Headington School: construction work starts

Construction work is starting on the new classroom building at Headington School.

The  works are scheduled to commence today Monday 27 June 2011 when a temporary access will be formed from Woodlands Road into the rear of the School’s property. 

Construction of the new building will start on 11 July 2011 and will continue for about 14 months.

Access to the site will be via a temporary entrance off Woodlands Road. This access/egress will be used by construction traffic from 27 June whilst the construction of the new building progresses.  The kerb will be modified to allow vehicles to enter into the site easily and all verges and pavements will be reinstated after the completion of the project.  Kingerlee will carefully monitor traffic and clear away any mud that might be deposited on the road.

The Woodlands Rd entrance is being used as this was deemed by the Highways Authority to be safer than the one from Headley Way. Local residents are being notified by leaflet. 

2 parking bays, an 11m section, of the residents parking is to be suspended for the duration of the works.

Raising educational attainment

Ruth attended an interesting workshop at the Town Hall yesterday on raising educational attainment in primary schools within the City. Here are some notes she took:

There are 28 primary schools in the city
Latest Ofsted:

  • none outstanding
  • 14 good
  • 11 satisfactory
  • 3 inadequate

Trends from last inspection

  • 22 inspected
  • 6 up a grade
  • 12 the same
  • 4 dropped a grade
  • 5 have received an interim assessment
  • 1 not inspected since 2008

Early years foundation stage profile  – percentage achieving target points score is improving

  • 36.7% 2008
  • 39% 2009
  • 50.4% 2010 ( national average is 52%)

This is encouraging! It means more children will start Key Stage 1 with good basic skills

KS2 is Ofsted’s main indicator
KS2 improving

but KS1 still a concern

Interventions happening (County led)
Extra Mile project has had especially good results

Factors slowing down the improvement

  • Oversubscription – extra classes in Foundation and KS1 (and overcrowding?)
  • High pupil turnover – parents swapping schools if there are spare places locally
  • Higher percentage of children in the City with English as an additional language

Heads, governors, city and county officers and councillors got together to suggest ideas for improvement and a report will be written up of the results. Please contact us if you would like to be sent a copy

Academies

At the Liberal Democrat Autumn Conference in 2010 which Ruth attended, the party raised a number of concerns about the expansion of academies, including the assertion that local education authorities should retain strategic oversight for the provision of school places funded by public money. 
 
The party called on the government to ensure that schools remaining within the Local Authority family are not financially penalised by the creation of academies.
 
What Liberal Democrats have campaigned on is:

  •  for all schools to be given the freedoms that academies enjoy
  • wider freedom for headteachers
  • that academies should be required to pay the full cost including administrative overheads for any services they buy back from the Local Authority 
  • that academies should have only observer status on the Schools Forum as they have placed themselves outside the democratic system for the funding of education.
     
    In particular, the Lib Dem Manifesto stated we would: “Introduce an Education Freedom Act banning politicians from getting involved in the day-to-day running of schools.”  The schools white paper addressed many of our concerns, removing much of the centralised and stifling bureaucracy imposed by Labour. Every school will have more autonomy, but the white paper also includes provision for local authorities’ strategic oversight.
     
    The manifesto also called for: “Reform the existing rigid national pay and conditions rules to give schools and colleges more freedom” . The white paper announced that we would give schools greater flexibility and freedom to set pay.
     

The Liberal Democrats are an independent, democratic party and it is clear that party policy will sometimes differ from coalition policy. Our members respect that in a Coalition government some of the policies that go forward will be Conservative ones and some will be Liberal Democrat ones. Compromise is inevitable and healthy.
 
As well as free schools and academies the Government is introducing a Pupil Premium to give extra funding to schools taking the poorest pupils, a key Lib Dem manifesto commitment. This will be worth £2.5bn a year by the end of the Parliament and will make an enormous difference not only to disadvantaged children but all pupils.
 
Michael Gove speech
 
In his speech on Thursday 16 June, Michael Gove announced that the weakest 200 primary schools would become academies in 2012/13.
 
This announcement needs to be put in context. For the first time, the Coalition has put in place a minimum standard by which primary school achievement can be judged – 60% of pupils reaching a basic level of English and Maths at 11, and where children make below average progress between seven and 11. Currently, 1,400 primaries fall below that standard. Of those, 200 have been persistently below that standard for five years and 120 of those for more than 10 years.
 
