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Freedom to exclude

Posted: 29 July 2004 | Subscribe Online


MPs on the education select committee are right to highlight concern over the schooling of looked-after children. It remains a disgrace that 47 per cent of these young people leave school without a single GCSE to their name (compared with about 11 per cent in the general population).

And it's hard to see how the new freedoms for schools set out in the government's five-year education plan are going to do anything to help this already disadvantaged group. With local education authorities stripped of so many of their powers, who is going to make sure that schools are inclusive when they are able to operate their own admissions policy?
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Without legislative backing, existing voluntary guidance urging schools to treat vulnerable children equally and work with other agencies to help them could fall by the wayside.

While some schools have an excellent record when it comes to addressing the needs of disadvantaged pupils others have shown little enthusiasm for it. Extended schools or no extended schools, it remains open to question whether those institutions that have been hung up on educational attainment to the exclusion of all else will ever fully engage in the children's services reforms agenda.


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