Originally formed in response to proposals
to set up Free Schools in our borough, we have grown to become a positive voice
for a broadly shared progressive vision of education.
Our vision of education:
- We think that everyone should have equal rights to a good quality education in our local community schools, regardless of their social class, religious faith, ethnic origin or postcode.
- We think that everyone should have access to a broad, balanced and rounded education that prepares them for life as an active, thinking democratic citizen as well as giving them the skills they need for employment.
- We think that everyone who provides education should be open, transparent and democratically accountable to their communities, their staff, their pupils and students and the taxpayers who fund them.
We are proud of our local comprehensive
schools. We believe that our local comprehensive community schools are a great
democratic achievement, the result of generations of struggle in the post-war
period.
Democratic education under attack:
The policies of the Coalition government
are now driving this progress backwards:
- Forcing community schools to become unaccountable academies against the wishes of their parents, teachers and communities
- Promoting private companies and churches as they create greater social, religious and ethnic segregation through the sponsorship of academies and Free Schools
- Preparing the way for private companies to use our schools and colleges to turn taxpayers’ money into private profit.
The great advances of the past were not handed to us on a plate. They were
fought for and won by passionate, committed people, working together to build
local and national movements for change.
We want to help build that pressure for
change in Waltham Forest:
We will:
Encourage debate on education in Waltham
Forest and work to raise consciousness about the need for a progressive,
democratic education system that genuinely serves our communities;
Campaign to defend our local community
schools wherever they are threatened by Academy status or by new Free Schools;
Campaign to put pressure on those schools
and colleges already outside democratic control to adhere to the best standards
of our local authority schools and to make themselves democratically
accountable to our community in Waltham Forest.
I really respect what you are doing. But what is going to happen in 2018 when there is a crisis over secondary school places in Walthamstow?
ReplyDeletePrimary school places had to be nearly doubled in 2011 as a result of over demand. The council was only able to cope with this by adding extra classes onto existing schools.
The secondary schools that we have are already very cramped. They don't have room to almost double in size (which some of the primary schools have had to do).
I don't agree with free schools, but at the moment this is the only way to open a new school. Clare Coghill, our officer for school improvements, has confirmed this.
What then is going to happen to our children in 2018 when a crisis in secondary school places hits Walthamstow?
Hi there - does this blog ever get updated or improved? Does any dialogue actually take place, or is it all just a ranting soapbox for those opposed to change and progress?
ReplyDeleteHi, I'd like to make contact regarding the organised march against the school cuts. Is there a contact I could have? My email is sianesimon@gmail.com
ReplyDeleteLook forward to hearing from you
Sian Simon