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Education reform in England


An overview of changes to education in England’s state schools, to help families on the move to understand their options.


J


ust before the Brexit bombshell nudged all other events off the news agenda, government plans for education reform were dominating the headlines. The waters have


been choppy since then with a snap general election leading to loss of a Conservative majority. But education still remains firmly on the policy agenda to ensure that all children in the UK, no matter their background, have access to a world-class education.


The government’s central aim in its programme of education reform is to drive up standards in England’s schools to match those of schools in other high-performing countries in the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development’s (OECD) international education league tables.


ACADEMY SCHOOLS


At the heart of the changes is the government’s desire to allow schools to become independent of local authorities, giving head teachers and senior leadership teams, the freedom to undertake day-to-day management, funded directly by the Department for Education.


18 | relocateglobal.com | Keep Informed GRAMMAR SCHOOLS


Not long after she entered Number 10, Theresa May delivered a speech in which she revealed a radical set of proposals for education reform, including lifting the restrictions on grammar-school expansion.


The academy school programme, initiated by the Labour government, began with ‘sponsored academies’ – schools that were deemed by the Office for Standards in Education (Ofsted) to be underperforming and were required to convert to academy status, with a government-approved sponsor taking over leadership. Later, the programme was expanded to allow top-performing schools to convert to academy status. The present government believes that the academy programme is driving up standards in England’s schools, and the programme remains firmly on its agenda for poorly performing schools. There are currently around 3,400 state- funded secondary schools in England, just over 2,200 of which are already academies. Of the approximately 16,800 primary schools, over 3,000 have converted to academy status.


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