The Brent Cabinet will tomorrow consider the School Place Planning Strategy 2014-18. It includes the above actions and the following schemes:
Expansion of the following schools in 2015 at a cost of £19.5m:
The report notes that proposed free schools in the borough will potentially provided a total of 10 forms of entry for primary pupils and 9.3 for secondary pupils in the 2014-18 period.
The report notes:
The council's policy to seek free school partners (Action 5 above) will be controversial in the light of problems associated with free schools not opening on time, having fewer pupils than designated so provided at considerable expense, and often without the backers having a proven track.
The report can be found HERE and the full Strategy HERE
Expansion of the following schools in 2015 at a cost of £19.5m:
- Byron Court Primary to increase by two forms of entry (2 additional classes in each age group)
- Leopold Primary school to increase by two forms of entry on the site of the Gwenneth Rickus Building in Brentfield Road (2 additional classes in each age group)
- Oakington Manor Primary to increase by one form of entry (one additional class in each age group)
- Lyon Park Infants and Juniors (currently operating under one headteacher)
- Carlton Vale Infants and Kilburn Park Juniors (subject to agreement on a suitable shared site for an expanded school in the South Kilburn regeneration area)
- Malorees Infants and Malorees Junior (subject to agreement by the governing bodies of both schools to amalgamation and expansion)
The report notes that proposed free schools in the borough will potentially provided a total of 10 forms of entry for primary pupils and 9.3 for secondary pupils in the 2014-18 period.
The report notes:
....to be funded directly by the Education Funding Agency (EVA) at no cost to the council. There is a risk to the council that if all of these places are not provided via this route that the council will need to provide places and fund the associated expenditure.This September both Gateway and Gladstone secondary free schools failed to open despite recruiting pupils.
The council's policy to seek free school partners (Action 5 above) will be controversial in the light of problems associated with free schools not opening on time, having fewer pupils than designated so provided at considerable expense, and often without the backers having a proven track.
The report can be found HERE and the full Strategy HERE