The Socialist

The Socialist 24 May 2007

Fight Brown's pay freeze

Public-sector workers say...Fight Brown's pay freeze

PCS: Public-sector unity to defend jobs and services

National Shop Stewards Network

Postal workers' strike ballot: Vote 'yes' for a future

Darling attacks Post Offices

Greenwich workers shame councillors


Gordon Brown crowned leader with no contest

John McDonnell speaks to the socialist

The alternative to Labour

MPs say stop looking at us!


Academies: No to these divisive schools

Lewisham council attacks education

School meals - Victory!

Canteen workers oppose school meals cuts

School campaigners shake Wokingham


Nursing staff strike shows way forward


Homophobia: it's not over

Letter to Polish Ambassador


Belfast 1907 - a city in revolt


Can solar power solve our energy needs?


SNP in power - populism and cuts

 
 
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As Brown and Cameron back academies...

No to these divisive schools

ANYBODY WHO thought that Gordon Brown would halt the government's relentless drive to create 400 divisive Academy schools, over 200 of them by 2010, will be sorely disappointed. He has made it clear that he fully supports the programme, and is even trying to convince his mates to become sponsors!

Jane Nellist, Coventry NUT, personal capacity

With the news that David Cameron wants the Tories to abandon their support for grammar schools and put their full support behind the academies programme, the campaign against academies must be stepped up.

47 academies have now been set up with another 90 already confirmed. For £2 million, which does not have to be paid up front (the Tories actually want to end this sponsorship money in their plans), private sponsors can get complete control of a school. This allows sponsors to set pay and conditions for staff, influence the curriculum and ethos of a school, as well as to control admissions.

Costs for the building of academies are escalating, with some costing over £40 million. On top of this, nearly £50 million has been spent on private consultants and project managers - enough money to build two new schools.

But at least we're getting innovation! The most expensive academy school so far (costing £46.4 million), the Thomas Deacon Academy in Peterborough, will not have a playground. The new CEO/Principal, Alan McMurdo, a Falklands veteran who had his first experience of teaching on HMS Battleaxe, says that he wants to run his school like a business and will treat pupils as employees!

Lunch will be incorporated into the third lesson of the day, when students will be escorted to the refectory and given 30 minutes to eat before returning directly to the classroom. What an inhumane way to treat children!

Local councils have been blackmailed by the government into agreeing to academies by the withholding of huge sums of money to rebuild secondary schools. Even where the 'Building Schools for the Future' scheme has been agreed the government continues to put pressure on councils to achieve a greater diversity of schools - in other words more academies and more Trust schools.

But one item of good news, and a setback for academies, was the result of the first ever 'competition' for a new school in Haringey, where a local authority-backed school beat off a proposed trust school, as well as two academies.

In the ten years that Labour has been in power, they have gone further with privatising our schools and education service than even Margaret Thatcher dared to do. Lord Adonis, the government minister responsible for overseeing the development of academies, may still lose his job under Gordon Brown but his brainchild, based on the Tories' City Technology Colleges, looks set to persist.

In June, MPs are to hold a Committee of Enquiry to investigate the impact of academies and trust schools. All anti-academy and anti-trust campaign groups should send delegates or written evidence to this enquiry - see www.antiacademies.org.uk for more details.

One thing is clear, where parents, teachers and communities join together in a determined campaign against the setting up of an academy, success can be realised.


In this issue

Public-sector workers say...Fight Brown's pay freeze

PCS: Public-sector unity to defend jobs and services

National Shop Stewards Network

Postal workers' strike ballot: Vote 'yes' for a future

Darling attacks Post Offices

Greenwich workers shame councillors


Labour Party leadership

Gordon Brown crowned leader with no contest

John McDonnell speaks to the socialist

The alternative to Labour

MPs say stop looking at us!


Education

Academies: No to these divisive schools

Lewisham council attacks education

School meals - Victory!

Canteen workers oppose school meals cuts

School campaigners shake Wokingham


Socialist Party NHS campaign

Nursing staff strike shows way forward


Socialist Party news and analysis

Homophobia: it's not over

Letter to Polish Ambassador


Marxist analysis: history

Belfast 1907 - a city in revolt


Environment and socialism

Can solar power solve our energy needs?


Scotland

SNP in power - populism and cuts


 

Home   |   The Socialist 24 May 2007   |   Join the Socialist Party

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Related links:

Academies:

triangleVictory for teachers' strike

triangleGove's 'overspend' - on academies!

triangleWaltham Forest: spread the strikes to stop the rot

triangleAxe the Con-Dems' ban on building new LEA schools

Tories:

triangleTories in turmoil over Europe

triangleLetter to the Tories who tell me to 'work hard and strive'

triangleTories and press use Philpott case to attack 'welfare culture'

triangleWill the Tories play the benefits card?

Gordon Brown:

triangleBrown's Budget

triangleBrown's 'Optimistic' Budget Ignores Reality

triangleTake over Murdoch's press!