The case reported yesterday on Wembley Matters continues today. Katharine Birbalsingh has issued the statement below:
Showing posts with label Michaela. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Michaela. Show all posts
Wednesday, 17 January 2024
Friday, 10 November 2023
Lifting the lid on Michaela's curriculum
New: Michaela head told inspectors the school did not teach music in year nine mainly because pupils “are not really interested in the subject”.https://t.co/pECQEien1L
— Warwick Mansell (@warwickmansell) November 10, 2023
Long read piece on the inspection notes on Michaela Community School,which I FOI’d following its recent report.
Labels:
curriculum,
Michaela,
Ofsted,
Warwick Mansell
Wednesday, 13 September 2017
Michaela deputy has controversial start at his new school
Barry Smith |
Barry Smith, deputy headteacher at Michaela Academy for three years has had a rough start in his new job as principal of the former Great Yarmouth High School, now relaunched by Inspiration Trust as Great Yarmouth Chartered Academy.
Smith has hit local and national headlines as a result of importing Michaela methods into a school with its own ethos and history, rather than a brand new free school as Michaela was.
Parents admit that things were not perfect at GYHS but some are objecting strongly to the school rules and disciplinary methods as well as the tone of Smith's communications, written and verbal, with parents.
Parents have set up a Facebook page 'Yarmouth High Worried Parents' which currently has more than 1,000 members. A fascinating exchange of views is taking place on the page which cover the specific rules and their implementation but go wider to look at the rights of children and parents. At present pupils are also making contributions on the page and opinions vary with some welcoming the 'calm' that the rules bring and others finding themselves at the receiving end of the demerits. Similarly some parents are keen to challenge, if not the rules, the way they are being implemented. Parents with children with special needs are concerned about whether their child will be able to follow rules such as 'tracking the teacher' where every child has to have his or her eyes on the teacher throughout the lesson. Children on the autistic spectrum often have a problem with making and maintaining eye contact.
The local authority has set up and investigation into the school's exclusion policy which had not been updated to reflect recent DfE guidelines LINK
Tomorrow parents are to meet with Mr Smith. It should be interesting.
Monday, 15 August 2016
Rescue Our Schools: Focus on free schools and grammar schools
From Rescue Our Schools
Rescue Our Schools - Families & communities standing up for state education
Dear Supporters,
For this, our 5th newsletter, we have decided to focus on Free Schools.
Did you know that local authorities are no longer permitted to open new schools maintained by them?
All new schools must either be academies (often set up by chains or MATs) or so-called "Free Schools". It seems they are costing us tax payers rather a lot...
http://schoolsweek.co.uk/2bn-fund-revealed-for-dfe-free-school-property-company/
Free Schools
Free schools have been hitting the headlines again, and not for good reasons. Last week the founder and former head of Kings Science Academy Bradford (one of the first wave of free schools in 2011), along with two staff, was convicted of fraudulently obtaining £150,000 from grants relating to the set up of the school. http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-leeds-36943526
Then it was revealed that the Michaela Free School have a policy of putting pupils into lunchtime isolation if their parents have not paid their (compulsory) lunch bill. http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3713583/Superhead-claimed-Britain-s-education-broken-puts-pupils-detention-lunch-restricts-food-parents-failed-pay-school-meals.html
Add to these clear examples of poor practice growing concerns about how much these additional free schools cost and that the whole programme is not living up to the claims that were made for it.
If there is a free school planned in your area, please look carefully at what is proposed, whether it is really needed, and what impact it might have on existing schools. Rescue Our Schools would like more focus on meeting the needs of existing schools than on extending choice for some at the expense of the system overall.
For more information about free schools and some of the problems associated with them, have a look at the Local Schools Network (www.localschoolsnetwork.org.uk) or SchoolsWeek (www.schoolsweek.co.uk )
Will it be back-to-academy rather than back-to-school for your kids?
One of our followers has written a piece for our website about how she feels following the conversion of her children's primary school to an academy.
http://www.rescueourschools.co.uk/news/2016/8/9/my-kids-school-is-converting-so-how-does-this-make-me-feel
If you have a state education story that you'd like to share with us and/or our followers, please do drop us a line: info@rescueourschools.co.uk.
