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From sink to success: how a trust鈥檚 leader transformed his schools

Once a humble design technology teacher in Sunderland, Nick Hurn reveals the truth of his schools鈥 growth and development鈥 Nick Hurn has become somewhat of a rallying voice for leaders with RAAC-affected schools 鈥 appearing across the national media demanding his pupils get a better deal. Four of his 47 academies at the Bishop Wilkinson [鈥
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There needs to be some sort of acknowledgement of the impact of RAAC

Nick Hurn

Once a humble design technology teacher in Sunderland, Nick Hurn reveals the truth of his schools鈥 growth and development

Nick Hurn has become somewhat of a rallying voice for leaders with RAAC-affected schools 鈥 appearing across the national media demanding his pupils get a better deal.

Four of his 47 academies at the Bishop Wilkinson Catholic Education Trust have been found to have the dangerous, crumbly material.

The chief executive has enquired about potentially reintroducing lockdown-style teacher assessed grades for impacted children, who he believes shouldn鈥檛 be 鈥渄isadvantaged through this unprecedented situation鈥. His question has fallen on deaf ears. 

But in a bid to convince exam boards, the 62-year-old has commissioned Durham University academics to examine the extent to which his pupils鈥 education has been rocked by the disruption.

鈥淭hey will make a prediction on what outcomes will be,鈥 Hurn says. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 want to be coming back in September saying 鈥榳e were right all along but nothing was done about it鈥.鈥

鈥榃ell, you鈥檙e a DT teacher鈥

Hurn鈥檚 academy trust . But more than 40 years ago a career in education hadn鈥檛 crossed his mind. He wanted to make jewellery.

Following a six-month stint working as a binman, he gained a design technology and silversmithing degree in Manchester. It was only on the advice of friends that he decided to secure teaching qualifications 鈥渏ust in case鈥 a path into his dream job didn鈥檛 emerge. 

Now, perched on a chair inside his office, Hurn quips he鈥檚 鈥渟till waiting鈥 to become a jeweller. The trust boss runs his schools from a room that stands at the end of a corridor lined with glass walls.

The Bishop Wilkinson Catholic Education Trust base

The rest of the building, located on a Sunderland business park, is filled with his 48-strong central team and meeting rooms containing 100-inch TVs. Hurn鈥檚 surrounds are a far cry from those he was in when he started teaching.

His first role came as a design technology teacher in Sunderland. He later moved to another high school in the area, where he was made head of DT. But he says 鈥渋t wasn鈥檛 easy to break into the senior leadership鈥 team. 

鈥淭hey [DT teachers] are down the pecking order behind maths, science and English. It was said to me unofficially 鈥榳ell, you鈥檙e a DT teacher鈥. I had loads of rejections for deputy head jobs.鈥 

Leadership at sink school

Hurn finally made the leap into leadership in 1999 when he arrived at St Edmund Campion in Gateshead. However, he believes he was only given an interview 鈥渂ecause the competition wasn鈥檛 very strong 鈥 it was a sink school, and nobody wanted to go there鈥.

It only took on 100 pupils a year. The building was 鈥渄ilapidated鈥 and riddled with asbestos. Metal fences lined the site鈥檚 perimeter to prevent thugs from entering. To cap things off, at the end of each day, members of staff stationed outside the school gates would be pelted with eggs.

鈥淭he local yobs used to meet in the shop just outside and when we went out for gate duty, they鈥檇 throw eggs at the staff. We used to get the police down regularly to manage them. It was really intimidating.鈥

After his boss left in 2002, Hurn was drafted into the role of acting headteacher. St Edmund Campion then joined forces with Sir Thomas More Catholic School, also in Gateshead, to launch a federation. Hurn was placed under the wing of experienced leader Mike Zaragga 鈥 who moved into an executive headteacher position.

鈥淚 learned so much from him as he turned the Edmund Campion around, got the discipline right, teaching right. I learned how to run a school [and] manage unions and awkward staff [from him].鈥

St Edmund Campion鈥檚 fortunes improved further when it relocated to a newly built complex a quarter of a mile away 鈥 removing the housing estates problem 鈥 and rebadged as Cardinal Hume Catholic School. It soon saw an uptick in pupil numbers. Its decrepit former home, meanwhile, was flattened.

鈥楶eople looked at the worst examples鈥

Nine years later, Cardinal Hume became one of the founding members of the Trinity Trust, which consisted of six other academies. Hurn juggled the roles of headteacher and CEO following the conversion.

Nick Hurn

In his spare time, he was sitting on the northeast headteacher board. His appointment to the group in 2014 gave him an up-close view of Michael Gove鈥檚 turbocharged academy revolution, which had kickstarted four years earlier.

He was 鈥渋nvolved in lots of decisions鈥 surrounding the formation of trusts and rubbed shoulders with the chief executives of numerous large chains.

The experience stood him in good stead for what was to come. In 2019, the Diocese of Hexham and Newcastle unveiled plans for its schools to convert to academy status.

