The concrete slab viewed through perspex window |
Purple marks the proposed school site |
Both the design of the school and the chosen free school provider are likely to be controversial. The Cabinet papers state:
The site comprises a concrete slab at first floor level with parking beneath.
It is proposed that the Council have a 999 lease interest in the land which it will then lease to the free school provider for 125 years at a peppercorn rent on the basis of the 'template' lease which the Secretary of State is empowered to grant.
The site is physically 'constrained' so it is proposed that the school will be on two levels (on top of the slab) with a roof top playspace for the 420 pupils as there is no space for a playground. Add to this that fact that the school is very close to the traffic pollution of the Edgware Road and it is not exactly ideal.
The free school provider is Floreat Education Academies Trust (FEAT) of which more later. To enable them to take pupils from September 2016 the Council wish to grant FEAT a 3 year lease on the former Kingsbury Pupil Referral Unit in Church Lane, Kingsbury. This was refurbished to provide additional temporary infant class places but the Cabinet paper states 'but has not been used for classes to date as demand has not required it.' I also understand existing primary schools were relectant to take on the additional unit as a 'satellite'.
The fact that 'demand has not required it' but somehow there will be a demand when it opens as a free school is a little strange. It is very close to Fryent Primary School but a long way from the Oriental City site so it is difficult to see how there will be continuity between the two sites in terms of actual pupils. Pupils who live in Church Lane will have to take two buses or a bus (302) and a walk to get to the Morrisons site.
The Church Lane site |
Never mind. Floreat seem to have assumed that the Brent Cabinet will deliver the goods. They have already set up a website for the Church Lane schoolLINK
So why do I sound a note of caution about FEAT?
It was founded by James O'Shaughnessy, (now Lord) former Director of Policy for David Cameron. He was a visting fellow at the Govite Policy Exchange, consultant to Pearson, and an Honorary Senior Research fellow at the Jubilee Centre for Character and Virtue. LINK
So why do I sound a note of caution about FEAT?
It was founded by James O'Shaughnessy, (now Lord) former Director of Policy for David Cameron. He was a visting fellow at the Govite Policy Exchange, consultant to Pearson, and an Honorary Senior Research fellow at the Jubilee Centre for Character and Virtue. LINK
He has described current education 'reforms' as a 'huge battle in an already very long war.'
Thanks to Powerbase for the following information.
Ian Moore, Director of Education, was seconded from PCW to the prime minister's education delivery team in 2006 and a senior adviser to the Conservative Party's 'Implementation Team' 2008-10,
And then there is Annaliese Briggs, who at 27 survived for just 6 months at Pimlico Primary School (one of Education Minister John Nash's chain) having no teaching qualification. Nevertheless she is in charge of FEAT's curriculum delivery!
See Powerbase for more but you get the picture.
So what is all this 'character building' stuff?
Imported from the US (there is a statement from the US Secretary of State for Defense on the Jubilee Centre's website LINK) it is rapidly becoming a government supported industry penetrating into our schools. This is their rather dull film about the programme:
An article by Matthew Bennett on the Local Schools Network website LINK explains some of the background:
‘No excuses’ charter schools are a product of the test-based accountability systems that have dominated American public education since George W. Bush’s first term. In the same way, English academy chains like ARK Schools and the Harris Federation developed within the culture of ‘hyper-accountability’ – to use Warwick Mansell’s term – created by the Education Act of 1988. The ARK Schools chain is, in fact, closely modelled on the KIPP ‘network’ of charter schools. Both target the inner cities. Both argue that severe economic and social deprivation is ‘no excuse’ for educational underperformance. Both aim to demonstrate – by dramatically boosting test and exam scores – that privatisation can be the miracle cure for decades of failure by state or public schools. Both have a surprising number of financiers on their boards (of the eight trustees on the ARK Schools board, five are hedge fund managers; none has any background in education).James O'Shaughnessy is an advisor to the US Character Lab, co-founded by Dave Levin who also co-founded the KIPP network of charter schools.
The new character education cannot really be understood without looking at the methods of behaviour management used in ‘no excuses’ schools and their English imitators. These schools love mnemonics – displayed in every classroom, chanted by students – and their mnemonics are quite revealing. SLANT: Sit up, Listen, Ask questions, Nod, Track the speaker. SMARTS: Stand and sit straight, Make good choices, Always 100% on task, Respect, Track the speaker, Shine. HALL: Hallway heads and eyes forward, Arms with finger on lips, Legs straight, Lips sealed. The rules cover the smallest details of students’ behaviour, and the slightest infraction of the rules – for example, failing to maintain eye contact with the teacher at all times – meets with immediate punishment (this is what one defender of the model calls ‘sweating the small stuff’). Sanctions include detentions, a period wearing a special ‘miscreant’s shirt’, or a deduction from the student’s account of ‘KIPP dollars’. (In a training video aimed at teachers in charter schools, a student is told at one point: ‘Laughing is ten dollars’.) Some charter schools push the principle to insane extremes. A list of complaints made by parents against a ‘no excuses’ charter in Texas, Nashville Prep, includes the following: ‘One student received a demerit for saying, “bless you” when a classmate sneezed. He also received detention (1) for saying “excuse me” while stepping over another child’s backpack and (2) for picking up a pencil for a classmate’.
It looks as if Katharine Birbalsingh will soon have a rival in the Brent 'scariest teacher' league.