Grammar Schools
By all accounts our new Prime Minister, Teresa May, is now considering lifting the long-standing ban on new grammar schools. This is a controversial issue, already triggering much debate. Read Rescue Our School's press release on the subject here: http://www.rescueourschools.co.uk/
What do you think? Do you agree with us that selection means rejection for most pupils? We'd love to hear from you.
Calling all fundraisers and creatives !
Rescue Our Schools is looking for an experienced fundraiser and creatives to volunteer to help raise money so that we can launch some exciting new projects.
Please get in touch if you'd like to join our team! info@rescueourschools.co.uk
Keep spreading the word
We are keen for as many people as possible to know about what's happening to our state education system. If you are on social media, our Facebook and Twitter feeds are full of updates. Why not sign up, like our page or follow us? And if you have already, maybe you could ask your friends to do the same and subscribe to these newsletters? Or you could spark up a conversation with other parents you know? The more people who know about the peril are schools are in, the better.
Twitter: @RescueSchools
Labels:
academies,
free schools,
grammar schools,
Michaela,
Rscue Our schools
Sunday, 9 August 2015
Tory propaganda: celebrating free school's 'achievements' before it opens...
Anyone who doubted that free schools are a Conservative political project should be convinced by the public relations offensive launched by prominent Conservative politicians.
The latest was a reception in the House of Lords hosted by Schools minister Lord Nash for free schools due to open in September. The Kilburn Times LINK reported:
The latest was a reception in the House of Lords hosted by Schools minister Lord Nash for free schools due to open in September. The Kilburn Times LINK reported:
What a fantastic new concept - celebrating achievements before they happen! Parents of as yet unborn children can throw parties to celebrate their child's first steps and football clubs can tour their cities on open top buses to celebrate their league achievements before the season opens.It is yet to open but the achievements of a new free school in Kilburn has been celebrated in the House of Lords.
Of course we have been here before with the Michaela Academy free school declaring itself 'Exceptional' on a massive, illegal billboard outside its Wembley Park building before most staff had been appointed, children recruited or any lesson had taken place.
This was followed up by Boris Johnson, a few months after the school had opened, declaring on a visit in his usual understated way that 'this is one of the most extraordinary schools I've seen' comparing it to Eton and hailing Michael Gove's darling Katharine Birbalsingh as a “powerful and visionary head teacher”.
On Twitter @Mapesbury commented:
Surely that Gladstone free school deserves a celebration more for having 120 pupils but no school! That's a mean feat.By the way, Gladstone is also 'Exceptional' before it opens or teaches anyone and Kilburn Grange Free School still has vacant places for its reception class in September.
Now I'm off to organise a celebration of the Green Party's 2020 General Election victory hosted by Baroness Jones in the House of Lords to take place in September.
Sunday, 9 November 2014
DfE: High Risk Michaela Free School will impact on Crest Academy Boys and Ark Elvin
The Department for Education has just published Impact Assessment for free schools in terms of their impact on neighbouring schools.
The full document is HERE. The assessment is for Copland before it became Ark Elvin. The Gateway Secondary Free School is also planned in the area and is recruiting pupils despite having no premises as yet.
Extract:
The full document is HERE. The assessment is for Copland before it became Ark Elvin. The Gateway Secondary Free School is also planned in the area and is recruiting pupils despite having no premises as yet.
Extract:
Michaela Community School
will provide an equal chance admission to prospective applicants living within
a 5 mile radius of the school through a lottery. The trust want to ensure that
all local pupils have an equal chance of attending the school regardless of
exactly how close to the school they live. However, it is thought that any
impact on secondary schools beyond 2.5 miles from the school will be minimal
and likely to be highly dispersed so the impact on individual schools is likely
to be very small. The free school is therefore unlikely to affect the long term
viability of any secondary school further than 2.5 miles from the free school’s
site.
Based on the assessment
above, opening Michaela Community School has the potential to have a high
impact on the following two secondary schools:
Copland Community
School has a substantial surplus (99
surplus places from a capacity of 1,585). The school has a below average level
of attainment and has an inadequate Ofsted rating. Given it is less than a mile
from Michaela Community School, it is possible that a significant number of
parents may be attracted to the new alternative provider. Lower pupil numbers
would reduce the school’s income and may make it harder to secure improvements.