The bottom 200 primaries have been failing for a significant amount of time and attempts to turn them around have clearly failed. It is in these circumstances that the decision has been made to turn them into academies. It is hoped that by turning these schools into academies, it may succeed where other measures have failed.

Lib Dems delivering for Britain. Part 3. Your life: education

The Liberal Democrats’ manifesto in practice. More actions on our May pledges..

Lib Dem manifesto p.34

“We will increase the funding  of the most disadvantaged pupils, around one million children. We will invest £2.5bn in this “Pupil Premium” to boost education opportunities for every child.”

The government has delivered on the key Liberal Democrat pledge of a £2.5bn pupil premium to bring extra funding to the most vulnerable students.

Lib Dem manifesto p. 34

“We will improve discipline  by early intervention to tackle the poor basic education of those children who are otherwise most likely to misbehave and become demotivated.”

The schools white paper introduced simple reading checks at age 6, designed to stop young children falling behind in basic skills which go unnoticed until it is too late and therefore contribute to bad behaviour.

Lib Dem manifesto p.35

“We will confront bullying, including homophobic bullying, and include bullying prevention in teacher training.”

The schools white paper specifically states that we will expect teachers and head teachers to take a strong stand on homophobic bullying. It sets out plans to rationalise and simplify anti-bullying guidance from a fragmented 500 pages to around 20 pages. It also commits to working with NGOs  such as Stonewall and the Anti-Bullying Alliance to promote best practice and make sure that schools know where to go to get support.

Lib Dem manifesto p.34

“We will…support the expansion of Teach First to attract more top graduates into teaching.”

The government has announced plans to expand the Teach First scheme. It also announced a new Teach  Next programme to encourage more mature entrants into teaching.

Lib Dem manifesto p.34

“We will improve teacher training by increasing the size of the school-based Graduate Teacher Programme… we will improve training for existing teachers over the course of their careers to keep them up to date with best practice.”

We have announced plans to expand the Graduate Teacher Programme.

Lib Dem manifesto p.34

“Axe the rigid National Curriculum, and replace it with a slimmed down ‘minimum curriculum entitlement’ to be delivered by every state funded school.”

The schools white paper announced that both primary and secondary national curriculums will be reviewed and slimmed down to become a national benchmark of the knowledge and concepts children should be expected to master in core subjects at each key stage. It will be designed so that parents can hold schools to account for what their child has learned.

Lib Dem manifesto p.36

“Reform league tables to give parents more meaningful information which truly reflects the performance of a school. Schools should be working to get the best from all their pupils but government league tables are forcing them to focus on those who are just above or just below the key “C” grade borderline.”

Under government proposals, performance tables will include a measure of how well pupils progress  as well as attainment. All of the information that underpins government statistical tables will be published for each school, and DfE will publish ‘families of schools’ documents that group similar schools in a region, and provide detailed performance information that can be used to identify best practice.

Lib Dem manifesto p.38

“Reform the existing rigid national pay and conditions rules to give schools and colleges more freedom.”

The schools white paper announced that we would give schools greater flexibility and freedom to set pay.

Lib Dem manifesto p.35

“We will replace the bureaucratic Early Years Foundation Stage with a slimmed-down framework which includes a range of educational approaches and enough flexibility for every young child.”

Dame Clare Tickell has been commissioned to review how the curriculum of the Early Years Foundation Stage prepares all children for school, reporting in Spring 2011.

Lib Dem manifesto p.37

“Introduce an Education Freedom Act banning politicians from getting involved in the day-to-day running of schools.”

The schools white paper introduced this year addresses many of our concerns, removing much of the centralised and stifling bureaucracy imposed by Labour. Every school will have more autonomy, but the white paper also includes provision for local authorities’ strategic oversight.

Lib Dem manifesto p.40

“We will end Train to Gain funding for large companies, restricting the funds to the small and medium-sized firms that need the support.”

The government has announced that it will end Train to Gain and replace it with an SME-focused programme to help small employers train low-skilled staff.

Improved bus service from Headington to Cherwell School

I have just been informed of the following improvement brought about by successful lobbying of the County Council by the parent of a Cherwell student who lives in Headington.

RH Transport, who run the 700 between the JR and Water Eaton have agreed to run the 0805 service from the JR via Summertown, i.e. along Marston Ferry Road, to reach Cherwell by 0820. This should help those pupils who come from Headington and Marston to Cherwell. Until now that service has used the ring road instead to avoid congestion – but this should not be such a problem in that direction at that time.