportunity of a great education as record numbers of weak schools are turned into academies this year.

    Forty-five sponsored academies will open in September, with a further forty-nine due to open during this academic year. This is the highest ever number of new sponsored academies to open in one year.

    In addition, 185 good schools will become academies this month – on top of the 796 who have already converted. These schools can now take charge of their own affairs and enjoy the professional freedom and control that academy status brings.

    Since September 2010, 1,097 schools have become academies (116 sponsored academies, 981 converter academies), meaning that 1300 academies are now open, compared to 203 opened before the Academies Act of July 2011. This is more than a six-fold increase.

    This means that more than 40 per cent of all secondary schools are now open or in the process of opening as academies.

    As of this September:

    • there are 1,300 Academies open across the country
    • in 29 local authorities, the majority of secondary schools are academies
    • in addition to the open academies, a further 575 are in the pipeline, with more applications expected in the new school year
    • the first 12 special schools have become Academies and we are working with 25 who are interested in doing so over the next year.

    Education Secretary, Michael Gove, said today:

    Teachers, not politicians or bureaucrats, should run schools. They should be free to innovate in the classroom. That is why thousands of schools are becoming academies.

    Every child should be able to attend a good school. But we have inherited one of the most stratified and segregated education systems in the developed world.

    Thankfully, record numbers of weak schools are becoming academies this year, so we are giving more and more children opportunities that have historically been the preserve of those from wealthy backgrounds.

    Academies benefit from greater freedoms to innovate and raise standards. These include:

    • freedom from local and central government control
    • the ability to set their own pay and conditions for staff
    • freedoms around the delivery of the curriculum
    • freedom to change the lengths of terms and school days.
  • Michael Gove – 2011 Speech at Durand Academy

    Michael Gove – 2011 Speech at Durand Academy

    The speech made by Michael Gove, the then Secretary of State for Education, in London on 1 September 2011.

    It’s a huge pleasure to be here in Durand, one year on from its conversion to an academy.

    An already outstanding school doing a wonderful job for children in one of London’s most challenging neighbourhoods has, in the last twelve months, made even more amazing strides forward.

    New support for children in the early years.

    More superb academic results at the end of Key Stage Two.

    A new cohort of brilliant young teachers trained here – in the classroom – and transforming children’s lives.

    And exciting plans drawn up to establish a brand new secondary school – with boarding accommodation – ensuring that young people in Lambeth can enjoy an outstanding state education which will equip them for the future every bit as effectively as any private school.

    What has been achieved here is inspiring – and underlines how, thanks to great teaching, our young people can achieve anything.

    Durand´s success is a result of partnerships. The school benefits from the active support given by caring parents. They know what a good education looks like, are ambitious for their children and believe in the aspirational ethos which permeates every classroom and corridor.

    Children enjoy brilliant teaching from gifted young professionals. We are uniquely fortunate to have the best generation of teachers ever working in England’s schools today.

    And the whole school community has a passionate and committed champion in the local MP, Kate Hoey.

    Kate has been a brave campaigner for educational excellence and a principled advocate for a better deal for disadvantaged young people throughout her career.

    She has always known instinctively what I have always believed passionately – the overwhelming majority of parents, whatever their background, want the same thing for their children.

    High academic standards.

    Rigorous qualifications respected by quality colleges and employers.

    Strict discipline, smart uniforms and respect for your elders.

    Playgrounds free of bullying and classrooms free of disruption.

    Teachers who instil the values of care, consideration and respect for others.

    And the assurance every child is being stretched so their individual talent can be nurtured.

    That is what Durand provides – what so many great state schools provide – and with these ingredients in place children from any background can prosper.

    Because the ingredients which make Durand a success have been applied elsewhere across South London.

    Look at the academy schools set up by one of the most admirable men I know – Phil Harris – Lord Harris of Peckham.

    His academy in Peckham gets half its students to secure five good passes at GCSE including English and Maths.

    When the school was run by the local authority only five per cent of children got those passes.

    Every single one of the schools he takes over gets at least an additional twenty per cent or more young people to pass five good GCSEs compared to the record when the local authority ran it. Some get 40 per cent more. His schools in Merton and South Norwood get 50 per cent more. And some of these schools have only been in his control for a couple of years.

    Phil is able to support state education so generously because of his success in business.

    His firm Carpetright has brought jobs and opportunities, as well as high quality low cost flooring solutions, to thousands.

    But many of you may also remember that Phil – and those who work for him – were, like many of us, victims of August’s outbreak of social disorder.

    His flagship building in Tottenham was torched in an act of nihilistic destruction.

    And it became, for a period, a symbol of London’s loss this summer.

    I found that tragic.

    Because the buildings which tell the real story of what London’s young people are like, and are capable of, are the academies Phil runs which turn out hundreds of brilliant, talented, wholly admirable young men and women every summer.

    And we have to make sure that the future for our young people is shaped by the values which make the Harris Academies such a success, not the values which ran riot on our streets this summer.

    We cannot say often enough that what we saw this summer was a straightforward conflict between right and wrong.

    On the one hand the overwhelming majority – those who work hard, those who set up their own businesses, those who came to this country to build a better life and create prosperity for others.

    And on the other hand – a vicious, lawless, immoral minority who need to know that their crimes will result in exemplary punishment.

    But while the first step in putting right what went wrong is clarity about responsibility.

    The next set of steps require honesty about what has happened in our society.

    To investigate where the looters came from is not to make excuses because of background.

    It is to shine a light on failures that originated in poor policy, skewed priorities and the deliberate undermining of legitimate authority.

    I believe in reform of our education system because I want to give inspirational teachers more freedom to do the job they love and give every child, whatever their background, an opportunity to get on.

    But we know, every teacher knows, there are some children for whom education currently is a tragic succession of missed opportunities.

    There is a direct line to deprivation which begins when children are failed in primary because their behaviour is not policed with proper boundaries and they are not taught how to read properly.

    When these young people arrive in secondary school they cannot follow the curriculum and cover up their failure with a show of bravado, acting up in class.

    That disruption is, in many cases, not effectively checked. That’s not because of any failing on the part of the teaching profession. It’s because we politicians haven’t given them the tools and training to keep order.

    The learning of every child suffers but the disruptive children lose out most.

