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The New Duty to Improve Cohesion: Schools as the Gateway to Stronger Communities. York 18.1.08 Mo Laycock. Head Teacher. Firth Park Community Arts College

The New Duty to Improve Cohesion: Schools as the Gateway to Stronger Communities

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The New Duty to Improve Cohesion: Schools as the Gateway to Stronger Communities. York 18.1.08 Mo Laycock. Head Teacher. Firth Park Community Arts College. Firth Park Community Arts College Indicators. 1,370 students on roll. 11 – 16 years. 10 form entry. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: The New Duty to Improve Cohesion: Schools as the Gateway to Stronger Communities

The New Duty to Improve Cohesion:Schools as the Gateway to Stronger Communities.

York 18.1.08

Mo Laycock. Head Teacher.

Firth Park Community Arts College

Page 2: The New Duty to Improve Cohesion: Schools as the Gateway to Stronger Communities

Firth Park Community Arts College Indicators 1,370 students on roll. 11 – 16 years. 10 form entry. 43% on SEN Register for learning

and/or EBD issues (linked to poor and early parenting).

27% BME students, many of whom are asylum seekers or refugees (aspirant students with strong families).

One third of cohort in year 7 annually, enter with KS2 SATS at level 3 and below. 25 year 7 students 2007 with reading ages of 6.5 yrs.

Full Monty land.

Brightside political ward. 6th most disadvantaged ward in the country. High unemployment, low aspirations, parochial attitudes. Sex and Drugs and Rock ‘n’ Roll alive and well in our area.

4 main feeder primary schools. 78% of students attend FPCAC from these 4 schools.

3 of the primary schools went into ‘notice to improve’ in 2007.

Inadequate nursery provision in the local community (being addressed by BSF phase 2).

FPCAC had a 2 day Ofsted inspection, March 07 – “FPCAC is the learning hub of the community and is changing learning and aspirations for the better in its community”.

“Good school with outstanding features”.

Page 3: The New Duty to Improve Cohesion: Schools as the Gateway to Stronger Communities

Indicators 1995

Split site school 1.5 miles apart. Students/staff travel 2/3 times daily.

10% 5+ A* - C GCSE’s. 25% NEETS. Deficit budget. Falling rolls. Low standards/aspirations. Few systems/strategies to improve. Ofsted May 1995 KS3 only. Very poor buildings. No uniform,

students bringing bags, doing homework etc.

77% attendance. Further Ofsted November 1997 due to

Local Authority ‘serious weakness’ category. (Ofsted criteria started in 1997 – FPCAC would have been ‘special measures/Fresh Start’).

Ofsted 1997. No category – but 10 key issues.

Page 4: The New Duty to Improve Cohesion: Schools as the Gateway to Stronger Communities

Indicators 2007 Full in all year groups and annual appeals. One site school since 2000. Tony Blair/David

Blunkett visit 2003. 92 teaching staff. 70 appointed by Mo

Laycock. Performing Arts Specialist School since 2002. Pilot Extended School for Sheffield, open 7.00

a.m. – 9.00 p.m. daily for students/adult learning. Many weekends and all holidays except Christmas.

43% 5+ A* - C GCSE’s 2007. Target 2008 48 – 50%. Learning pathways x 4 at KS4. 94% 1+ A* - G GCSE’s. 75% of year 11 2007 continuing in education/training.

KS3 results 2007. CVA 108. Top 25% of schools.

‘Can do/will do’ culture. Lots of visitors to FPCAC. Staff speaking at

local/regional/national conferences. Possible Academy status 2009/2010 with Kier

Construction as the sponsor. No selection or changes in admissions. 89% attendance (DCSF monitoring).

Page 5: The New Duty to Improve Cohesion: Schools as the Gateway to Stronger Communities

Community Cohesion Strategies Community School since 1995 to win community back. Extended School since 2003. Adult education classes 4 nights per week. 200+ adult learners. Salsa/keep fit to GCSE

classes. Family Learning weekends on Saturdays – 9.30 a.m. – 3.00 p.m. 400 attending regularly. Parents coffee mornings/workshops fortnightly. Year 7 parents first half term to get them

on our side as partners. Senior citizens links and annual Christmas party. Links in Design & Technology, History,

Catering, SEN support. Outreach work for BME parents, particularly Yemeni/Somalian parents. SLT/Extended School staff attend all community meetings in the school day/evenings. Holiday workshops. Active Brightside. Targeted students i.e. Gifted and Talented,

vulnerable, poor attenders, low self esteem et al.

Page 6: The New Duty to Improve Cohesion: Schools as the Gateway to Stronger Communities

Family of Schools Strategies Headteachers of the 5 schools meet

half termly. Arts cross phase group. Literacy cross phase group. MFL/Arts/ICT staff working in primary

schools. Longley Park 6th Form College links

re 14 – 19+ Post 16. Family of Schools learning vision

*Same behaviour for learning strategy.* Consistent strategies re working with parents across the 5 schools.

FPCAC students peer teaching years 4,5,6 primary pupils.

Projects at FPCAC for primary pupils i.e. Sports/ICT/Science.

Competencies Curriculum at FPCAC year 7 (RSA Opening Minds). 5 primary practitioners employed at FPCAC in KS3.

Joined up vision and mission statements. Shared logos on letterheads re Family of

Schools. Performances/showcases/workshops at

FPCAC.

Page 7: The New Duty to Improve Cohesion: Schools as the Gateway to Stronger Communities

Other Initiatives re cohesion

SSAT/NCSL/Continyou links. Black Pupils Attainment Project

(DCSF). Boys Breakthrough Project. Now

called ‘Raising our Game’. Boys/Girls.

Service District partnerships re vulnerable families.

Arts across the Curriculum strategy. Early promotion of young/aspirant

leaders. Links with Rotherham/Brighouse/Barnsley.

Cross phase leadership projects i.e. Literacy/Student Voice et al.

Page 8: The New Duty to Improve Cohesion: Schools as the Gateway to Stronger Communities

The Future

Executive principal for all 5 schools?o Lead Learners/Headteachers also.o Vertical grouping at FPCAC.o Early transition from 2009 at Whitsun –

all 5 schools.o Academy status – 0 – 16 through school

on the FPCAC site.o Stage not age approach to learning.

*KS3 2 years. Year 9 transition year. Differentiation years

9 – 11. Links with Longley Park.o Vocational centre on site. Kier.o Sheffield Hallam University links.o Community Theatre/Library/Refectory. o Base on site for Service District

personnel, i.e. Police, Health, Social Services, Connexions, Councillors et al.

Page 9: The New Duty to Improve Cohesion: Schools as the Gateway to Stronger Communities

Ultimately our shared vision involves

More students going onto University and returning to

Shiregreen/Firth Park to live and work. Pride in the local community. Houses on sale – stating ‘close to Firth Park Community Arts

College’! Belief in life long learning. Self esteem, confidence, determination to succeed as flexible,

positive citizens and learners.

We believe that Firth Park is Fantastic!