Home / Nicky Morgan warns opposing grammar school expansion would be ‘perverse’
Nicky Morgan warns opposing grammar school expansion would be ‘perverse’
EB News: 20/10/2015 - 11:15
This news arrives after last week’s decision to allow the Weald of Kent grammar in Tunbridge, Kent, to open a new site as part of a major expansion. Morgan defended the extension, telling MPs that the plans were clearly an expansion of the same school, with pupils and teachers expected to work across both sites.
However, Shadow Education Secretary Lucy Powell condemned the plans, which has resulted in the first new taxpayer-funded grammar school in 50 years. Powell voiced concerns that the decision would ‘open the floodgates’.
Morgan said: "It would have been perverse, given the need for more good and outstanding school places, to have rejected this application for expansion purely on the basis that the school in question is a grammar school.
"This was a decision to approve a proposed expansion of this school that was taken on the facts in this case and it is my firm belief we should not stand in the way of good schools, all good schools, being able to expand."
She added: "I realise there has been significant interest in the outcome of this case, including from MPs, but I would like to take this opportunity to confirm that the government has no plans to change our policy on grammar schools.”
Powell contended the Education Secretary’s assertion that the plans simply involved an extension to the pre-existing school. She said: "The truth about selective grammar schools is that far from being the bastions of social mobility that some romanticise about, they have entrenched social advantage.
"Today's grammar schools cannot deny that selection criteria favour the privately tutored and those with the means to acquire that tuition.
"This decision to allow a so-called annex – 10 miles away from an existing school in a different town – is what everyone knows it to be: a new school. It will the first new grammar school to open in more than 50 years."
Three schools have been fitted with solar panels over the summer as part of a government-funded scheme, with eight more schools set to get their solar panels this autumn.
Charity Speech and Language UK has published its whitepaper in lieu of the delays to the government’s own Schools White Paper – delays which are damaging children’s education, mental health and future.
The scheme will see high-achieving young people from disadvantaged areas receive letters from students at Kings College London, encouraging them to consider a university education.
A coalition of over 60 leading organisations from the UK’s creative and digital industries, alongside education experts, are calling on the government to introduce a new Digital Creativity GCSE.
The Government’s Youth Hub programme – which are hosted by sports clubs and other community venues, will almost double in number thanks to £25 million new investment.