    Some drift out of formal learning – playing truant and then becoming persistently absent.

    They, and others who cause disruption, are often excluded from effective education and placed in ‘Alternative Provision’ and ‘Pupil Referral Units’.

    Some of these units do a great job in tough circumstances.

    But in many of these units for excluded children there is often no effective academic learning which prepares young people for work, no guarantee of effective supervision for the necessary number of hours, no accountability for money spent or outcomes achieved and no secure barrier to prevent these young people drifting further into gang culture or criminality.

    These young people are not in school for much of their teenage years – they are on the streets – and on my conscience.

    For all the advances we have made, and are making in education, we still, every year allow thousands more children to join an educational underclass – they are the lost souls our school system has failed.

    It is from that underclass that gangs draw their recruits, young offenders institutions find their inmates and prisons replenish their cells.

    These are young people who, whatever the material circumstances which surround them, grow up in the direst poverty – with a poverty of ambition, a poverty of discipline, a poverty of soul.

    I recognise that using a word like underclass has potentially controversial connotations. It can seem to divide society into them and us.

    But I believe there’s a merit in plain speaking.

    I am also haunted by the thought that I might, if circumstances had been different, been one of them. I was born to a single parent, never knew my biological father and spent my first few months in care.

    Thanks to the love of my adoptive mother and father, and the education I enjoyed, I was given amazing opportunities. So I know just how much the right parenting, the right values at home, and the right sort of school matter in determining a child’s fate.

    I also know that if we are to tackle the scandal of our educational underclass we cannot shrink from radical action.

    We need to make sure children arrive in school ready to learn.

    We need to make sure children in primary school learn to read.

    We need to make sure teachers have the tools and the training they need to keep order in class so every child can learn, and that requires a new, explicitly tougher, approach to discipline.

    We need to make sure children are in education throughout their teenage years, and that requires a new approach to truancy.

    We need to make sure those children whose behaviour is persistently disruptive are in institutions which are equipped to turn their lives around, institutions which are held accountable for their actions.

    We need to make sure that every young person is taught in a way which inspires them and prepares them for the world of work.

    We need to turn round the weakest schools, which are concentrated in our poorest areas, by ensuring nothing stands in the way of giving those children a quality education.

    And we need, restlessly and relentlessly, to challenge, everywhere and always, the culture of low expectations that condemns so many young people to a lifetime incarcerated in a prison house of ignorance.

    Let me spell out the action we are taking in each of these areas – and the further action I propose to take in the months ahead to accelerate our reform programme.

    Firstly, school readiness.

    If there is one theme which predominates in the conversations I have had with primary school teachers in the last year or so it is the difficulty they have in dealing with children who arrive in reception class totally unprepared to learn.

    Teachers report to me that a growing number of children cannot form letters or even hold a pencil. Many cannot sit and listen. Many can scarcely communicate orally, let alone frame a question. Many cannot use a knife and fork. Many cannot even go to the lavatory properly. Some express their frustration through displays of inarticulate rage.

    More than 1,200 children aged seven or under have been permanently excluded from their primary schools for violence or other disruptive activity in the last five years. A further 53,000 children aged seven or under were suspended for similar behaviour.

    If children arrive in school unable to sit, listen and learn and then disrupt the learning of others then lives begin already blighted.

    Which is why we are intervening.

    It’s why we are increasing the number of health visitors to give parents good advice at the start of their child’s life and spot danger signs.

    It’s why we are overhauling the adoption process to get children out of the most dysfunctional homes where their futures are at risk and into the arms of loving adoptive parents.

    It’s why we are paying to extend fifteen hours of pre-school education every week to the most disadvantaged two-year-olds.

    It’s why we have extended the number of hours of pre-school education available to three and four year olds from twelve and a half hours to fifteen hours.

    But we can never do enough to improve a child’s development in the early years.

    Which is why the Government is going to follow up the work of Graham Allen and Frank Field to extend the scope of early intervention. The Social Policy Review which the Prime Minister and Deputy Prime Minister are leading will take things further.

    But let me be clear.

    The number of families where we need to intervene is small. I do not support an extension of the state’s reach into the lives of every parent. That will only undermine the virtues – of self-discipline, responsibility and aspiration – which we need to encourage.

    But where we do need to intervene we should not be worried about accusations that we are being judgemental, authoritarian or old-fashioned.

    Children should not be brought up in conditions of squalor, should not have to endure abuse, should not have to witness domestic violence, should not be left to vegetate in front of the television while alcoholic or drug-addicted parents ignore their needs.

    Having read – in the serious case reviews which follow child deaths or serious abuse – of some of the terrible conditions in which children are raised in modern Britain it is clear we need to be tougher on inadequate parents.

    We have a responsibility to protect.

    By making it easier to take vulnerable children into care, making it easier to ensure those children are adopted quickly and making it easier for those who adopt to secure the future of those whom they have enfolded in love.

    If we do not act we will perpetuate the suffering of innocents by allowing them to be inducted into a lifestyle without boundaries, self-respect or hope.

    And in the same way as I support intervention to ensure children arrive in school ready to learn so I support intervention to ensure children in school learn the most important thing of all – how to read.

    You cannot read to learn until you have learnt to read.

    But the level of illiteracy in England is shocking.

    At the end of primary school one child in six still cannot read properly.

    And illiteracy is concentrated in some of our poorest communities.

    A full 42 per cent of black Caribbean boys, and 60 per cent of white boys eligible for free school meals aren’t reading properly at the age of 14.

    But there is nothing either inevitable or fixed about the number of people who cannot read properly.

    We know that teaching using the right methods can effectively eliminate illiteracy.

    Using systematic synthetic phonics – a traditional method of sounding out and blending letters – can help almost any child save the most severely disabled to read English – whatever their socio-economic, cultural or ethnic background.

    Rigorous academic research in Scotland – in Clackmannanshire and West Dunbartonshire – has confirmed that the early and effective deployment of systematic synthetic phonics effectively eliminates illiteracy.

    Which is why we are providing schools with the resources and teachers with the training to deliver effective phonics teaching in every classroom.

    And we will hold every school to account for how successfully they teach reading. Every child will have a new reading check after two years at primary school to ensure they are decoding fluently. Once secure in this basic skill then children can read for pleasure, and enrichment, to pursue their own interests and to discover the best that has been thought and written.

