News0 min ago
Al Madinah School...shambles Still Continuing
http:// www.bbc .co.uk/ news/uk -englan d-26083 099
Anybody still think that these so-called "Free" schools are a good idea. For free read "free-of-qualified Teachers"
Anybody still think that these so-called "Free" schools are a good idea. For free read "free-of-qualified Teachers"
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No best answer has yet been selected by mikey4444. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.they must be monitoring them as how would they know there were problems if they hadn't been.
from the link
A Department for Education spokesperson said in a statement: "The vast majority of free schools are performing well but where we have found failure we have acted swiftly and decisively.
"We have monitored Al-Madinah very closely since problems came to light last year.
One bad apple don't spoil the whole damn bunch (to quote the Jackson 5)
....Ofsted has just completed its independent inspections of the first 24 free schools, which opened in September 2011. The results are in – and these schools are outperforming the rest of the country. The proportion that are good or outstanding outstrips other state schools. Although a handful of schools required some improvement when judged against Ofsted's tough new inspection framework, the leaders of those schools are already taking action to ensure they improve – or are ex-private schools that need a little more time to adjust to the disciplines of state school inspection....
http:// www.the guardia n.com/c ommenti sfree/2 013/jul /31/fre e-schoo ls-succ ess-ed- miliban d-admit
....Ofsted has just completed its independent inspections of the first 24 free schools, which opened in September 2011. The results are in – and these schools are outperforming the rest of the country. The proportion that are good or outstanding outstrips other state schools. Although a handful of schools required some improvement when judged against Ofsted's tough new inspection framework, the leaders of those schools are already taking action to ensure they improve – or are ex-private schools that need a little more time to adjust to the disciplines of state school inspection....
http://
If you follow your own link, you will find
A Department for Education spokesperson said in a statement: "The vast majority of free schools are performing well... "
I see the teachers at the Free school in Islington are on strike. If they are not qualified, how come they are members of the NUT? My view is that any teacher who goes on strike is giving his pupils a lesson in greed and blackmail, and is unfit for the job.
A Department for Education spokesperson said in a statement: "The vast majority of free schools are performing well... "
I see the teachers at the Free school in Islington are on strike. If they are not qualified, how come they are members of the NUT? My view is that any teacher who goes on strike is giving his pupils a lesson in greed and blackmail, and is unfit for the job.
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