Recently, a formerly independent school near
Newcastle-upon-Tyne was blessed with the good fortune to have its £5 million
debt paid off by the Government, as it became an academy and merged, against
the opposition of the local council and many families, with a nearby primary
school. And now it
has lost its head teacher in controversial circumstances.
Yes "Oiky", what you're doing with our money
The King’s
Priory School, the result of the merger of the King’s School and Priory
primary, is in North Tyneside. Charging fees estimated at around £10,000 a
year, the King’s School was in debt and suffering from declining pupil numbers.
Other local secondary schools were more popular. So the merger and academy
conversion were decided upon, and
the debt was gone.
This apparently benign act by Michael “Oiky” Gove and his
subordinates was cheered on by Sebastian Payne at the Spectator, who
concluded triumphantly “The battle
for The King’s School is over, and Labour has lost” What Payne may not have done is to read what
one of his commenters said about Emmanuel Schools Foundation (ESF): King’s Priory’s
head teacher came from one of their schools.
ESF has been dogged by
accusations of teaching creationism as fact. And it was not long before the
heady mood of the opening celebration (attended
and reported on by, you guessed it, Sebastian Payne of the Speccy) had given way to conflict: “teachers threatened strike action over their
working conditions and there are said to have been frequent clashes with
parents over [the] religious focus”
it
was reported.
Head David Dawes has now stepped down by “mutual agreement” – in the middle of the
school year. Why this has happened is not difficult to see after examining the
testimony of parents, such as “As a
parent tears have been shed and there’s been such anxiety. There’s been no
learning support staff for the entire term – that’s 80 children who were
previously at King’s getting help with their reading and numeracy”.
Special needs assistance wasn’t the only complaint. Another
parent said “[Dawes] wanted to make
it highly religious. Christianity comes in lots of different formats and he was
forgetting about the other children of faith and of those no denomination. It
was creationalist [sic] and this
wasn’t what I wanted for my child”. That matches the warning given in the
comments on the first Spectator post.
Creationism being potentially taught as fact is one thing.
An academy chain – once again – shedding head teachers mid-way through the
school year is something else, and Woodard Academies, who run the King’s Priory
School, have
also lost the head of Littlehampton Academy in Sussex. And then there is
the creative accounting that allowed King’s Priory to open debt free.
Thus another of the
increasingly routine stories from the Gove education miracle.
1 comment:
This was a very corrupt deal. A failing private school (in the face of competition from better private schools and the state sector) got bailed out and was given the management of a primary school simply because it is located about 50 yards away.
Guano
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