Opposing academies and "free" schools - Education Workers Network

The text of a brief introductory leaflet on Academies and Free Schools by the Education Workers Network distributed at the 2011 London Anarchist Bookfair.

Submitted by Choccy on November 2, 2011

What are Academies?
The academy schools program began in 2000 under New Labour. They are state sector schools run independent of local authority control and with a private sponsor.

18 months ago there were less than 300 academies in England but the Academies Act 2010 sought to expand the number of academies and there are now over 1000. Some schools that are deemed 'outstanding' by Ofsted have been ‘fast-tracked’.

It is thought that many 'outstanding schools may not even need a sponsor, and might be able to opt straight out of local authority control regardless.

What do sponsors get?
Private sponsors put up an initial capital sum, up to £2mil and the state foots the bill for around another 90%. For this, the sponsor gets a say in the running of the school. They have a majority on the board of governors, dictate the ethos of the school, and have control over what the school building is used for. Often they have control of aspects of curriculum, the sorts of courses on offer and the kinds of outside agencies that come into schools.
Academies are not obligated to recognise unions or follow national agreements over pay & conditions.

What sort of sponsors are out there?
Sponsors do not have to have a proven track record in education. Academies have been opened by Christian ‘philanthropist’ used-car salesmen like Peter Vardy’s Emmanuel Schools in the north-east, other Christian groups like United Learning Trust and Oasis Trust, and banks like United Bank of Switzerland, who were fined $780 mil in 2008 for tax evasion, and employed the 2nd biggest ‘rogue trader’ in financial history.

What do they mean for workers?
Because they can set their own pay & conditions, they open up the possibility of further eroding conditions for all education workers. They can increase staff workload through ignoring national assessment practices and having extended school days. The current government has already implied they will turn-down applications from schools that intend to stick to national agreements.

What are ‘Free’ Schools?
These are also independent schools in the state sector, planned to be set up by local parents, teachers and voluntary groups. They would also be free to set their own pay & conditions for workers, and it is suspected they will also require a private sponsor in practice. Of the 63 Free Schools already approved or planned for 2012-13, 23 are from existing schools, 2 are existing independent schools and 12 are being set up by faith groups, with many more being opened by charities that already run large 'chains' of academies; ARK, E-ACT, and the Harris Federation.

Do academies improve education?
No. The National Union of Teachers' report, 'Academies: beyond the spin', in 2007, found that many academies have high staff turnover and sickness figures, and also high pupil exclusion rates (in a bid to move on ‘problem’ pupils).

Academies have been said to ‘massage’ their 5 A-C grade figures (the benchmark by which schools are judged) by entering pupils for ‘equivalent’ courses such as BTECs, courses whose educational value is doubted by Ofqual, the independent educational standards monitor.

What is the social impact of academies?
Being controlled by a sponsor means the possibility of manipulating pupils with an ideological programme. The Emmanuel Schools Foundation was said to be openly teaching that the Earth is 6000 years old in its science lessons, and in 2006, Channel 4's 'Dispatches' found that teachers were immersed in a culture of 'bible-bashing' within the school.

Other academies run by businesses and banks have an overt focus on ‘business-speak’, with many being business specialists or eschewing traditional subjects for business-related study.
Academies are free to select 10% of pupils by aptitude and have been accused of skewing the educational demographics of areas in which they operate.

The Fightback
Communities and workers are fighting back. The 'Hands Off Bournville School' campaign in Birmingham recently defeated governor plans to convert to an academy after a sustained struggle by parents and the threat of co-ordinated strike action by teachers in NUT and NASUWT.

In Kingsbury High School in London, teachers from the NUT and NASUWT were on strike this month against their school being converted into an academy.

Struggles like this must be supported by workers in education and beyond. With academies growing exponentially we cannot underestimate how important the fight against them is.

Revolutionary change
The cuts and ‘austerity’ measures are hitting education hard. The attempts to increase private involvement in education and further erode pay & conditions, as well as educational standards, through programmes such as the academies scheme, highlights the need for complete abolition of the existing system. The call for radical overhaul in the education system, is a call for revolutionary change in society as a whole.

Until workers and communities are in charge of all industries, we will never have an education that truly liberates us and aids our quest for better and more meaningful lives. Education workers must resist attacks on their working conditions, and communities must fight the erosion and further manipulation of the education provision that should be liberating us, rather than churning out workplace fodder for the bosses.

We want education run BY and FOR working class people, to meet OUR needs, not the narrow ideological whims of capitalists, politicians or religious cranks. The EWN seeks to build a revolutionary union for education workers, with the ultimate goal being workers control of education, in our interests, not bosses, churches, or the state.

SUPPORT WORKERS & COMMUNITIES IN STRUGGLE!
SUPPORT THE FIGHT AGAINST ACADEMIES! TOGETHER WE CAN WIN!

Comments

Choccy

12 years 2 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by Choccy on August 16, 2012

Jesus this was updated less than a year ago, there were 1000 then, there's now 2000.

Cazzac111

10 years 1 month ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by Cazzac111 on September 10, 2014

See the youtube video 'Ark Schools Academies and Eugenics' and
'Ark and Eim Group the Dutroux Scandal'

Spikymike

10 years 1 month ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by Spikymike on September 10, 2014

I note that belatedly UNISON has started to ballot ''as many academies as possible'' (which I believe means the bigger chains) to join the second, October public sector strike day with the rest of their TUPE'd colleagues but presumably excluding those new recruits not on the Local Authority scale pay and conditions. It's still too little, too late perhaps but then the disperal of workers accross this part of the public sector privatisation programme has already weakened organisation and moral amongst many of these workers subject to a more intense and amboldened management. It would be good to get some more updated information on conditions and worker responses in the expanded Academy and 'free' schools sector from others here who are involved.