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Parkwood School academy protest led by far left – Blunkett



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Published Date: 29 April 2008
DAVID Blunkett has attacked protesters who are opposing plans to turn Shirecliffe's Parkwood High School into Sheffield's third City Academy.
The Brightside MP, who is in favour of the plans, said the opposition is being led by campaigners from the far left Socialist Workers' Party - not with young people's interests at heart but because they oppose private sector involvement in education.


He has written to constituents, saying: "How dare they talk about 'Saving OUR school'? They don't live in the area. They don't have children at school in the area.

"These people don't give a damn about what is happening to our children, they are using them as a political football."

Mr Blunkett, who would have been a pupil at the school himself but for his blindness, added: "Our children deserve the best - they deserve a first class education.

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"The children at Parkwood High deserve a first class school. Local parents also tell me that is what they want.

"The current head and staff have done an excellent job in improving the results and outcomes for children at Parkwood. But they recognise that there is the potential to achieve even more.

"Alongside them, I have fought tooth and nail to get the £15million to rebuild the school and create a new academy," Mr Blunkett added.

Following consultations with parents, detailed proposals on the Academy plans are now being drawn up and will be presented later this year.

If the plans are approved, Parkwood will also be completely rebuilt over the next three years - an issue which has been seized upon by critics who say it is wrong the school will only receive such funding if it goes down the academy route.

The academy would be run by education charity Edutrust, with Sheffield Hallam University as a second partner.

If the application process goes smoothly Parkwood will become an academy in September 2009, with a new building expected to be ready two years later.


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The full article contains 351 words and appears in Sheffield Star newspaper.
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  • Last Updated: 29 April 2008 7:44 AM
  • Source: Sheffield Star
  • Location: Sheffield
 
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Local Person,

29/04/2008 08:50:02
I'm a parent, I'm not far left in fact I've been called right wing in the past....Blunkett is out of his tree defending his lapdog Harpham. 15 Parents voted in favour of the proposal going forward.....15 from a catchment of over 1500 pupils (including feeder schools). Real democracy at work; blue labour style. We collected 370 signatures against from local parents in a couple of weeks on the mere basis of what they offered so far. The new school building is a crass bribe, the laptops to kids who are in the main from the poorer parts of the city is another crass attempt at manipulation and the lie that the University is to be an 'academy partner' has already been dispelled yet they still peddle it like a dead horse. Blunkett only knows what Harpham tells him and after this week he'll be out of a job too.
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Lewis Skinner,

SHEFFIELD 29/04/2008 10:03:54
"not with young people's interests at heart but because they oppose private sector involvement in education."

Bit of a contradiction there Mr Blunkett! Do you think that the private sector has an interest in anything but making a profit?

A public sector school that is losing money can have the leak plugged with more money. A privately run school that is losing money will be wound up, just like any other company.

A privately run school will need to make more money than a public-sector one, because the company directors need to take their cut. When Sheffield Council ran the buses, the aim was for a 3% profit. First's aim is a 22% profit. Why are we to believe thise school will be any different?
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Local Person,

29/04/2008 15:01:23
Lewis you are right, Edutrust have a great track record in education.....just look at the farce of Rhodesway in Bradford where they got threw out by the council after destabilising the school. Academy status means one thing....a second class education in a overcrowded school, its all down to numbers not quality. I wonder if anyone from the University can comment on them becoming part of an academy partnership.

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