    But unless children are secure in that basic skill then reading remains a painful, difficult and obscure process. Especially for those children who grow up in homes without books, without a reading culture, without access to literary excellence.

    There is a considerable lobby which argues that any additional check on children’s progress, of the kind we are introducing for reading, is unfair, generates more work for everyone and narrows the purpose of education.

    Which is, of course, nonsense.

    What is unfair is a world in which the children of professors grow up surrounded by books and ready to read at six while many children who are poor grow up in ignorance and ready to rebel long before they’re sixteen.

    What generates more work for everyone is a culture which acquiesces in failure early on and then leaves us all to pick up the pieces when a confused and betrayed child finds he has been denied access to his birthright.

    And what really narrows the purpose of education is a failure to give children the key to understanding the full richness of human achievement, instead leaving them frustrated, disruptive and branded too difficult to teach.

    Because one thing of which we can be certain is that the children who have not learnt to read properly are the children who disrupt everyone else’s learning and fatally endanger their own futures.

    There is an ironclad link between illiteracy, disruption, truancy, exclusion and crime which we need to break.

    But we must accept that there is no single measure any Government can take which will ensure proper behaviour in all our schools.

    Over the years there has been a slow, and sustained, erosion of legitimate adult authority in this country. It has been subverted by a culture of dutiless rights which empowers the violent young to ignore civilised boundaries which exist to protect the weak and vulnerable.

    I am a strong supporter of defending children’s rights

    The right to learn in safety.

    The right to have their talents nurtured in an ordered environment.

    The right to express themselves, and their differences, in a culture of respect.

    But these rights are everyday undermined by our failure to deal with the ignorance, insolence and violence of a minority.

    The only way to reverse this dissolution of legitimate authority is step-by-step to move the ratchet back in favour of teachers.

    We need to ensure, in everything we do, that we send a single, consistent, message that teachers are there to be respected, listened to, obeyed.

    There is nothing arbitrary or unfair in insisting that students respect, and obey, teachers.

    Teachers possess the knowledge that pupils should aspire to acquire, they have committed themselves to serve others, which is the virtue our society should most prize, and unless their authority is absolute in the classroom then they cannot teach and children cannot learn.

    So that is why the legislation we are currently taking through Parliament takes every opportunity to strengthen the hand of teachers.

    For years, teachers have lacked effective powers to search students for items which can cause disruption in class. Like mobile phones, flip video cameras and Blackberries.

    Students have used their phones in the past to record disruption in school and post details online. This summer we saw how mobile technology can be used to co-ordinate widespread disruption and violence.

    But there are some in the Lords who think this power to prevent disruption undermines children’s rights. I think nothing could be further from the truth.

    Stopping the smuggling of Blackberries into classrooms safeguards children’s rights – the crucial rights of the majority to learn in peace, free of the fear of violence and intimidation.

    According to a survey by the OECD 30 per cent of effective teaching time is lost because of poor behaviour in schools.

    The right every child deserves to be taught properly is currently undermined by the twisting of rights by a minority who need to be taught an unambiguous lesson in who’s boss.

    As well as strengthening teachers search powers we are also giving teachers the right to impose detention on the same day a school rule is broken.

    Incredibly, to me at least, teachers used to have to give at least 24 hours notice of every detention.

    Of course same day detention is inconvenient for some parents. But then disruption in class is more than inconvenient for every child who suffers.

    And parents should take responsibility for their child’s behaviour in school. If you don’t want your child to face an inconvenient after-school detention then make sure they don’t misbehave in the first place.

    As well as reinforcing the authority of teachers with these new powers we have also radically slimmed down the central guidance on discipline – from more than 600 pages of bumf to just 50 pages of clear and helpful support.

    The mere existence of 600 pages of dos and don’ts on discipline sent a fatal signal to teachers – if you don’t play it by the book you could find it’s you who’s on the receiving end of disciplinary proceedings. So instead of enforcing the rules teachers were cowed by the rules.

    We are determined to end that.

    So as well as signalling to teachers they are freer to use their own judgement we are taking every step to back up the exercise of their own authority.

    We are overhauling teacher training so every new teacher is given the proper support they need to manage poor behaviour. The fear of misbehaviour is a barrier to many good people becoming teachers and a reason why many good people leave the profession.

    But not nearly enough time and expertise is devoted to giving new teachers the training they need to keep order.

    Our new teaching schools – 100 outstanding schools with a superb record in raising achievement and exhibiting great teaching – will play a central role in giving teachers the practical hands-on experience they need in classroom management.

    We will shift the emphasis in teacher training from outdated theory to the very best practice, and to outstanding providers – schools like Durand.

    And we will ensure that when new teachers arrive in class they can deploy not just the skills they have acquired but also plain common sense.

    That is why we have overhauled the rules on physical contact to make clear that schools should not have a no-touch policy and it is right to intervene physically to maintain order. Or indeed to comfort a child in distress.

    And it is also why I cannot proceed with rules the last Government put in place which would have required teachers to go through an arduous bureaucratic process to record the details of every instance they do have to physically restrain children. The last thing teachers need at this time is another piece of regulation inhibiting their judgment, undermining common sense. The National Association of Head Teachers and the Association of School and College Leaders have both warned that this new regulation increases the burden on teachers. And I have listened to what they, and other professionals, have said.

    So let me be crystal clear – if any parent now hears a school say, “sorry, we can’t physically touch the students” then that school is wrong. Plain wrong. The rules of the game have changed.

    I know, of course, it’s difficult to restore order in some schools. Which is why we’re doing everything we can to support teachers who do the right thing.

    We’re changing the rules covering the malicious allegations made about brave teachers when they do step in to restore discipline.

    We know that some of the most disruptive children attempt to divert attention from their own misbehaviour by confecting allegations against teachers who attempt to maintain order. Some of these allegations are foul and the majority baseless.

    There were 1,700 allegations made against school staff in 2009/10 and fewer than one per cent resulted in dismissal or resignation.

    But these allegations often lead to the suspension of the teacher concerned, the blackening of his name, a blight on his career progression and, for conscientious public servants, a deep sense of trauma and hurt.

