17/10/2012
Report Calls For For-Profit Firms To Run Schools
Profit-making firms should be brought in to run England's persistently failing schools, according to the Prime Minister former policy chief.
James O'Shaughnessy report for the Policy Exchange think tank says England "faces a serious educational problem" and that proven education firms should be paid by results to turn such schools around.
Private organisations are allowed to run schools in England but currently not for profit.
Mr O' Shaughnessy, who quit No 10 earlier this year, is calling for private trouble-shooting firms to be brought in under a "new three strikes and you're out rule" based on the new tighter Ofsted inspection regime.
The report says at the first Ofsted notice to improve, schools should be obliged to become a state-funded but privately run academy under a new sponsor.
At the second, the academy would be obliged to join a successful academy chain of at least three schools bound together legally, financially and operationally.
If no improvement is seen by the third notice to improve, the governing body would be obliged to hand over the running of the school to a proven educational management organisation, which may or may not make a profit.
This organisation would then operate the school on a payment-by-results basis.
Mr O'Shaughnessy said: "As the prime minister said earlier this year, there is a 'hidden crisis' where coasting schools have been allowed to bump along in mediocrity for years, delivering a sub-standard education to their pupils.
"But the new Ofsted inspection regime will mean that up to a third of schools will be told they aren't good enough and need to improve.
He added: "However, the dramatic increase in schools being told to improve requires more capacity than the academy and chain sectors can provide.
"So where local authority control has failed, and turning a school into an academy and then placing it into a chain have not been enough to break the cycle of underachievement, we must see whether private companies can help.
"Any objections to the private sector attempting to succeed where the state and voluntary sectors have failed should be dismissed for what they are - ideological prejudice."
(H)
James O'Shaughnessy report for the Policy Exchange think tank says England "faces a serious educational problem" and that proven education firms should be paid by results to turn such schools around.
Private organisations are allowed to run schools in England but currently not for profit.
Mr O' Shaughnessy, who quit No 10 earlier this year, is calling for private trouble-shooting firms to be brought in under a "new three strikes and you're out rule" based on the new tighter Ofsted inspection regime.
The report says at the first Ofsted notice to improve, schools should be obliged to become a state-funded but privately run academy under a new sponsor.
At the second, the academy would be obliged to join a successful academy chain of at least three schools bound together legally, financially and operationally.
If no improvement is seen by the third notice to improve, the governing body would be obliged to hand over the running of the school to a proven educational management organisation, which may or may not make a profit.
This organisation would then operate the school on a payment-by-results basis.
Mr O'Shaughnessy said: "As the prime minister said earlier this year, there is a 'hidden crisis' where coasting schools have been allowed to bump along in mediocrity for years, delivering a sub-standard education to their pupils.
"But the new Ofsted inspection regime will mean that up to a third of schools will be told they aren't good enough and need to improve.
He added: "However, the dramatic increase in schools being told to improve requires more capacity than the academy and chain sectors can provide.
"So where local authority control has failed, and turning a school into an academy and then placing it into a chain have not been enough to break the cycle of underachievement, we must see whether private companies can help.
"Any objections to the private sector attempting to succeed where the state and voluntary sectors have failed should be dismissed for what they are - ideological prejudice."
(H)
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