A pioneering three-school trust in London plans to join one of England鈥檚 biggest MATs in the latest high-profile academy merger. Big Education Trust is to consult on proposals to join forces with Oasis Community Learning, which runs 55 academies across the country. The Department for Education is said to be taking an 鈥渋nterest鈥 in the move, with officials identifying the 鈥渙perational scale and efficiencies鈥 it could bring. It is the latest high-profile MAT merger that is reshaping the academy sector. The average trust size has increased from 3.1 schools in 2019, to 5.3 earlier this year, as the number of single-academy trusts also plunges amid squeezed funding. Three schools 鈥榯oo small鈥 Big Education was launched in 2018 by Peter Hyman, a former adviser to Tony Blair and more recently to Sir Keir Starmer in opposition, and current CEO Liz Robinson. Its academies include , which hasn鈥檛 permanently excluded a pupil in almost two decades, and School 21, a free school torchbearer for progressive values which was co-founded by Hyman and Oli de Botton, who is now the prime minister鈥檚 education adviser. Robinson said the trust 鈥減unch[es] above our weight鈥 by 鈥渄oing lots of projects and [carrying] influence in the system鈥. Among other things, it鈥檚 involved in Rethinking Assessment and the Big AI Project, which received 鈥渙ver $1 million鈥ver two years鈥 to design 鈥渁 framework of principles for the effective use鈥 of the tech. It decided to merge three years ago as 鈥渢hree schools is too small to run a MAT鈥, Robinson said. 鈥There鈥檚 the same breadth of work to do in a big trust as there is in a small trust, [but] you鈥檙e massively resource constrained in a trust of our size. 鈥淚t means we鈥檙e stretched very thin and work in an unsustainable way, frankly, to do what we do.鈥 She added it is 鈥渜uite hard鈥 for small trusts to grow given the amount of due diligence required, meaning some 鈥済et a bit stuck鈥. 鈥楲ike speed dating鈥 The trust developed a set of principles around 鈥渨hat mattered to us, what we鈥檙e looking for and what we鈥檙e trying to achieve鈥 in the merger. It looked at the 100-plus trusts that operate in inner London. 鈥淲e had lots of conversations with other trust leaders,鈥 Robinson said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 very hard to avoid the speed dating, swipe-left, swipe-right metaphors in all of this.鈥 The Oasis connection came after Robinson met the trust鈥檚 CEO, John Barneby, at an event last year. While Oasis was 鈥渘ot actively pursuing growth鈥, Barneby said it was interested in 鈥渉ow we can deepen the work we鈥檙e doing in a particular area or in the type of work that we鈥檙e doing鈥. His 鈥渆ars pricked up鈥 when he realised the trusts shared the view that 鈥渢here is more value to education than just exam results. They鈥檙e really important, they鈥檙e a key aspect, but education does a lot more than that…beyond the headlines.鈥 Such narratives were 鈥渞are to hear鈥, and it was 鈥渘ot just being talked about, it鈥檚 being done as well鈥. 鈥淏ig Education鈥as built out this holistic, integrated model that鈥檚 thinking about the whole child, whole family and the community,鈥 Barneby said. 鈥淚n Oasis, we鈥檝e been doing something very similar through our community hub model for a number of years.鈥 Pledge to 鈥榓void staff disruption鈥 Barneby said that the proposed merger is “not a deficit situation鈥, and said both organisations are working to avoid as much staff disruption as possible. He could not rule out redundancies, but said the goal is to “preserve the nature and character” of Big Education. It is expected Robinson would move into a new, as-yet-unnamed role focused on 鈥済rowing鈥 her organisation鈥檚 projects across Oasis. Barneby hopes this work could 鈥渟hape some of the system as well. Within this potential partnership is a promise to keep Big Education鈥檚 influential projects and programmes thriving within a new combined organisation. 鈥淚t would create further opportunities for schools across both Big Education and Oasis to connect, share ideas, and learn from each other 鈥 building a stronger network for our joining communities.鈥 DfE interest in ‘rare’ merger Schools Week revealed last month that government officials are working on white paper proposals to encourage all schools to join a group. It is not known how Labour would define a school 鈥済roup鈥. However, it is understood the plan would not force schools into new structures. Barneby noted there 鈥渁ren鈥檛 that many examples of a small, successful trust [like Big Education] merging with a much bigger trust鈥. 鈥淭here鈥檚 lots of small trust-small trust and medium-medium [mergers]. I think there鈥檚 some interest around that model [from DfE],鈥 he continued. 鈥淪ome of the operational scale and efficiencies you can get are quite significant and so that鈥檚 another area of value that the department see from having more mergers.鈥 But Robinson believes one of the factors preventing more of these moves from occurring will be CEOs not wanting to surrender their roles. There needs to be 鈥渇lexibility [and] not just MAT CEOs being [viewed as] the top job in the whole system鈥, she added. 鈥淸With] boards as well it鈥檚 kind of like turkeys for Christmas. When we started talking about this, [Big Education鈥檚 board] all sort of agreed that they鈥檙e not going to be having our nails in the board table and hanging on because they will be dissolved.鈥 September launch The MATs are currently consulting on the plans with the aim of completing the merger by next September. They would then work “towards harmonising systems over the next couple of years鈥. Staff were told about the proposals today. Both trusts’ boards have agreed to explore the plan, and will make a final decision in December or January. The proposals would then have to be ratified by the government’s regional directors after consultation. The move would take Oasis’s tally of schools to 58. Only three others 鈥 United Learning, Delta Academies Trust and Reach2 鈥 will be bigger. But Robinson added: 鈥淭his is an exciting strategic opportunity for us to secure our future as a centre of excellence in inclusive, expansive educational approaches, and to scale our work.鈥