As the infamous case of outstanding Sulivan Primary School's closure to make way for Fulham Boys' Free School is hitting the headlines, see BBC London News later tonight, Gladstone Free School is accused of a land grab in Brent in this guest blog:
Residents,allotment holders, representatives of Torah Temimah Primary School close to the proposed site of Gladstone Free School (currently allotment,a green open space and a hired rugby pitch (Kilburn Cosmos RFC) alongside the north of the railway line as it passes through Gladstone Park (at the bottom of Parkside (off Dollis Hill Lane) NW2) will be attending the consultation by the proposed Gladstone Free School on Monday 27 January 2014 at 6pm at the Crown Moran Hotel in Cricklewood.
Residents,allotment holders, representatives of Torah Temimah Primary School close to the proposed site of Gladstone Free School (currently allotment,a green open space and a hired rugby pitch (Kilburn Cosmos RFC) alongside the north of the railway line as it passes through Gladstone Park (at the bottom of Parkside (off Dollis Hill Lane) NW2) will be attending the consultation by the proposed Gladstone Free School on Monday 27 January 2014 at 6pm at the Crown Moran Hotel in Cricklewood.
The
land is Metropolitan Open land and Brent Council has already turned
down an initial application - however recent enquiries to the Gladstone
Free School (LINK ) have discovered that this open land is
now the favoured site of the Department for Education and the governors
of the Free School.
The Gladstone Free School
is scheduled to open in September 2014 and apparently a temporary
building is planned on the open land.
The
backers of the school claim that there is a need for a new local
secondary school - in fact there are many vacancies for September 2014
at Whitefield School NW2 and the newly refurbished Crest Academy ..both
schools are within two miles of the proposed free school.
Governors
argue that the site is where the former William Gladstone School stood (
until foolishly closed by Brent Council 20 years ago).This is false -
the former site of the school is now a housing estate including Campbell
Gordon Way.
From the school website. Proposed school is in blue but the open space has been coloured grey rather than green |
We are opposed to the loss of our open space because :
- this is a valued recreational space used by local residents for sports,relaxation,dog walking and gardening
- there is heavy traffic use in the area caused by the primary school parents and staff
- a new road system for the 800 pupil school would destroy the tranquillity of Gladstone Park - used by thousands weekly
Please come along and make your feelings known.
Free schools were introduced by the Conservative/Liberal Democrat
Coalition government in 2010 - they are state funded independent schools which do not
co-operate with:
the local Council or other secondary
schools.The government hands over taxpayer money to build or convert new
free schools and pay their costs.Research shows that Free Schools
discriminate against pupils from poor families and have lower levels
of pupils on free school meals than their local catchment area.
Further note from Martin (Wembley Matters)
Gladstone Free School website has added a red running footnote at the bottom of the advertisement stating that the meeting is only to discuss the broad principles of the school.
However the Agenda for the meeting on the panel next to this announcement includes the proposed location:
Further note from Martin (Wembley Matters)
Gladstone Free School website has added a red running footnote at the bottom of the advertisement stating that the meeting is only to discuss the broad principles of the school.
However the Agenda for the meeting on the panel next to this announcement includes the proposed location:
The plan for the event is:
Welcome
Background to the school
Vision and curriculum
School day, uniform, and induction
Proposed location and equality assessment
Funding agreement
Summary and Consultation questions
Breakout groups:
- curriculum;
- premises;
- completing admissions forms;
- completing consultation form
Good luck in your resistance to this. Momentum seems to be growing with similar issues arising all over the capital and the country and local and national elections on the horizon. What better moment?
ReplyDeleteIt's all well and good mentioning available places at the two schools above, but what noone who is anti Gladstone School has mentioned, is that the standard of education at these schools, is not particularly good. A lot of state schools run by Brent are poorly run, which is why so many have been turned into Academies.
ReplyDeleteSo it's not just a question of available places, it's about available places in schools that can offer future generations a good quality education.
It is not true to say that 'many' Brent secondary schools have become academies because they are poorly run (except for the forced academy at Copland). They became academies as Good or Outstanding schools and mainly for the additional money following loss of some 6th form funding. They have the same school management as before academisation.
ReplyDeleteYou mention the Crest schools as having poor standards but these are already academies. They converted to academies in order to get a new building when other sources were not available. Now they have a spanking expensive new building but are not being chosen by parents. Despite failing they cannot (by law) be taken back into the local authority and can only be taken over by another academy chain.
I think this illustrates the dangers of the current fragmentation of school provision and the diminished role of the local authority (they have no power to intervene at Crest) as well as the decline in the Council's school improvement service due to funding cuts.