However, the growing
level of basic need for secondary places in the area (basic need in Brent is
expected to rise to a 986 place shortfall by 2018/19) makes it likely that the school
will remain viable in the long term.
Labels:
Ark Elvin,
Copland Hugh School,
Crest Boys,
DfE,
Michaela
Monday, 15 September 2014
'The MDC is okay with me' says Pavey but others disagree
Brent's Cabinet met at Roundwood Youth Centre this afternoon, as part of a programme to move the meeting around the borough. It was followed by a walk-about in the area. There was more discussion than usual with backbenchers and residents contributing but once again a Brent Council meeting was marred by the failure of councillors to project their voices and the lack of microphones.
Democracy must be HEARD to be done!
The Cabinet approved the action plan arising from the Brent Education Commission which includes partnership work between schools and support for the Brent Schools Partnership which has recently appointed a Strategic Director who will work a three day week.
One of the more controversial issues was planning school places:
Objective: Ensure that the local authority is proactive in encouraging the best schools in Brent and free school providers to set up new schools in areas where extra places are need.A Labour Council supporting free schools and chains will stick in the throats of many, particularly on the day the Michaela Free school opened in a building that remains a building site and when Gateway and Gladstone Free Schools failed to open on time.
Activities:
Work wuth the Education Funding Agency, DfE Free Schools team, the Regional Schools Commissioner and other partners to attract the best quality providers to Brent.
Promote the establishment of effective local chains/federations/partnerships to promote new schools and offer a local solution for schools at risk of failure.
Deputy Leader and former lead member for Children and Families, Cllr Michael Pavey, raised the possibility of the strategy changing if there is a change of government policy after the General Election.
Cabinet approved plans to make school expansion contracts more attractive to building companies by putting several into a package.
The London Mayor's plans for a Mayoral development Corporation in the Old Oak/Park Royal area provoked most discussion. As explained in an earlier blog Brent Council has not opposed the MDC in principle. Backbencher Cllr Dan Filson thought that was a mistake and said that Brent should start from the position that the MDC is undemocratic and limits the input of Brent council into the plans. He though that having the three council leaders (Brent, Hammersmith & Fulham, Ealing) sitting on the MDC would not solve the problem as they would not have time to get down to the nitty gritty. The focus of the MDC was on Old Oak rather than the important task of reinvigorating the Park Royal Industrial Estate and rescueing it from being mainly devoted to warehousing.
Resident John Cox said that in the Harlesden incinerator campaign there were 180 councillors they could lobby. With the MDC it would be just three. He said much of the land was publicly-owned, which we purchased in 1948 when nationalising the railways. Instead of flogging off public assets for the maximum value to developers, and then being supplicants to try and get some (so-called) affordable housing, we should value some of the land as zero, in perpetuity, and the state should build social housing. We could even call it council housing if we wanted to. He said the area was more like the Docklands development rather than the Olympic site.
Cox said that there was no chance of Crossrail coming to Wembley Central station but Cllr Butt said that the Council had not given up the battle to make Wembley Central a destination: 'We can't afford to not having trains stopping there'. It was essential for the housing planned for Wembley.
Cllr Claudia Hector, another Labour backbencher, said that housing in the new development must be 'genuinely affordable' not the London Mayor's 80% of affordable rent. Director of Regeneration and Major Projects, Andy Donald, said the council was aware of that and that there would be a mixture of housing.
Cllr Pavey said that he thought the MDC was the right structure, with the wrong Mayor. He could not see a combination of the three local authorities (Ed: Ealing's suggestion) as working for such a large development.
Muhammed Butt said that the three councils were continuing to talk but he stressed that they must come up with a 'credible alternative': 'We will have to work with the MDC if we don't come up with anything else'.
The Cabinet approved a bid to the GLA to make Alperton and Wembley Housing Zones. 20 will be created across London at a cost of £400m to create 50,000 new homes and 100,000 associated homes over the next 10 years.
Margaret McLennan said that the Zones were essential, especially in Alperton, to provide much needed infrastructure including new schools, health centres, transport etc to kickstart the areas. Cllr Perrin, lead member for the environment was concerned that this was at the cost of moving businesses out of the area and there were also issues over contaminated land near the canal at Alperton.
