The prospects for disadvantaged children and young people under the Education Bill remain uncertain, says Martin Rogers
The implications of Labour’s Education Bill are impossible to predict with confidence. Already dependent on Conservative MPs to push the embryonic legislation through the second stage of its parliamentary journey, the government could face further difficulties should those same MPs feel the bill is too diluted from the white paper and withdraw their support.
The volatility is compounded by the fact that the central feature of the package – the creation of “independent state schools” (trust schools) – will depend for its success on the decisions of individual schools, few of which so far seem interested, although ministers will hope for a Mexican wave of enthusiasm if they can overcome initial inertia.
Many proposals are widely supported, such as:
● Catch-up sessions for pupils who are behind.
● Increased personalisation of the curriculum.
● New diplomas for 14 to 19-year-olds.
● Extended free transport for children from poor families to their three nearest secondary schools within two to six miles.
● A tougher admissions code with which schools will have to act in accordance, rather than merely “have regard” to, and the banning of interviews as part of the admission process.
● Better access to educational and recreational opportunities out of school hours.
● A requirement on governing bodies to have regard to local children and young people’s plans.
● The extension of nutritional standards to all food and drink provided in schools.
● Earlier provision of education for pupils excluded from schools.
● A new duty on councils to promote the fulfilment by pupils of their educational potential.
But many doubt that the claimed benefits will extend equally, let alone particularly, to the disadvantaged. Greater collaboration between schools and colleges is encouraged to secure
improved provision for learners, but no changes are proposed to reduce the pressure on schools to protect their league table position in what remains a quasi-market.
So, although it is proposed to make the introduction of banding easier for admissions (reducing the ability of the wealthy to secure access to popular schools by buying into their catchment
areas), there is no apparent incentive for schools to do so.
Some things have improved. In future, regulations and not the code will require all schools to give top priority to looked-after children, and Kelly has indicated that local authorities’ power to direct schools to admit pupils will be extended to ensure that looked-after children will be admitted to the most suitable school at any time. But this change has been required because the code failed to deliver it, and it is important to ensure that similar failings do not affect other groups for whom improvements are intended – so a stronger mechanism for implementing the code is needed than that proposed, with a stronger role for local authorities.(1) And, in deploying their new “choice advisers” for parents, local authorities would do well to focus initially on the 6 per cent or so of children whose parents do not express a preference on their behalf at secondary transfer time.
If local authorities are to act as champions of parental choice and to promote the fulfilment of every child’s educational potential, they will need to take a tough stand on behalf of the disadvantaged. They will need to ensure fair access to all schools (a duty mysteriously absent from the bill, despite being promised in the white paper), and they and inspectors must ensure delivery of schools’ obligations to contribute to all five outcomes laid out in Every Child Matters. They will also need to monitor closely the performance in each of their schools of all disadvantaged groups and, through the new school improvement partners, ensure that any attainment gaps, or other inequalities, are addressed effectively.
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