    That is why we are legislating to give teachers the protection of anonymity when allegations are made.

    It’s why we have made clear to heads that they should not suspend teachers just because a child has made a wild allegation. Leadership teams should back their staff all the way.

    We are also making clear to heads that false allegations are themselves a disciplinary offence and could lead to criminal sanctions.

    And I will also work with the Association of Chief Police Officers and the prosecuting authorities so that these cases are investigated properly without delay ensuring the cloud of suspicion which hangs over professionals can be dispelled as quickly as possible.

    Critically, these two particular changes, eliminating no touch rules and reforming the process which governs allegations against teachers, will help us in one other crucial change we need to make to improve discipline.

    We need more male teachers – especially in primary schools – to provide children who often lack male role models at home – with male authority figures who can display both strength and sensitivity.

    One of the principle concerns that men considering teaching feel is the worry that they will fall foul of rules which make normal contact between adults and children a legal minefield.

    By changing the rules to make it clear that adults can exercise their own authority and judgement in every aspect of classroom management we can help reverse the flight of men from primary education and bolster still further the strength of the workforce.

    And specifically in order to ensure that there are many more male role models entering teaching we will be launching our troops to teachers programme later this autumn, so that we can draft gifted individuals from the armed services into the classroom. Professionals who have devoted their lives to training young men and women in uniform will have the chance to intervene earlier in the lives of those they are best equipped to help.

    The right sort of military training can have a fantastically beneficial impact on young people with a history of poor behaviour. Cadet forces provide structure, discipline and excitement for young people. As independent schools know. Which is why I’ll be asking for their help in extending the number of state schools which have cadet forces.

    But its not just formal cadet training. The charity Skillforce, which is run by former soldiers, has a fantastic record in working with children who’ve had behaviour problems.

    It offers programmes which give young people the chance to learn self-discipline, teamwork, endurance, practical problem-solving techniques and useful vocational skills. Its results are amazing.

    But if young people are to benefit from the sort of programmes Skillforce offers, if they are to encounter strong role models, if they are to benefit from a disciplined learning environment, if they are to secure the qualifications which will give them control over their own lives then they need to be in school.

    And in far too many cases they are not.

    In many cases those young people who constitute our educational underclass simply don’t spend enough time in education.

    The true scale of truancy in this country has been masked by statistical manipulation.

    And the link between truancy and educational failure is stark.

    For years, the critical measure of truancy was persistent absence.

    For a child to count as persistently absent they had to miss at least 20 per cent of sessions. We have just published data that shows a far more revealing picture.

    There are currently 175,718 children who are absent for this length of time.

    But if you look at the number of children who are absent for 15 per cent of school time – at least a whole month of education – then the total is 433,129.

    And the number of children who are absent for 10 per cent of the school year – around 30 sessions – is over a million.

    A missing million of young people – missing out on school, missing out on learning, missing out on the opportunity to succeed

    There is a dreadful correlation between poor attendance and educational failure.

    Overall just over half of young people get five good GCSEs.

    But only a third of those students who miss between 10 and 20 per cent of school get the basic minimum of five decent GCSE passes.

    While three quarters of those students who attend 95 per cent of lessons get those five crucial GCSEs.

    Those heads who have succeeded in turning round poor schools know that you have to tackle attendance first – you have got to have young people in class, on task, all day.

    Because if they’re not in school when they’re 14, 15 and 16 they won’t be in education, employment or training when they’re 16, 17 and 18. They’ll be on benefits, in gangs and on their way to young offenders institutions.

    A child who is persistently absent is currently 23 times more likely to end up excluded than other children – and as we know – 80 per cent of young men in custody were previously excluded from school.

    So we have got to tackle the truancy tragedy in England.

    We’ve begun by raising the bar.

    Persistent absence used to be interpreted pretty loosely. You had to miss at least 20 per cent of all school sessions before being considered persistently absent.

    We’ve tightened the rules so its 15 per cent. And, in due course, I want to go further.

    We will give teachers the power to ensure attendance improves.

    They can, at the moment, issue penalty notices and go to the courts to ensure mothers and fathers do their duty to get young people to attend school.

    But policing of these sanctions is weak. When fines are imposed they are often reduced to take account of an adult’s expenditure on satellite tv, alcohol and cigarettes. And many appear to shrug off fines and avoid existing sanctions, refusing to take responsibility for their actions. So we need to review the sanctions schools, police, the courts, and the Government, have available.

    I will be asking a team of teaching professionals, under the leadership of our discipline adviser and outstanding headteacher Charlie Taylor, to review these and other policies we might implement to prevent more young people falling into the educational underclass.

    In return for giving schools more power, we will also expect them to secure improved attendance. Schools where truancy persists can expect much closer scrutiny.

    In preparation for the new tougher inspection system, Ofsted will be trialling no notice monitoring inspections this term, targeting schools with poor disciplinary records and poor attendance.

    These surprise inspections will mean that schools cannot – as some do – use a notice period to hide disciplinary issues. And the insistence on effective attendance will mean schools cannot – as some have – hide their poor disciplinary record by acquiescing in the absence of the most disruptive children.

    We cannot have a situation where those most in need are abandoned – denied their right to education because we’ve denied teachers the authority they need to teach.

    Of course, it’s not just by acquiescing in truancy that weak schools condemn some of their students to membership of the educational underclass.

    It’s also by formally excluding or referring these children into institutions which are, in too many cases, poorly equipped to turn young peoples’ lives round.

    At any time there are between 40 and 70 thousand children in alternative provision – in local authority pupil referral units or other institutions which are there to cater for those with behavioural problems.

    Some of these PRUs are outstanding. Like the Bridge Academy run by Hammersmith and Fulham Council which does a superb job. The teachers and other gifted professionals who work in our best PRUs and offer the strongest alternative provision do the hardest job in education. And they deserve additional support in their work. Which we will give.

    But, despite the best efforts of many dedicated professionals, far too few PRUs meet the standards we need.

    Last year only 2 per cent were judged outstanding for educational achievement. While 32 per cent of them were judged inadequate for attendance.

    And it’s not as though attendance at PRUs is onerous. The rules politicians have put in place mean they do not even have to provide a statutory minimum number of teaching hours.