They were to join one of four newly formed trusts, of which Bishop Wilkinson was one, 鈥渨hether people wanted it or not鈥. Any pre-existing academy chains in the diocese were to be dissolved.

The naysayers 鈥渓ooked at the worst examples of trusts and thought that鈥檚 what it鈥檇 be like for them鈥 and that 鈥渁ll their autonomy would be wiped out鈥. A target of making 156 schools take the plunge by 2022 was set. 

Trust’s rapid schools expansion

argued that its model would ensure every one of its primaries and secondaries 鈥渉as its place鈥 and will not 鈥渂e left isolated or vulnerable鈥. Their 鈥渦niqueness鈥 is celebrated and the unique contribution of each is recognised and appreciated鈥.  

Hurn believes the size of his central team 鈥 which he describes as 鈥渓arger than most鈥 鈥 aided the trust鈥檚 rapid expansion. The 鈥渄ifficulty鈥 he had 鈥渨as matching the required expansion of our services and team with the income鈥. 

Because academisation had been dictated to them by the diocese, CEOs did not 鈥渉ave a choice to say 鈥榳e鈥檙e not taking you鈥欌. This meant Hurn took over the reins of 鈥渇inancially stable [schools] as well as the ones that aren鈥檛鈥.

鈥淭aking so many on in such a short space of time meant we couldn鈥檛 do in-depth due diligence at every school. We鈥檙e doing that now as we go along, [so] we鈥檙e finding things out now and doing things retrospectively,鈥 he continues. “We鈥檝e got to focus our efforts on the schools that need help 鈥 and we have been doing that.鈥 

One of the main issues the trust has encountered has been from small primary schools 鈥 generally with fewer than 100 pupils on roll 鈥 whose 鈥渟taff costs are just far too high鈥. Hurn is considering 鈥渞eallocating鈥 surplus employees to parts of the trust 鈥渨here there are gaps鈥.

鈥淲e can have, say, a SENCO who works across six small schools, rather than one in every school. You鈥檙e not actually making them redundant then, you鈥檙e getting them to do the same job on the same money.鈥

‘Beefed up’ central team

Bishop Wilkinson鈥檚 accounts show it funds its central services by collecting between 0 and 5 per cent of each of its schools鈥 budgets. Hurn says this flexibility allows the trust to make sure it does not take a top slice from schools in financial difficulty 鈥渦ntil we are able to stabilise them, which can take a year or two鈥.  

Heads have agreed that reserves can be pooled and used by the trust 鈥渋f or when necessary鈥 to support an ailing academy. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 an informal agreement, but do we need to make something more formal further down the line? Possibly.鈥

There is just one school left to join the trust. This has allowed Hurn to 鈥渂eef up鈥 his standards and school improvement teams by employing 鈥渟ome real experts in [primary] maths and literacy鈥 along with two former HMIs.

His secondaries have decided 鈥渢hey鈥檒l work together on a shared maths approach鈥. An 鈥渁ll-through languages plan鈥 for his academies is also in development.

Hurn says this means 鈥渋f a school does French in a [feeder] primary, then the secondary will also do French鈥. Similar programmes are being worked on for his academies鈥 English, geography and maths curriculums.

鈥淥ne of the benefits of our model is we have every single primary feeder school in our trust,鈥 Hurn says. 鈥淵ou鈥檙e starting at a real advantage, and you can do an all-through plan that鈥檚 going to be effective and efficient.鈥

However, since the government ramped up its RAAC policy at the end of August, much of Hurn鈥檚 attention has been on mitigating the problem. For his three worst-affected schools, alternative accommodation has been found 鈥渇or all of the children鈥 鈥 ending a 鈥渓ong, drawn-out, painful鈥 process which has taken weeks to finalise.

‘Kids at schools have one chance at exams’

One primary is holding lessons in an old community centre, while another has moved classes to a former business centre. At St Leonard鈥檚 Catholic School in Durham, pupils have been provided rooms by a local college. Others have been using eight makeshift classes in the school鈥檚 sports hall.

Hurn hopes temporary structures built on St Leonard鈥檚 playing fields will be ready to use in the new year, allowing all his youngsters to return to the site. The Durham academics are expected to publish their findings by the new year, after conducting interviews with pupils and teachers, calculating missed lesson time and analysing key stage 4 and 5 mock exam grades.

鈥淚f the research comes back and says nothing鈥檚 been that badly affected, so be it 鈥 I鈥檒l just get on with it and suck it up. But I suspect it won鈥檛. There needs to be some sort of acknowledgement [impact RAAC has had] and action taken.

鈥淭hese children have one chance to get their results 鈥 in five years鈥 time no one鈥檚 going to be saying 鈥榦h well, your results aren鈥檛 that good, but you were affected by RAAC, weren鈥檛 you?鈥. It will all be forgotten about.鈥

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1 Comment

  1. Joanne Monkman

    Nick Hurn needs a reality check by speaking to parent’s at the coal face. As a parent I can see teachers are working extremely hard. I haven’t seen the same from the Trust.

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