Michael Gove scraps limits on grammar school growth
ax parents to oppose academic selection and school weak force in a battle for survival
Parentsbe 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. "
- from next year, the government established a "minimum standard" for secondary schools 40% of pupils achieving five good GCSEs including English and mathematics. Face low-performing schools become academies. high schools have not built new since 1960, but emerged earlier this year a grammar in Devon was in talks to create a satellite school seven miles away.
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"
Find best price for : --Nick----Michael--
Blog Archive
-
▼
2011
(638)
-
▼
December
(159)
- China plans manned moon mission
- Where have all the working-class leaders gone? | D...
- Eurozone crisis live: Yields fall at Italian debt ...
- FA appeals against Rooney's Euro ban
- The truth about the Khmer Rouge is too big for one...
- The best theatre of 2011: Susannah Clapp's choice
- Former general set to win Guatemalan presidential ...
- Spurs fail with Olympic Stadium appeal
- Arsène Wenger admits wage gap leaves Arsenal with ...
- Bahrain and Libya expose the two faces of Britain'...
- State pension age rise delayed by six months
- NHS waiting times increase for diagnostic tests
- Michael Gove scraps limits on grammar school growth
- 124 Sure Start centres have closed since coalition...
- Fabio Capello says England were 'lucky' to beat Wa...
- Union leaders 'hell-bent' on strike action, says D...
- Chelsea consider entering the race for Arsenal's S...
- Chelsea consider entering race for Arsenal midfiel...
- Police accessed BlackBerry messages to thwart plan...
- 'Wayne Rooney made a silly mistake and I'm not hap...
- George Osborne plays down tax cuts but wants to ma...
- Hiroshima Day, an apt time to question Trident | C...
- Theatre will miss Nicolas Kent | Richard Norton-Ta...
- Will the Family Drug and Alcohol Court survive?
- We must make an effort to encourage future female ...
- MPs condemn tactical mistakes that ruled out victo...
- City can be as good as Barça, says Touré
- Unions are protecting young workers | Helen Flanagan
- Security and intelligence agencies to give evidenc...
- Engineering students at Silverstone search for the...
- How journalists have shaped social policy
- Manchester United's Sir Alex Ferguson vows to 'kee...
- The scale of the challenge is shocking us into act...
- What the teachers of the rioters know
- BA owner IAG beats Virgin to buy bmi
- The artist's artist: ballerinas
- Tottenham's Gareth Bale claims rival clubs no long...
- Chelsea's André Villas-Boas to unwind with motorcy...
- Neil Lennon says Celtic's Islam Feruz had 'head tu...
- Is Merkel ready to switch the ECB printing presses...
- Labour can prosper from NHS debate
- Tuition fees could bring bonanza for humanities
- Teaching schools are our beacon of hope
- Newcastle hopes to salvage Science City in wake of...
- Protesters: Silenced in court | Ellie Mae O'Hagan
- A vocational course is not a 'dead end'
- Irish economic exodus costs Gaelic sports dear
- Afghanistan's first major railway opens up supply ...
- Championship 2011-12: the bloggers' half-term report
- Alex Aldridge | The case of the sleepless lawyers
- GCSE results: more turbulence on the way
- The sticky challenge facing Africa
- Clegg vows to target widening wealth inequality
- Danny Alexander confirms agreements over public se...
- Rail fares to rise faster than inflation
- Nick Clegg takes aim at inequality, bank bonuses a...
- Under-fire Steve Kean bullish before Blackburn's d...
- Andrew Lansley plans NHS vehicle to warehouse toxi...
- Families face fast-track eviction to help landlord...
- Bradley Manning hearing: defence lawyer turns fire...
- Legal world prediction for 2012
- Said & Done: Zdravko Mamic, Gigi Becali, plus Lari...
- French credit downgrade could come 'within days'
- Nicolas Sarkozy: Is France falling in love again? ...
- Revealed: how City fees are eating into our pensions
- Chelsea fans to air concerns over plan to buy Stam...
- Vince Cable: government plans to block illegal fil...
- Inland Revenue risks 'own goal' with challenge to ...
- Embryonic stem cell trial of blindness treatment g...
- Spurs accused of 'spying' on OPLC board
- US must learn from Britain and not cut foreign aid...
- Style guru Mary Portas leads host of TV celebritie...
- Neymar has chance to justify hype against Lionel M...
- David Cameron questioned over £448m cash to tackle...
- Labour's toughest test: the politics of 'no more m...
- Amanda Knox begs judges to 'do justice' in emotion...
- Martin Jol relishes Premier League return with Fulham
- Science funding tends to favour mediocrity over gr...
- Public sector pensions: facing some of the future ...
- Parents create their own junior school
- Coaches help young people get back on track
- Eurozone crisis live: Merkel offers UK olive branc...
- First privately run NHS hospital 'is accident wait...
- Sharp rise in NHS waiting times
- FTSE has worst quarter since dotcom crash
- Children's heart unit wins high court reprieve
- Ed Miliband's £6,000 tuition fee pledge is a stopg...
- City living affects your brain, researchers find
- David Cameron has taken the first steps to solving...
- Westminster council to draft 'civic contracts' for...
- Nick Clegg's attack on David Cameron driven by par...
- Six tips for surviving the Nobel Prize festivities
- Some universities to drop fees to under £7,500
- Police clash with Malema supporters
- UK riots inquiry panel named by Nick Clegg
- Credit rating agencies braced for US downgrade ami...
- Manchester City frustrated by row with Corinthians...
- Iran's nuclear ambitions targeted with broader EU ...
- Comment is free readers on ... happiness | The peo...
- England set to play in Dublin for first time since...
-
▼
December
(159)
0 comments:
Post a Comment