    Of course the poor quality of some alternative provision should not mean we limit the freedom of professionals in mainstream schools to take the steps they need to maintain order. Exclusion is an important tool all schools need to be able to use.

    It is critical to any effective discipline policy that schools have the freedom to exclude children who have clearly over-stepped the mark.

    And it is important that when children are excluded for violent acts and grotesque intimidation that they cannot be re-instated over the heads of a school’s leader and its governing body. If we are to send a consistent message that adult authority is to be respected then we cannot send a violent child back to a school from which a long-suffering head has expelled him. That is why we are legislating to reform the exclusion process to reinforce the authority of a school’s head and its governors.

    But if we are to help schools deal effectively with disruptive children we need the policies which will secure much better alternative provision.

    And that’s why we’re acting now to help professionals do an even better job.

    We’re making sure PRUs are better governed and held to account for student performance.

    We’re allowing those PRUs which are outstanding to acquire Academy freedoms and grow so more young people can benefit from their leadership.

    And we’re allowing new providers to help by allowing alternative provision Free Schools to be established specifically aimed at supporting the most challenging children.

    We’re also planning to overhaul the whole exclusion process so schools are given the money local authorities currently spend on alternative provision, they are given the freedom to commission the right alternative provision and they are then held to account for the performance of those children they place in alternative provision. By giving schools more resources, more flexibility and also more responsibility, the whole system will be better aligned to give all children the support they need.

    But I want to be certain that we are doing everything – everything – to improve the quality of alternative provision.

    Can it be right that there is no minimum guarantee of the number of hours of education young people are given?

    Can it be right that so many young people in PRUs are allowed to be absent for so long without sanctions?

    Can it be right that we have children with serious, clinically-specific, special educational needs being housed alongside those whose problems are behavioural not physical or neurological?

    Can it be right that so much alternative provision is not properly registered, and therefore not properly inspected and not properly held to account?

    That is why I will be asking the team led by Charlie Taylor to look urgently into how we can improve alternative provision – and make sure another generation are not failed.

    I will be asking them specifically to work with Lord Harris of Peckham to see if we can accelerate the ability of Academy chains to establish new provision for excluded and disruptive pupils

    But critical as that work will be, a proper national effort to stop any more children joining this educational underclass requires us to be determined in tackling failure everywhere.

    There are more than one thousand primary schools where more than forty per cent of children leave unable to read write and add up properly.

    More than 200 of those primaries have been under-performing for at least five years.

    Many of them are concentrated in local authorities with an entrenched record of poor educational performance who’ve run out of excuses for their failure.

    More than 200 secondary schools fail to get five good GCSEs for more than a third of their students.

    Only 16 per cent of students overall get GCSEs in the core subjects of English, maths, the sciences, a language and either history or geography.

    And those schools which do not reach acceptable standards in these areas are, overwhelmingly, the schools with poor attendance records, poor discipline, poor levels of teaching and learning, poor provision of extra-curricular activity, poor links with business or universities and, above all, poor leadership.

    Which is why we are acting now to give the children currently in those schools a better chance.

    It’s why we’re setting up university technical colleges – with longer hours, longer terms, a stretching technical curriculum and all the discipline of the workplace.

    It’s why we’re setting up new studio schools – built on a human scale – for those children failed so far by conventional schools – with a curriculum tailored to those who need practical learning – and teaching delivered by skilled craftsman.

    It’s why we’ve established 24 free schools – overwhelmingly in areas of educational need – with the longer school days, demanding curricula and brilliant leadership our toughest areas need.

    It’s also why this year the Academy programme will take its biggest step forward yet – with more under-performing schools than ever before being taken over by high-performing schools, more high-performing schools taking formal responsibility for the weakest and Academy status becoming the norm for the secondary sector.

    But the scale of the challenge we face means we must go further, and faster. And that is why the Government’s social policy review is so important.

    Alongside it, I will be raising the floor standard below which no school should fall so we squeeze failure out of the system.

    I will also be asking more great schools to play an even bigger role in turning round the weakest.

    I will ensure planning laws change so great new schools can be set up in the poorest areas – and every Government department will be asked to hand over surplus buildings so we can get new schools across the country.

    And as we review policy in the Department of Education we will look at how we need to further reform funding, take on partisan vested interests and change rules on things like public procurement to build on the idealism which reform has already unleashed

    Just last week we saw how chains of Academies, not just those in the Harris group, but also those run by Ark, by EACT, by Ormiston and ULT had dramatically improved the performance of pupils since leaving local authority control.

    Schools in the most challenging areas, with the toughest intakes, turned into beacons of excellence – with young people who’d been written off a generation ago now getting ready to write their first essays at Oxford and Cambridge – and children who’d been destined for the educational underclass now experiencing an education which is truly world-class.

    Looking at those schools – looking at this school – it’s impossible not to be optimistic about the future – but we will only achieve everything of which we’re capable if we remember that nothing – nothing – should be allowed to stand in the way of the reforms which will give every child the education we would wish for our own.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Lord Hill responds to The Times on free schools [August 2011]

    PRESS RELEASE : Lord Hill responds to The Times on free schools [August 2011]

    The press release issued by the Department for Education on 31 August 2011.

    Sir,

    It is disappointing that Monday’s article plays down the hard work and achievement of so many passionate teachers, parents and charities that have set up new schools to improve education for children in their area (Pupil numbers are scaled back after failure to fill places, Monday 29 August 2011).

    Contrary to the gloomy picture painted, many of the free schools opening for the first time in September report that they are oversubscribed – with some receiving four applications for one place.

    The fact that hundreds of families are putting their faith in these brand new schools – schools that do not yet have exam results or Ofsted ratings to prove their worth – is remarkable. It clearly shows that parents want a better choice of local schools – run by teachers, not bureaucrats – which offer strong discipline, excellent teaching and high standards.

    Lord Hill of Oareford CBE

    Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Schools

     

  • PRESS RELEASE : More than 160,000 disabled children now enjoy short breaks [August 2011]

    PRESS RELEASE : More than 160,000 disabled children now enjoy short breaks [August 2011]

    The press release issued by the Department for Education on 26 August 2011.

    The number of disabled children receiving short breaks more than doubled between April 2008 and March 2011, with increases in every area of the country. The findings are published today in a report by Together for Disabled Children (TDC), commissioned by the government.

