Schools White paper
To receive a presentation on the Schools White Paper.
Minutes:
Maggie Swindells briefed the Committee on the White Paper – Your child, your schools, our future – Building a 21st century schools system. The main points in the paper included:
An ambition for every child that their education would prepare them
for the challenges of the 21st century - all schools would provide excellent teaching and
extra help that a child may need, schools would work in
partnership, schools would improve with stronger accountability and
rapid intervention when needed, schools and school leaders would be
supported and there would be a highly skilled and motivated
workforce;
Pupil Guarantee – relating to behaviour and discipline,
breadth and balance in the curriculum, sport and cultural
activities would be available, the school would promote health and
wellbeing;
Parent Guarantee – assurance that the school will deliver the
Pupil Guarantee, Home School Agreements to reflect rights and
responsibilities, access to extended services;
New Guarantees – relating to extra help and support including
one to one tuition for pupils falling behind at Key Stage 2 and
Year 7, personal tutors for secondary school pupils, compulsory
Personal, Social and Health Education;
Partnership working – wider curriculum and qualification
choices, specialist schools, increased efficiency and no
duplication, effective membership of the Children’s
Trust;
Every school improving – an annual report cared showing a
school’s strengths and weaknesses and improvement priorities,
Ofsted inspection, School Improvement Partners to provide a
challenge and support role but improvement overall to be the
responsibility of schools themselves;
Transition measures were in place and the responsibilities for
Local Authorities included monitoring school performance, having
tailored support for local needs, supporting School Improvement
Partners to identify suitable providers and packages;
Every school and school leader supported – school funding
would be reformed, buildings and infrastructure would receive
investment, greater say for parents, local Authorities would have a
key role commissioning services and school places, schools would
increasingly review, improve, develop and share emergent and
effective classroom practice;
In every school: delivering a well-led and highly skilled workforce
– schools would need the strongest leaders, there would be a
well-led and highly skilled children’s workforce, teaching
would have higher status making it world class, the role of
governing bodies would be strengthened, their would be masters
degree qualifications for all teachers and a renewable Licence to
Teach (every 5 years), Children’s Workforce would have a
joint training and professional development strategy;
The implications for Cheshire East would include building on good
practice, relate to the Council’s Aspire Values (Action,
Support, People, Integrity, Recognition, Excellence), new structure
and transformation of the service, partnership working.
RESOLVED: That the presentation be noted and discussed further at a future meeting.