Tuesday 26 February 2013

Public meeting on Friday - Update

PUBLIC MEETING: EDUCATION CRISIS IN WALTHAM FOREST?


Hosted by Waltham Forest Defend State Schools

Friday 1 March - 8pm, Welcome Centre - Off Church Hill, or Church Lane in Walthamstow Village, E17 9RJ


Speakers:

Jonathan White, Waltham Forest Defend State Schools
Kiri Tunks, local parent, teacher and National Union of Teachers
Mark Holding, Governor, Thomas Gamuel school, Waltham Forest
  • Is there a crisis in our education system in Waltham Forest?
  • Are Free Schools or Academies the Answer?
  • What happened to the idea of comprehensive education for all?
Come and hear the case against Free Schools and Academies and discuss the crisis in Waltham Forest

ALL WELCOME

Thursday 21 February 2013

Walthamstow Guardian covers our campaign and meeting

Today's Walthamstow Guardian featured an article on page 2 covering our campaign and giving a pretty good summary of some of the key issues. One of the contributions to the letters page also expresses support for our campaign. You can read the full article, including a plug for our public meeting by reporter Daniel Binns here.

The article also confirms what we'd already heard, that Oasis and WSSI have indeed got their preapproval from the DFE. This means they have a period of around three months to conduct a public consultation. The timing of our public meeting probably couldn't be better as a way of beginning a wide debate in the borough.

Don't miss this meeting, which will feature speakers from Defend Waltham Forest State Schools, a governor at Thomas Gamuel school, currently being forced to convert to academy status, and local parents and teachers.

Friday 1 March - 8pm,
Welcome Centre - Off Church Hill, or Church Lane
Walthamstow Village, E17 9RJ
http://www.streetmap.co.uk/map.srf?X=537832&Y=189151&A=Y&Z=106

 

Friday 15 February 2013

Bribery and Coercion versus Democracy

1 March public meeting – make sure you’re there:


There’s already been a lot of interest in our public meeting on 1 March. The full details of the meeting are here.You can let us know you’re coming via our new Facebook event and you can also follow us on Twitter at @SaveE17Schools. We’ve also been out on the school gates with old fashioned leaflets, with a good response at both Henry Maynard and Thomas Gamuel. So it’s looking good.
Let us know you’re coming on Facebook here:


We’re hearing that Oasis’s application has been granted preapproval by the Department for Education. If this is true, it means that we enter a new phase where they have to launch a consultation of the local schools and community while they build a full business case for the Department. Anyone who attended the previous consultation events will know, this will need watching! Still, it means that our meeting comes at a very good time.

Bribery and Coercion versus Democracy:

In theory, the government’s Free Schools and Academies programme is supposed to be about promoting choice by enabling the growth of efficient and competitive schools. Of course it turns out that when governors and parents make the wrong choice, it’s a very different story. One of the speakers at the meeting will be talking about the challenges to democracy at Thomas Gamuel where a ballot of parents and successive votes of the governing body have been overruled because they rejected the move to academy status.

Perhaps the most notorious example of this was at Downhills in Haringey where the DfE forced through academy conversion in the face of similar democratic opposition. This is the subject of a brilliant new film by independent filmmaker Rhonda Evans. You can watch this on Youtube here.
And then of course, there is the bribery, documented in the Independent, which reported that officials from Michael Gove's department are offering £65,000 "bribes" to convince reluctant headteachers to convert their schools to academies. Read more here.


You can have any school you like as long as it’s an Academy or Free School”

“It’s time to elect a new People”

Etc etc etc.

Friday 8 February 2013

Public Meeting: Education Crisis in Waltham Forest?


PUBLIC MEETING: EDUCATION CRISIS IN WALTHAM FOREST?

Hosted by Waltham Forest Defend State Schools

Friday 1 March - 8pm, Welcome Centre - Off Church Hill, or Church Lane in Walthamstow Village, E17 9RJ


Speakers to be confirmed
  • Is there a crisis in our education system in Waltham Forest?
  • Are Free Schools or Academies the Answer?
  • What happened to the idea of comprehensive education for all?
Come and hear the case against Free Schools and Academies and discuss the crisis in Waltham Forest

ALL WELCOME

 
 There are now two proposals for Free Schools in Waltham Forest. More schools face conversion to Academy status, in the face of fierce local opposition.

We are told that Free Schools are the only answer to a demographic timebomb in the area, but is this true? Or do they pose a greater threat to our existing schools?

We are told that Academy status will improve our schools, but the evidence suggests it makes little or no difference to the quality of the school, promotes greater selection and makes our schools less accountable to our communities.

It's time to start a proper public debate and expose the half truths and misconceptions that circulate around education in our borough.

Be at this meeting.

Thursday 7 February 2013

Just a few of your comments...

Here are just a few of the comments of people supporting our campaign and signing our petition:

We have very good community schools in LBWF that will be adversely affected on several levels if this is allowed. It will also create divisions in our society. Schools should have qualified teaching staff, be inclusive and teach the curriculum.
I think that we should focus resources on existing community schools rather than these "free schools". We see today that Accademies are costing £1billion more than expected, I wish this extra money was spent on community schools rather than the opt-out brigade who wish to have something special for their children alone.


We need to support the schools we already have, instead of undermining them by building Free schools that will decrease the numbers attending our community schools. This will threaten the very survival of inclusive education in this borough. Why don't we increase the capacity in our existing secondary schools, just as the primary schools have done?

When the time comes for my child to go to secondary school, I would like to see a good selection of local schools, with good teaching and facilities. I believe the LEA is best placed to provide this. I do not believe it is right for education to be placed in the hands of commercial organisations (academies) or organisations with biased, vague or undisclosed agendas (free schools).


I am opposed to the incremental break up of the state education. When fundamental reforms take place in other crucial services, consultation takes place, for instance the NHS. In this instance, a policy is in place which does not have the benefit of consultation and as a result there are no checks and balances in the new system which is being imposed on parts of the british education system through coercion of those running schools placed in impossible situations and complicity of those in local governments and otherwise. And there is always a risk of a third 'c' that often rears its head at some point where coercion and complicity exist, and the ends have justified means the reprecusions of which have not been fully assessed.


With the imminent rebuild of Willowfield School in Walthamstow and the number of Secondary Schools with places I see no reason why we would need another school in Waltham Forest.

Fully agree that consultation was biased. Also believe Oasis and WSSI are deliberately undermining the very good work done by Walthamstow schools whilst exaggerating the success of Oasis schools to suit their case. Further believe that the LA must rapidly get and publicise clarification on the pupil placement issue to show the Oasis/WSSI case is fundamentally flawed.


It is, in my view, essential that we support state schools and avoid the competition and 'privatisation' which free schools create.

“I find the whole government agenda of moving away from la run schools into the hands of religious institutions very worrying. I'm not sure the public at large is aware of or understands what is happening.



Education is a right which cannot be adequately provided by the private sector.