    Short breaks give disabled children and their families the chance of a normal life and opportunities that other children can take for granted such as playing with their friends, learning new hobbies or going on holiday. Short breaks also give parents a well needed rest from their caring responsibilities and a chance to recharge.

    The government has now made it statutory for local authorities to provide short breaks, as of April 2011. The new regulations require local authorities to publish information to parents describing what short breaks services are on offer in their area.

    The government has committed over £800 million for local authorities to invest in short breaks between April 2011 and March 2015 through the Early Intervention Grant. This compares with £270 million which was made available between 2008 and 2011.

    The number of disabled children receiving short breaks rose from 57,383 in 2008-09 to 162,831 in 2010-11 – an increase of over 105,000 children. This has contributed to a decrease in social care interventions and a fall in the number of disabled children entering the looked after system.

    The TDC report also analysed the success of parent forums across the country between 2008 and 2011. Over 1,700 parents of disabled children are now actively involved in planning services in their area through parent forums – over three times more than in 2008.

    Children’s Minister, Sarah Teather, said:

    Disabled children and their parents rely on support and free time to have a normal family life. Weekends away, overnight care and fun activities give parents a valuable break from caring and give disabled children a chance to learn a new skill or make new friends.

    The success of the short breaks programme is clearly down to local authorities working in partnership with parents of disabled children, so that services are shaped by their needs. The families involved benefit and services are better value for money so other families get to enjoy more short breaks services.

    Short breaks provide families with early help so they can cope better in times of stress, and are less likely to need help from social care services. That’s why it’s vital that local authorities continue to invest in short breaks and make it a priority. We have backed this up with a new duty on local authorities to provide short breaks.

    We want to give parents more influence and control over local services. In our green paper on special educational needs (SEN) and disability we have set out a range of ways that parents should be involved in local decision making. Increasing parent participation means more services are being delivered that are more responsive to the needs of local disabled children.

    On short breaks the report finds that:

    • Over eight million additional hours of daytime short breaks were provided to disabled children and their families – the number of daytime hours rose from 6,079,681 hours in 2008 to 14,308,283 hours by March 2011.
    • An additional 193,000 nights of care are being provided either in the child’s own home, in hospices, holiday parks or on weekend breaks. The number of nights of care rose from 587,095 nights in 2008 to 780,827 nights by March 2011.
    • Local authorities have particularly improved activities and breaks for children with severe challenging behaviour and complex health needs.
    • Providing a range of short breaks services has led to greater satisfaction from disabled children and their parents and is more cost effective than only using expensive residential care.
    • Greater parental involvement in commissioning short breaks services has led to better value for money, and therefore more services are being delivered to more children.
    • There have been particular increases in the number of voluntary and community sector organisations, particularly small local groups, delivering services.

    Christine Lenehan, Council for Disabled Children (CDC), said:

    Short breaks are essential for families with disabled children. Caring for a disabled child can be a full time job. This often means that parents of disabled children have little time to do day-to-day tasks such as cleaning, taking a shower and sitting down to eat a meal.

    Access to regular, reliable, high quality short breaks can be life changing for families, providing time to do day-to-day activities, to rest and to build their relationships. Even more importantly, they give disabled children and young people themselves the opportunity to take part in positive activities, to build friendships and to play an active part in their communities.

    CDC warmly welcomes the increase in access to short breaks, particularly for children with the most complex needs. However, this is not the end of the story. It is crucial that the Government continues to monitor local delivery of short breaks under the Early Intervention Grant.

    The government today announced that Contact a Family, a charity providing advice and support for the parents of disabled children, has won the contract to strengthen parents’ involvement in local decision making across the country. Contact a Family will carry through the commitments in the SEN and disability green paper to give parents more control over the support their child and family needs, and to fund parent forums in every local area.

    Parent forums have been developed in almost all local authorities to help parents have a say in the range and quality of services for disabled children. This includes, for example, the supply and delivery of equipment, therapy services, and the local SEN transport policy.

    An increase in parent participation and the active involvement of parents in shaping services has resulted in:

    • Lower stress for families, helping them feel in control of their child’s wellbeing.
    • An increase in value for money services.
    • Better, more coordinated local information for families of disabled children.
    • Some parents have personally benefitted and have returned to work as a result of the confidence of being part of a group.
    • Three pilot projects in Leicester, Hull and Tower Hamlets successfully increased the number of black and ethnic minority parents by tackling barriers such as lack of information and language differences.

    Srabani Sen, Chief Executive of Contact a Family, said:

    We are delighted the government has committed to continue funding parent forums which have played a vital role in shaping services to meet the needs of families with disabled children over the last three years.

    The results speak for themselves: more and more parents’ voices are being heard, parents feel more in control and this has led to a range of improved outcomes for children, young people and their families.

    Strengthening parent participation is at the heart of Contact a Family’s work and we look forward to supporting parent carer forums to continue their excellent work.

    Local parent forums share experiences, provide peer support, and get updates on national developments via the regional parent forum networks. A National Network of Parent Carer Forums (NNPCF), established in March 2010, supports local and regional forums. This has helped ensure that parents are engaged in shaping national policy, and that their voices are heard.

    The NNPCF has worked closely with the government in formulating national policy. Specifically they are involved in the selection of green paper pathfinders that will test the single education, health and care plan and personal budgets.

    Anna Gill and Carrie Britton, co-chairs of the NNPCF, said:

    We are delighted that the government values the unique and crucial perspective that Parent Carers can bring to strategic decision making at all levels, from national commissioning and policy making through to the local allocation of scarce resources; the ongoing commitment to support the development of all Parent Carer Forums through Contact a Family will help us ensure that the voice of even more families will be heard.

    Voluntary and community sector and other organisations have been invited to bid to support local areas, including their ongoing provision of short breaks.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Nick Gibb comments on the English Baccalaureate [July 2011]

    PRESS RELEASE : Nick Gibb comments on the English Baccalaureate [July 2011]

    The press release issued by the Department for Education on 28 July 2011.

    Responding to the Education Select Committee’s report on the English Baccalaureate, Schools Minister Nick Gibb said:

    We believe very strongly that all children have the right to a broad and balanced education that includes English, maths, science, a language and a humanity.

