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Oh Lord: Peers now take aim at schools bill

Former Tory ministers warn of 'get out of jail card' for 'incompetent' school leaders

Freddie Whittaker

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Labour鈥檚 schools bill will give a 鈥済et out of jail card鈥 to 鈥渋ncompetent鈥 school leaders, and place government at risk of 鈥渆ndless litigation and judicial reviews鈥, former academies ministers have warned.

The children鈥檚 wellbeing and schools bill is now moving . Much of the debate and criticism focused on Labour鈥檚 plans to row back academy freedoms.

But skills minister Baroness Smith said the reforms 鈥渕ake vital and practical鈥 changes that will deliver 鈥渢angible improvements for every child as a result鈥.

She also confirmed the university technical colleges and studio schools will be exempt from following the national curriculum.


鈥楤ack to the  education badlands鈥

Lord Agnew, former Tory academies minister and Inspiration Trust chair

cost-cutting consultants schools
Lord Agnew

The bill will 鈥減lunge the education system back into the bad lands鈥 of 20 years ago and 鈥渇ace a stormy passage鈥 through the Lords.

鈥淎mbiguity鈥 over academisation for failing schools will 鈥減resent a get-out -of-jail card for the incompetent management of those schools鈥.

鈥淥rganisations rot from the head down. Schools don鈥檛 fail because of the teachers but because of the people who manage them.鈥

He accuses Labour of 鈥渆ssentially condemning children to a failed education. It seems you’re not prepared to allow the hard edge of intervention to sweep out mediocrity and failure.

鈥淭he communities that you claim on your benches to represent [disadvantaged ones] will be the ones thrown under the bus under a senseless ideology.鈥


鈥楨ndless litigations and judicial reviews鈥

Lord Nash, former Tory academies minister and Future Academies chair

Lord Nash
Lord Nash

While Labour 鈥渋nvented the academy movement [they] now seem intent on dismantling it鈥.

He is 鈥渃oncerned about the clauses taking micro-managing powers to the centre. Over-riding funding agreements, which are contracts, is never a good look.鈥

Councils gaining the 鈥渁bility to change PANs鈥 and 鈥渨eak academisation intervention powers鈥 mean the government is 鈥渟etting itself up for endless litigation and judicial reviews. Good luck with that.鈥

Legislation has been 鈥渞ushed out without any consultation鈥 with leaders who have 鈥渘o desire for it鈥.

While the government 鈥渨ould be well advised to scrap it and start again鈥, he urges ministers to 鈥渢ake a constructive approach on amendments鈥.


鈥楽chools must behave in right way鈥

Baroness Morris, Labour former education secretary

Estelle Morris

鈥淚f we want every school to be a good school,鈥 Morris says, then 鈥渨e鈥檝e got to make sure that they don鈥檛 achieve this by behaving in a way that makes it more difficult for other schools to succeed.鈥

She welcomed the proposal to allow councils to challenge academy admission numbers.

This is 鈥渘ot because I want to take away the freedoms, but because those can be exercised in a way that makes it impossible for the school down the road to flourish and succeed鈥.


鈥楤road curriculum needs to be an entitlement鈥

Baroness Bousted, former NEU boss

Dr Mary Bousted
Dr Mary Bousted

Bousted challenged Tory claims of 鈥済ains鈥 made during their time in office, pointing out the 鈥淔orgotten Third scandal鈥 and funding squeeze. 

鈥淔or a party that reduced spending in schools in such a savage way in real terms over a decade, the idea that they would support unfilled places throughout the country in order for academies to determine their pupil intakes is frankly unbelievable.

鈥淪urely this is a prime example of an ideology that supports structures, not standards.鈥

She says curriculum reforms will ensure a 鈥渂road and balanced curriculum鈥 is an 鈥渆ntitlement鈥, and all teachers having to be qualified is a 鈥渟ocial justice issue鈥.

The bill is 鈥渁mbitious, positive for all our children, is proportionate and necessary鈥.


鈥榃hen did centralisation ever lead to innovation?鈥

Lord Fink, Ark Schools trustee

Lord Fink
Lord Fink

The Conservative peer says the schools bill 鈥渄oes not strengthen our system: it centralises it, homogenises it and risks extinguishing the very freedoms that made academies and vast parts of our schools system successful in the first place鈥.

Fink also questions 鈥渨hen did centralisation ever lead to innovation?鈥

鈥淎cademies have done more for social mobility than any single government policy over the last 25 years and it was initiated by New Labour. We mustn鈥檛 let political short-term theatre dismantle the long-term and cross-party progress we鈥檝e made in education policy.鈥


鈥楻efer MAT executive salaries to teacher pay board鈥

Lord Knight, former Labour academies minister and E-ACT trust chair

Academies have 鈥渂y and large worked well鈥, Knight said, but this is 鈥渘ot because of the
freedoms promised, it is much more due to strong governance and effective leadership鈥.

Lord Knight
Lord Knight

But he had 鈥渃oncerns鈥 that 鈥渦nfettered鈥 use of new powers to issue compliance orders
to academies 鈥渃ould interfere with good governance鈥.

He also suggested 鈥渆xploring whether the pay of senior MAT executives should be
referred to the STRB [the teacher pay body] so trust remuneration committees receive
guidance to prevent pay inflation鈥.

The bill puts 鈥渃hildren鈥檚 interests, not structures or ideology at the centre of reform鈥, he added.


‘The system is not working well enough for all’

Baroness Smith, government skills minister

Responding to the feedback, Smith said the bill makes a 鈥渟ignificant contribution to this Government鈥檚 mission to dismantle barriers to opportunity鈥.

On academies, she said 鈥渉igh-quality trusts have been critical in driving school improvement over the last two decades鈥.

鈥淲e want to build on this success and we want high-quality academy trusts to grow,鈥 Smith added.

But she said the 鈥渟ystem is not working well enough for all鈥, with 鈥渟ignificant issues鈥 including attainment and attendance.

鈥淲hile the best trusts have spread innovation and excellence across the system, academisation is not always the answer,鈥 she added. 鈥淓ven when it is, on too many occasions it has been too slow.鈥

She said the 鈥渓east compelling arguments鈥 came from those 鈥渕ore concerned about a defence of structures and status quo鈥.

鈥淚 have to say that some of what we have heard from those opposite smacks of complacency, not of consensus. The true consensus is among those who know that tackling underperformance needs urgency, innovation and a range of tools.

鈥淎s for some of the comments made about the RISE teams that are starting work, I am not sure that noble Lords in this place want to be referring to successful school leaders as 鈥渃lipboard-carrying bureaucrats鈥, as some have.鈥

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