I was pleased to see that £6m has been set aside for the provision of school nurses but this is going to external procurement, rather than in-house and only one bidder has emerged. it was confirmed that the provision would be free to local authority, academies and free schools but not to private schools. There was no detail about how many hours per school would be involved.
There was a rushed discussion of the Borough Plan where the Council hope to engage young people in schools in discussions about the future of the borough and no discussion at all on the Quarter 1 Performance Report where council services are given a RAG (Red, Amber, Green) rating. Support to enable families to be independent, take up of 3 year olds nursery education grant and the number of in-year applications for primary places getting a place withion four weeks of applying were all given a red rating.
Labels:
academies,
Alperton,
Brent Council,
Cabinet. Roundwood,
free schools,
Gateway,
Gladstone,
Mayor,
MDC,
Michaela,
school nurses,
school places,
wembley
Sunday, 27 April 2014
Will breathing be allowed in Birbalsingh's primary school?
The editor cut my reference to"almost 'no breathing' allowed" in the letter published on April 10th in the Kilburn Times (see below) about Katharine Birbalsingh's Michaela Free School. Maybe she was not familiar with Michael Rosen's wonderful poem.
I was trying to make a point about Birbalsingh's strictures on 'installing (sic) impeccable behaviour', children sitting in rows, traditional education and her rejection of any idea that teachers facilitated learning. She has a model of 'private education' which is very old fashioned and out of touch with the real private schools that I come across.
The comments were about her secondary school, which is yet to open, but this week she was on the front page of the Kilburn Times trying to gather support for her bid to open a primary school to feed into Michaela and again, getting the word right this time, of her determination to 'instil impeccable behaviour in pupils while offering a non nonsense approach to learning which will deliver a private standard of education'.
Birbalsingh was quoted as saying, 'We need to show the Department for Education that our primary school will be as popular as our secondary school'. In fact Michaela has been struggling to fill its Year 7 and resorted to advertising in local chicken shops. Its public meetings for potential parents were very poorly attended. As reported here some parents allocated the school by the Council have turned down the offer. Nationally 70% of free school have unfilled places after being open for two years.
As a former primary teacher I shiver at the thought of her 'strict' educational philosophy being imposed on primary aged children.
Birbalsingh says she is seeking parents 'with a professional background' to get involved in her bid. I hope that before doing so they thoroughly research Katharine Birbalsingh's controversial professional background. This includes losing her deputy headteacher job when she used photographs of children at her then school to castigate the comprehensive school system at a Tory Party fringe meetiing and her free school bid being opposed by two other London boroughs.
In the Wembley Ploan space has been earmarked for a new primary school close to Arena House and North End Road in the Wembley Regeneration area on land which is currently occupied by small industrial and commercial units. Originally this would have been a local authority primary school funded by Section 106 funds as a result of Quintain's redevelopment of the area and the new housing planned.
Meanwhile plans have been approved for a new four form entry primary unit in the grounds of Wembley High School, a new primary unit has opened at Preston Manor High School and additional classes provided at Preston Park Primary and Park Lane Primary. Ark Academy across the road from Arena House includes a primary department.
I was trying to make a point about Birbalsingh's strictures on 'installing (sic) impeccable behaviour', children sitting in rows, traditional education and her rejection of any idea that teachers facilitated learning. She has a model of 'private education' which is very old fashioned and out of touch with the real private schools that I come across.
The comments were about her secondary school, which is yet to open, but this week she was on the front page of the Kilburn Times trying to gather support for her bid to open a primary school to feed into Michaela and again, getting the word right this time, of her determination to 'instil impeccable behaviour in pupils while offering a non nonsense approach to learning which will deliver a private standard of education'.
Birbalsingh was quoted as saying, 'We need to show the Department for Education that our primary school will be as popular as our secondary school'. In fact Michaela has been struggling to fill its Year 7 and resorted to advertising in local chicken shops. Its public meetings for potential parents were very poorly attended. As reported here some parents allocated the school by the Council have turned down the offer. Nationally 70% of free school have unfilled places after being open for two years.
As a former primary teacher I shiver at the thought of her 'strict' educational philosophy being imposed on primary aged children.