    These academic subjects reflect the knowledge and skills young people need to progress to further study or to rewarding employment. It cannot be right that children from the poorest backgrounds are significantly less likely to have the opportunity to take GCSEs in these subjects than children from more advantaged areas. Just 8% of children eligible for Free School Meals were entered for the E-Bacc subjects next last year compared to 22% overall.

    Closing the attainment gap between children from wealthier and poorer backgrounds is a key objective of the Government and the E-Bacc measure plays an important part in helping to deliver that objective. The E-Bacc is not compulsory but it is about closing the attainment gap between rich and poor and about increasing opportunity.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Outcome of the review of NHS student support [July 2011]

    PRESS RELEASE : Outcome of the review of NHS student support [July 2011]

    The press release issued by the Department for Education on 25 July 2011.

    The new package of support will provide new students with a small non-means tested grant, a means tested bursary and a reduced rate non-means-tested loan. The loan will be provided by Student Finance England. As with the current scheme, different rates of means tested bursary and loan will apply according to where a student lives and studies, whether in London, outside of London, or with their parents.

    This means that a healthcare student on an eligible course of 45 weeks in duration and studying outside London could receive a non-means tested grant of £1,000, a means tested bursary of up to £4,395 and a non-means tested loan of up to £2,324.

    It is planned that these changes will take effect from September 2012. Any changes which are made will apply only to new students who begin their training on or after the date on which the changes come into effect. Existing students will remain on the current scheme.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Michael Gove announcement on education funding [July 2011]

    PRESS RELEASE : Michael Gove announcement on education funding [July 2011]

    The press release issued by the Department for Education on 19 July 2011.

    The Secretary of State for Education has today set out how the Government will ensure that education funding is better targeted in the future.

    The key announcements are:

    Schools Capital

    • The Government will provide £500 million to help local authorities provide extra school places – meeting the extra pressures caused by increased birth rates.
    • A new school rebuilding programme has been launched. It will be targeted at those schools in the worst condition. Information will be available shortly from Partnerships for Schools.
    • School Building regulations will be pared down significantly – cutting red tape and costs.
    • The Government is minded not to fund the BSF projects which were the subject of a judicial review earlier this year, subject to further representations from the authorities involved.
    • The recommendations of Sebastian James’s review on school building will be broadly accepted subject to a thorough consultation process on details and implementation. This consultation is being launched today and is available from the publications section. We will carry out a condition survey of all school buildings so that funding can be better targeted. We will revise school building regulations to reduce unnecessary burdens and bureaucracy. We will also improve the design of schools to achieve better buildings and better value.

    Schools Funding

    • A new consultation (available from the publications section) has been launched seeking views on proposals for a new, fairer and more transparent school funding system.
    • The current funding system for maintained schools will continue in 2012-13.
    • A consultation has been launched with Local Authorities only about LACSEG academy funding, to ensure that the rapid growth in academy numbers is funded fairly and to ensure that local authorities are not double funded for services they no longer provide. This consultation is available from the publications section

    The Secretary of State has written to local authorities, schools and other partners setting out the full details of these announcements. The letter is available below.

    Letter from the Secretary of State

    Dear Colleague,

    Today I am making a series of announcements on education funding with the aim of making the system fairer and less bureaucratic. These announcements cover both capital investment and school revenue funding. The key elements are outlined below.

    Capital investment

    I am announcing my initial response to Sebastian James’s review of education capital funding. I accept the majority of the review recommendations, subject to consultation.

    This consultation will run for twelve weeks and will focus on two key areas. First, the best model for allocating and prioritising capital, recognising the increasing diversity of the schools estate; and secondly the proposals put forward on procurement and project management, calling for a more centralised approach to capture efficiencies and build expertise.

    While there are undoubted benefits to implementing these proposals, I would like to hear views from all interested parties.

    I am also keen to move forward more quickly on some of the other recommendations. I wish to develop a suite of standardised drawings and specifications for school buildings. I intend to collect condition data so that funding can be better targeted. I will also simplify the school premises regulations. I will consult fully on revised regulations in the autumn.

    I am also announcing that an extra £500 million of capital funding will be available this financial year for those local authorities where rising pupil numbers is putting severe pressure on school capacity. Details of how allocations will be made will be provided over the summer and finalised in the autumn.

    Furthermore, I am pleased to be launching a new privately financed school building programme. This programme will focus on the school buildings in greatest need of repair.

    The programme will be available to all publicly funded schools. I am determined that criticisms of the previous model for private financing must be addressed and I will only agree to projects when a series of rigorous value for money tests have been passed.

    Local authorities, schools, and organisations with responsibility for schools will be able to submit applications for the programme.

    Information and guidance on preparing applications will be available online. Applications can be submitted between 3 and 14 October.

    Revenue funding

    The Government is also publishing a consultation on school funding reform: Proposals for a fairer system. This follows our earlier consultation in April, on the high level principles of school funding reform. The consultation will run for twelve weeks, closing on Tuesday 11 October.

    The proposals in the consultation deal with the historic inequalities which have meant that similar schools in different areas receive very different levels of funding.

    The consultation document sets out proposals to reform the system so that it is simpler and more transparent. We propose to introduce a new national formula so that money is allocated more consistently across the country. We also wish to expand the eligibility criteria of the Pupil Premium. The consultation also includes proposals for funding high need pupils and early education.

    In order to allow sufficient time for consultation and to ensure that schools and local authorities have sufficient time to plan for possible changes, we are consulting on whether we should implement these reforms from 2013-14 or wait until a later spending period. We will maintain the current funding system for maintained schools for 2012-13. Details of the arrangements for funding academies in 2012/13, following our spring consultation, will be available in due course.

    These reforms will bring substantial benefits. However, they will require funding to be moved between schools and areas, and will take time to have effect. We will apply transitional arrangements from the outset to ensure that the reforms are introduced at an appropriate speed that is manageable for schools. These transitional arrangements will limit the year on year change to schools’ budgets so that there is stability in budgets while the reforms are introduced.

    Local Authority Central Services Equivalent Grant (LACSEG)

    We will also be consulting local authorities, the Local Government Association and London Councils (in a separate, shorter consultation) on the level and basis for the Local Authority Central Services Equivalent Grant transfer in 2011-12 and 2012-13.

