Tuesday, December 27, 2011

Michael Gove scraps limits on grammar school growth

new rights proposals

ax parents to oppose academic selection and school weak force in a battle for survival

Parents

be stripped of the right to oppose the expansion of secondary schools, a school in the new code for admission laid down by Parliament.

militants against the selection of scholars say it could force some schools in a battle for survival that the grammars to expand to take their neighbors with better students.

Education Secretary Michael Gove, is scrapping restrictions on the expansion of popular schools. The decision means that schools will be lower under financial pressure greater than the number of students is reduced.

During the summer, the government conducted a consultation on school admissions new code, which said complaints about the expansion could be referred to the Chief Justice of the school, an arbitrator independent legal.

schools minister, Nick Gibb, told the House of Commons that "no one - absolutely no one" would be allowed to object to the judge about the school admission system. The draft code for consultation which included objections to a growing number. However, the final version presented to Parliament earlier this month, said that the objections to the extension "can not be made" in schools judge.

Margaret Tulloch, secretary of the pressure group world to come, said. "By enabling schools to develop, this will allow the cream on children's academic non-selective schools

"This will make it harder for [schools] to hit [GCSE] goals, it will be more of a struggle for them, and there is no way that you can object if no another school wants to develop. "

parents campaign to end the selection and the face of a struggle. A successful vote requires a majority of parents in the main supply of private or public, who sent at least five children to school in the last three years.

reading some parents have launched the first campaign since 2000 to complete the selection, targeting reading and Kendrick Girls School ', which attract children from a wide area of ??influence.

Daood Khan, who has a five year old daughter, said the campaign was motivated by the desire to make schools reflect the local population.
He said: ".. We are not opposed to the selection, in principle, the choice we face in depriving local children of school choice"


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