Birbalsingh says she is seeking parents 'with a professional background' to get involved in her bid. I hope that before doing so they thoroughly research Katharine Birbalsingh's controversial professional background. This includes losing her deputy headteacher job when she used photographs of children at her then school to castigate the comprehensive school system at a Tory Party fringe meetiing and her free school bid being opposed by two other London boroughs.
In the Wembley Ploan space has been earmarked for a new primary school close to Arena House and North End Road in the Wembley Regeneration area on land which is currently occupied by small industrial and commercial units. Originally this would have been a local authority primary school funded by Section 106 funds as a result of Quintain's redevelopment of the area and the new housing planned.
Meanwhile plans have been approved for a new four form entry primary unit in the grounds of Wembley High School, a new primary unit has opened at Preston Manor High School and additional classes provided at Preston Park Primary and Park Lane Primary. Ark Academy across the road from Arena House includes a primary department.
Labels:
Arena House,
ARK,
Brent Council,
free school,
Katharine Birbalsingh,
Kilburn Times,
Michael Rosen,
Michaela,
Preston Manor,
primary,
Quintain
Friday, 7 March 2014
Sufficient places in other schools for Year 7s if Brent free schools fail to open
In response to concerns I expressed about the fate of Year 7 pupils in September 2014 if the free schools they have been offered do not find premises or open in time, Sara Williams, Strategic Director of Children and Families states:
There are sufficient places in Brent secondary schools to offer places to all Brent children offered places at Free Schools in the event that the Free Schools do not open.
The admissions team always works throughout the summer to place pupils for September and this year will be no different. The council will do everything it can to support families if the need arises.
Gladstone Free School in Cricklewood and Gateway Free School in Wembley Central have still not found premises. Katharine Birbalsingh has assured parents of children going to Michaela Academy that planning permission has been granted for building works at Arena House in Wembley Park. She assures them that although there may seem to be little evidence of any work going on (I can see none) there is a lot going on behind the scenes.
Labels:
Brent Council,
Children and Families,
free schools,
Gladstone School Gateway,
Michaela,
places,
Sara Williams,
Year 7
Sunday, 24 March 2013
Petition launched against Birbalsingh's Michaela Free School
The petition from parents, teachers and local residents launched today is available as a PDF on the panel opposite. Please run off copies and circulate to friends, work colleagues and neighbours. The petition will be sent to the Michaela Academy as a response to their current consultation (the first consultation meetng is on Tuesday March 26th in the Powell Suite,Chalkhill Community Centre 3-5pm and the second on April 4th 6-8pm. The Community Centre is at 113 Chalkhill Rd Wembley, Greater London HA9 9FX. Directions: Cross the road from Wembley Park Station - turn left and then take first right.
The wording is self-explanatory:
We believe that the evidence from ‘free’ schools has shown that they lead to increased social segregation, lower attainment and have been run for profit. Brent schools are in the top 10% of schools in the country so have a proven track record improving attainment for all children ensuring equal opportunities for pupils from all backgrounds.
The wording is self-explanatory:
We are a group of local parents, teachers and members of the local community opposed to the setting up of the Michaela ‘free’ school in Brent.
We think that the planning for school places has to be done in collaboration with the local community. Putting this school in the north of the borough of Brent will directly compete with our existing local schools and is not where the school place shortages are.
We believe that the evidence from ‘free’ schools has shown that they lead to increased social segregation, lower attainment and have been run for profit. Brent schools are in the top 10% of schools in the country so have a proven track record improving attainment for all children ensuring equal opportunities for pupils from all backgrounds.
We believe that all children need decent school buildings, investment in their schools and smaller class sizes. Free schools have been funded by cutting two desperately needed grants, including the BSF (Building Schools for the Future) money promised to our existing local schools. We know that the cuts to education and public services and the raising of tuition fees will harm our communities. The free school movement is Michael Gove's experimental pet project and is part of the plan to privatise our services and will worsen education for all.
We, the undersigned, oppose the setting up of the Michaela Community School. This could destroy other local schools. We believe that school places need to be planned and the setting up of a school to ‘compete’ with others is damaging to our communities.
Labels:
Arena House,
Brent Council,
Chalkhill Community Centre,
free school,
Katharine Birbalsingh,
Michaela,
Petition
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