The Socialist

The Socialist 25 January 2012

Hard times - but not for the 1%

The Socialist issue 702

Hard Times - but not for the 1%


The trade unions and Labour

Add your name to the TUSC petition

Trade Unionist and Socialist Coalition election conference


Public sector pensions: 'Coalition of the willing' gathering strength

Financial vultures kill Peacocks

Con-Demned to unemployment

Fight the Tories' Welfare Reform Bill

Victory against Dorries' abstinence education bill

Keep the racist EDL out of Leicester

Them & Us


Haringey parents say: No to academies!

NUS calls national student walkout


Balfour Beatty re-ballot: Vote to strike again

Sweetheart stitch-ups in the electrical industry: A spark's history of the Joint Industry Board

Exposed - the dirty world of the construction blacklist


Egypt - A year of revolution and counter-revolution


Stepping up the action to defend pensions at Unilever

Defend Len Hockey: Outrageous attack on Whipps Cross hospital workers

Pontefract hospital: Army withdrawn - now kick out PFI!

Save Vine services

Llanelli: Save Prince Philip's A&E

Stop the Salford day centre closures

Kirklees parents say 'save our children's centres!'

Greenwich Unite members oppose cuts, privatisation and racism

Workplace news in brief

 
 

PDFs for this issue

Page 1 pdfPage1 pdf

Page 2 pdfPage2 pdf

Page 3 pdfPage3 pdf

Page 4 pdfPage4 pdf

Page 5 pdfPage5 pdf

Page 6 pdfCentre pages pdf

Page 8 pdfPage8 pdf

Page 9 pdfPage9 pdf

Page 10 pdfPage10 pdf

Page 11 pdfPage11 pdf

Page 12 pdfPage12 pdf

Socialist Party logo Socialist Party on the climate change demo December 2007, pic Paul Mattsson Socialist Party News
Socialist Party Policy statements
Socialist Party contemporary Marxist analysis

Link to this page: http://www.socialistparty.org.uk/issue/702/13567

Seach this siteGoogle search the site

Printable versionPrintable version

email to friendemail to friend

Facebook

Twitter

Home   |   The Socialist 25 January 2012   |   Join the Socialist Party

Subscribe   |   Donate   |   Bookshop

Haringey parents say: No to academies!

Paul Gerrard, National Union of Teachers
16 February teachers at Chestnut Grove School in Balham, Wandsworth, south London, went on strike to show their opposition to the school becoming an academy.

16 February 2011 teachers at Chestnut Grove School in Balham, Wandsworth, south London, went on strike to show their opposition to the school becoming an academy.   (Click to enlarge)

Primary school parents in Haringey, north London, are in the front line of the battle against the Con-Dems' destruction of our education. Five Haringey schools, which supposedly do not meet the government's 'floor' targets for results, are threatened with being compulsorily turned into academies.

Over 600 people attended a Haringey meeting to organise against the bullying tactics of the government. Saturday 28 January will see a massive demonstration through the streets of Haringey.

Already education secretary Michael 'Royal Yacht' Gove has had to back down: one of the schools, Downhills School, where results have improved recently, will undergo an Ofsted inspection before any decision about a change of status.

New Labour used bribery to turn schools into academies with up to £2 million promised from a business sponsor. The coalition government are now using compulsion.

The Con-Dems argue that academies are the only way to raise standards in under-performing schools. Yet recent research publicised by the Anti Academies Alliance shows that in London, on the measure of five GCSEs including English and maths, the best performing schools are NOT academies. Nationally, 20% of academies failed to improve on their GCSE results in 2010.

Haringey parents are right to call academies 'privatisation'. Already bigger academy 'chains' run more schools than some local authorities.

Oasis Community Learning, for example, runs 12 high schools all over England. Nine teachers were sacked at its Media City Academy in Salford at Christmas.

And ultimately, academies can pay staff whatever they like.

Despite business involvement, eight academies recently had to be 'bailed out' by the government for nearly £11 million.

An academy at Backwell near Bristol recently failed to enter 100 pupils for GCSE science exams. A parent commented: "I feel badly let down... now the school is an academy, who is it accountable to?"

Academy plans can be defeated. At St Leonards RC School in Durham staff voted 105 to 15 against academy status and the plan was dropped. Protesting parents stopped an academy project at Varndean School in Brighton. Teachers from Lancashire to Gloucestershire, from Coventry to London, have taken strike action against academy proposals. If the NUT and NASUWT teaching unions mobilise promptly, they can kill the plans before they get underway.

  • For coordinated strike action across schools threatened with academy status, backed by strong community campaigns
  • No to academies and free schools. Bring all schools under local authority control
  • We need high quality local comprehensive schools, under democratic control including students, parents and education workers
  • Haringey Labour MP David Lammy is opposed to compulsory academies, but not to academies themselves. None of the main parties opposes Academies. Elect trade union and community candidates to the London assembly and in town halls to defend comprehensive education.

Demonstrate against academies!

Saturday 28 January, 12noon

Assemble at Keston Road N17

(Next to Downhills School)

March to Haringey Civic Centre


In this issue


Anti-cuts campaign

Hard Times - but not for the 1%


Socialist Party editorial

The trade unions and Labour

Add your name to the TUSC petition

Trade Unionist and Socialist Coalition election conference


Socialist Party news and analysis

Public sector pensions: 'Coalition of the willing' gathering strength

Financial vultures kill Peacocks

Con-Demned to unemployment

Fight the Tories' Welfare Reform Bill

Victory against Dorries' abstinence education bill

Keep the racist EDL out of Leicester

Them & Us


Education

Haringey parents say: No to academies!

NUS calls national student walkout


Socialist Party feature

Balfour Beatty re-ballot: Vote to strike again

Sweetheart stitch-ups in the electrical industry: A spark's history of the Joint Industry Board

Exposed - the dirty world of the construction blacklist


International socialist news and analysis

Egypt - A year of revolution and counter-revolution


Socialist Party workplace news

Stepping up the action to defend pensions at Unilever

Defend Len Hockey: Outrageous attack on Whipps Cross hospital workers

Pontefract hospital: Army withdrawn - now kick out PFI!

Save Vine services

Llanelli: Save Prince Philip's A&E

Stop the Salford day centre closures

Kirklees parents say 'save our children's centres!'

Greenwich Unite members oppose cuts, privatisation and racism

Workplace news in brief


 

Home   |   The Socialist 25 January 2012   |   Join the Socialist Party

Subscribe   |   Donate   |   Bookshop

Related links:

Academies:

triangleLincolnshire academies in crisis

triangleOur Demands

triangleHaringey takes action against academies

triangleSave community schools - no to academies

triangleHaringey - Save community schools, No to academies

triangleFight job-cutting academies

Parents:

triangleBack to work? How the system fails the unemployed

triangleOur education under attack

triangleHundreds of Liverpool Sure Start parents demonstrate against cuts

triangleKirklees marches to save child centres

Haringey:

triangleLondon, Haringey TUSC election rally

triangleHaringey & Enfield Socialist Party: The 2011 'English Riots' - lessons for socialists

triangleHaringey & Enfield Socialist Party: Pensions and the fight back

Schools:

triangleFor councils that fight the cuts!

triangleNottingham teachers strike against five-term year

triangleThem & Us

School:

triangleRotherham teachers stand up to bullying

triangleSwinton teachers strike against job losses

triangleGreater London Assembly election