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Bosses axed at failing school



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Published Date: 18 November 2008
GOVERNORS at a Sheffield secondary have been axed after inspectors found the school was failing its pupils.
The city council has used new legal powers to take over control of Handsworth Grange School - the first time such action has been taken in the secondary sector.

An interim five-strong governing board has been appointed to oversee improvements at t
he school after the chair of governors resigned and her colleagues agreed to step down.

The inspection team had rated the performance of the governors to be inadequate.

They found they had obstructed developments at Handsworth Grange rather than enhanced them and added the body had not held the school properly to account or ensured its effectiveness.

Inspectors also pointed to a great deal of turbulence in staffing at the school as a reason for its problems.

Previous headteacher Steve Burnage and his business manager were suspended in the summer of 2007, sparking an investigation into the school's finances.

Mr Burnage subsequently resigned and acting head Anna Quaile, previously his deputy, was only confirmed as his full time replacement in April this year.

Inspectors praised the good work Ms Quaile had done since her appointment to raise staff morale, provide clear direction and identify weaknesses.

But many of the actions she had taken were still too recent to be demonstrating the necessary impact and the quality of teaching and levels of achievement by the students were inadequate.

Successful Tapton headteacher David Bowes has been brought in by the authority to give the school support while it is in special measures.

"Standards are too low and leadership and management, including governance, must be effective, which has not previously been the case," he said.

"We need to improve the quality of teaching, track the students' progress and set them effective targets," Mr Bowes added.

Ms Quaile said there had been a number of key appointments this term and she intended to work closely with parents to help under-achieving pupils.

"Inspectors felt our lessons were too dull so we are addressing that. Staff upheavals have been a factor - since 2005 we have had 67 new members of staff out of 130, largely due to retirements. Morale was affected by the suspensions but it is positive now."

The interim governing board is expected to be in place for up to 18 months.

A new governing body will be set up and will be shadowed by the board until it is ready to take over.

Cabinet member for children's services Coun Andrew Sangar said he had asked council officers and the headteacher to make sure there was swift and decisive action.

"I have every confidence in Anne Quaile the headteacher, and believe she is the right person to take the school forward and bring about the necessary improvements in teaching and learning," he said.



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The full article contains 521 words and appears in Sheffield Star newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 18 November 2008 11:20 AM
  • Source: Sheffield Star
  • Location: Sheffield
 
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101% OWL,

18/11/2008 10:38:02
''Bosse saxed at failing school'' If you can't even get the headline right, i'd pack it in !!
2

101% OWL,

18/11/2008 11:41:22
Discovered spellchecker and changed it, well done, there's hope for you yet !
3

RX,

Sheffield 18/11/2008 17:43:54
Why does a school need a business manager?
4

Honestly !!,

Sheffield 18/11/2008 18:12:41
Sensationalised journalism yet again. Please verify your facts before publishing material that will effect staff, parents and pupils at the school. The governors were not all axed. You can't even get the name of the new Headteacher correct. Standard obviously are slipping elsewhere.
5

The governors were not axed ,

Sheffield 18/11/2008 19:08:14
Did the LEA support governance at the school ?
Why have the ex governors not had the opportunity to give the whole picture ? If the truth was out then it would not have been the unpaid volunteers that grabbed the HEADLINE, governors city wide are aware of the current situation ,stand up and be counted or it could be your school next . and the school name is incorrect also
6

The governors were not axed ,

Sheffield 18/11/2008 20:12:04
Another mistake it was Director of support services .
With a budget of close to 5,000,000 a business manager is more than needed ,most schools both primary and secondary have one they allow the headteacher and leadership team to lead on teaching and learning .
7

Keith Sheffield born,

Oxford 18/11/2008 23:29:40
When I went to secondary school there were no managers or governors just a dam good headteacher.Mr.Hemmings.If Sheffield had heads like him you wouldn't have to have all the other hangers on.Alas Meynell Road Sec.Modern has long gone
8

Honestly !!,

Sheffield 19/11/2008 11:20:37
Dear Keith, please post only informed comments, you have no idea what you are talking about. Every school in the UK has to have Governors, it is a legal requirement. They appoint the Headteacher.
9

stygian,

underthestone 19/11/2008 11:51:38
It would appear from the comments that the professionalism of The Star has slipped somewhat. On 10 November The Star printed a big article that falsely claimed that a citizen had been banned from asking questions, and that council bosses had lost their patience with him. The council has written saying that the events that The Star printed simply did not happen, the citizen is not banned from asking questions and no-one lost their patience.
As for this case, the council HAS manipulated the board of governors in the past, when a governor refused to be a puppet, by making false accusations of bankruptcy, but, being unable to produce any evidence ( because the accusation was untrue ) refusing to say who made the false accusations.
So, it would appear, that there accuracy and truth issues with the council, as well as The Star.
10

The governors were not axed ,

19/11/2008 12:07:35
Secondary moderns were generally deprived of resources and good teachers. The Newsom Report of 1963 reported on education for these children, and found that in some schools in slum areas of London fifteen year old pupils were sitting on furniture intended for primary schools. Staff turnover was high and continuity in teaching minimal. Not all secondary moderns were as bad, but they did generally suffer from neglect by the authorities.

This is why we have governors all of who are unpaid .
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