News

Most schools to be service hubs by 2012

Posted: 18 March 2004 | Subscribe Online


Almost all schools will become extended schools by 2012, Charles Clarke told the General Teaching Council annual conference last week.

Within seven or eight years, nearly all schools would be open for more hours every day and would offer a wider range of services, including social work and health care, he said.

The education secretary acknowledged the changes would be "a significant issue for the comprehensive spending review". He made clear that he would be pushing the Treasury for more resources for retraining, particularly as teachers would be working more closely with other professionals such as social workers in future.
Article continues below the advertisement



Every Child Matters: Next Steps, published alongside the Children Bill, promises to look at "how to support all schools to develop extended services that are right for their school and community".

Children's minister Margaret Hodge told Community Care last week that schools were currently "the most valuable asset that we waste". She said she wanted to see schools acting like mini-children's trusts, commissioning services for their local community (news analysis, page 20, 11 March).

However, chief inspector of the new Commission for Social Care Inspection David Behan said he hoped there would be "a very thorough debate" about the plans for schools to be the main driving force behind children's services reforms. He said many children felt alienated from the school environment and warned the proposals could lead to "further social exclusion".

Every Child Matters: Next Steps from www.dfes.gov.uk/everychildmatters/pdfs/EveryChildMattersNextSteps.pdf


Spread the word:   bookmark it! diggit! reddit!




Products and Services
  • RSS Feeds
  • Conferences
  • Jobs By Email
  • News
  • Blogss
  • Videos
  • Magazine Subscriptions
  • Podcasts