    16-19 funding

    The Department and the YPLA will be carrying out an open consultation on the 16-19 funding formula and methodology in the coming months. Building on the series of expert panels that schools, colleges, independent providers and their representative bodies have taken part in, we plan to launch the formal part of the consultation in the early autumn, subject to cross government clearance.

    This is slightly later than originally planned but will allow us to align with the consultation on the general principles governing study programmes for 16-18 year olds as set out in Professor Wolf’s review of vocational education. The length of the consultation period will not be affected.

    I look forward to receiving your views on today’s announcement.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Government response to Lord Bew key stage 2 review published [July 2011]

    PRESS RELEASE : Government response to Lord Bew key stage 2 review published [July 2011]

    The press release issued by the Department for Education on 18 July 2011.

    The government has published its response to Lord Bew’s independent review of testing, assessment and accountability at key stage 2, accepting all the recommendations in full.

    Education Secretary Michael Gove said:

    These changes represent an educationally sound approach and substantial reform. The system in future will be fairer for teachers and pupils. It will give parents the vital information they need and will hold schools accountable.

    Key changes to the current system will include:

    • replacing the current writing test with teacher assessment of writing composition from 2013 to ensure that pupils can be more creative and will overcome the dangers of teaching to the test. This teacher assessment will make up the larger part of the overall writing judgement
    • introducing a test of some of the essential skills needed to become fluent, confident writers – spelling, grammar, punctuation and vocabulary. This will be trialled in 2012 so that it can be introduced in 2013
    • publishing more data in the 2011 performance tables onwards, including new three-year rolling averages from 2012, to give a rounded picture of a school’s performance
    • placing a greater emphasis on progress made by pupils
    • giving secondary schools teacher assessment judgements before test results, from 2012. This will mean there is more weight attached to them and allow longer for them to inform year 7 teaching and learning
    • primary schools providing more information on pupils’ performance to secondary schools so year 7 teachers know right from the outset children’s attainment and the areas where extra work is needed. This will start in summer 2013
    • trialling in 2012 of an extension to the testing period, so that pupils who are absent (eg due to illness) on the day of a test will have a week in which to sit it, rather than two days

    The review panel was chaired by the cross-bench peer Lord Bew and consisted of headteachers and education experts. Michael Gove set up the review last year. He said external accountability at key stage 2 was vital because it was shown to drive up standards, but agreed the current system was flawed and could be improved.

    Lord Bew said:

    I am pleased that all our recommendations have been accepted. This is a complex area and many conflicting views were presented to us. But this package will lead to a better system, one that will do the jobs everyone wants it to do and which will have the confidence of all parties involved.

  • PRESS RELEASE : New standards raise the bar for teachers [July 2011]

    PRESS RELEASE : New standards raise the bar for teachers [July 2011]

    The press release issued by the Department for Education on 14 July 2011.

    • More focused on classroom skills and expertise
    • Behaviour management and subject knowledge vital

    All teachers will be expected to meet new standards of competence and conduct from September 2012, following an independent review of the skills that teachers should possess. They are a key part of the Government’s ambition to ensure the status and quality of the teaching profession continues to rise.

    In March this year, the government asked Sally Coates, Principal of Burlington Danes Academy in West London, to lead a review of standards for teachers. The standards place a sharp focus on the key elements of teaching – including subject knowledge, managing behaviour and teaching pupils with a variety of special needs – and will set a clear and unambiguous benchmark for teachers, regardless of whether they are newly qualified or have been in post for many years.

    The government has today accepted the review’s recommendations including:

    • Improving the rigour of teaching standards and ensuring they focus more on the essential teaching skills required in the classroom.
    • Recommending a single set of standards for all teachers, replacing the current duplication of different standards issued from different bodies – reducing them to just eight standards for teaching from 33 standards for QTS and 41 for Core and to just three standards for personal and professional conduct from the eight principles in the GTCE Code.
    • Setting a clear expectation that teachers must not undermine fundamental British values, including democracy, the rule of law, individual liberty and mutual respect, and tolerance of those with different faiths and beliefs.

    The government launched the review because the existing standards are not fit for purpose. More than a third of teachers do not feel they provide a good definition of teacher competence and 41 per cent believe they do not make any difference to the way they teach.

    In place of the old ambiguous and vague system, the new standards are practical and clear about the competencies that all teachers should have.

    They will:

    • help headteachers assess teacher performance
    • provide clear requirements on teachers having skills to tackle bad pupil behaviour
    • make sure that teachers are able to teach the core basics of reading and writing, including understanding systematic synthetic phonics.

    Sally Coates, chair of the review, said today:

    Nothing has more impact on a child’s achievement than the quality of teaching they receive and in the new standards for teachers we have prioritised the importance of classroom practice and subject knowledge.

    I hope the review’s recommendations will ensure the benchmark for entry to the profession is rigorous and firmly based in teaching. I want every teacher to consider these the standards of expectation and build upon them in their career.

    Michael Gove welcomed the recommendations:

    The old standards placed a premium on bland statements and platitudes over practical use for teachers and they had to be improved. Sally and her team have produced a new set of standards with real teeth. They set clear expectations about the skills that every teacher in our schools should demonstrate.

    They will make a significant improvement to teaching by ensuring teachers can focus on the skills that matter most.

    Review panel member Roy Blatchford, Deputy Chair and Director of the National Education Trust, commented:

    The new Teachers’ Standards give an unequivocal message that highly effective teaching is what matters in this profession.

    The Review Group has seized the opportunity to raise the bar for current and future teachers. Our nation’s children and young people deserve no less.

    Greg Wallace, Executive Principal of the Best Start Federation of schools in Hackney, said:

    We’ve been using synthetic phonics as our primary ‘learn to read’ strategy for the last decade. Over that period I’ve consistently seen synthetic phonics serve children with a very wide range of needs incredibly well.

    Given what we know about the effective teaching of reading, the expectation that all primary teachers should know how to use this method expertly is long overdue. I am thrilled to see the use of synthetic phonics enshrined in the new national standards for teachers because all children have the right to be taught to read as early – and as quickly – as possible.

    The second phase of the review, starting this month, will look at the standards required for advanced skills teachers and excellent teachers.