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Holmfield Primary School is threatened
with closure - Submitted 08 Oct 2009 - Source Leicester
Mercury
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happens next - what can you do <<
Parents and governors say they want a
school threatened with closure to be given one more chance to
show it has made improvements.
A 12-week consultation has begun into
the future of Holmfield Primary School, in Leicester Forest
East, after an Ofsted report criticised "inadequate"
teaching and placed the school in special measures.
**(see below to view the report)**
Governors say Leicestershire County
Council's own inspectors judged the school to be making satisfactory
improvements just days before Ofsted produced its damning report.
Earlier this week, a large group of
parents and children marched in protest against closure. Helen
Lawson, of Thorpe Astley, whose son goes to the 152-pupil school,
said it has a lot of support.
She said: "Support is not just coming
from parents but from the entire community who feel the school
is at its heart.
"I've just been into the chemist and they've already filled
a page of a petition."
Susan Flannigan, who has three grandchildren
at the school and whose own children were pupils there, said:
"We don't think it makes sense.
"It just doesn't seem fair when
you see the money that's pumped into other schools. "The
children here are happy kids. There can't be that much wrong
with that."
In its inspection report published a
fortnight ago, Ofsted said that despite some improvements over
the last year, significant groups of pupils were not making
enough progress and were "attaining standards that are
exceptionally low for their ages".
But Malcolm Fox, vice-chairman of the
school's governing body, said governors and parents were not
sticking up for the school because of "misplaced loyalty"
but because they believe it is improving – and would prove
that to Ofsted when inspectors returned.
He said: "Local authority inspectors
came into school and told us teaching was good and improving
just four working days before Ofsted inspected us.
Holmfield Primary
School Improvement and Performance Service
Note of Visit >
LEA
Report 16th June 2009 <
"We fully believe that when Ofsted
inspectors return in December or January they will see that
teaching is improving and the county council will withdraw its
consultation into closure."
Councillor Ivan Ould, county council
cabinet member for education, and David Parsons, the council
leader whose own ward includes Holmfield, said they would listen
fully to parents' concerns.
But education officials say they must
consider the school's future because Ofsted said it was "failing
to give its pupils an acceptable standard of education and the
persons responsible for leading, managing or governing the school
are not demonstrating the capacity to secure the necessary improvement."
Holmfield Primary School website
LEA
Report June 2009 School Improvement and Service
Note of Visit
** Inspection
Report: Holmfield Primary School, 23rd & 24th June 2009
**
Text from letter from Her Majesty's Inspector
to pupils explaining the findings of the inspection 25th
June 2009
Dear Pupils
Inspection of Holmfield Primary School,
Leicester Forest East, LE3 3FF
Thank you for being so helpful to us
when we came to inspect your school. You gave us some very useful
information when you talked with us and showed us your work.
This helped us to make the judgements I am now sharing with
you.
You told us that the adults in the school
work hard to take care of you and help you to feel safe in school.
You know a lot about how to stay healthy and try hard to behave
well in lessons, and more of you are now attending school regularly.
The school gives you the chance to help each other through the
school council or as play leaders.
We have decided your school is not doing
as well as it should and needs some extra help; we call this
'special measures'. The adults that work with you will have
help to improve your school. Other inspectors will be visiting
your school regularly to check its progress. Having looked closely
at your work in lessons, I have judged that many of you are
not being helped to make enough progress. I have therefore asked
your headteacher, governors and staff to:
help you to make better progress and
reach higher standards in English, mathematics and science
make sure that your activities in lessons always challenge and
motivate you
increase the ability of senior staff and subject leaders to
drive up standards and achievement
put in place some important policies that will help them improve
the school's performance.
You can play your part by coming to school even more regularly,
by behaving as well as you can, and by working hard in lessons.
We wish you every success in the
future.
Yours faithfully
Anthony O'Malley
Her Majesty's Inspector
Malcolm Fox,
Chair of Holmfield Governors Malcolm Fox, Leicester Forest East
- 30-Sep-2009
Three major,
three minor inspections in the pevious year, 2008/9, by the
County Council independent Inspectors all said that Holmfield
was 'satisafory' and 'making progress'. An HMI visit in January
2009 said that Holmfield was 'satisfactory' and 'making progress'.
The last county Council Inspection was two weeks before the
Ofsted inspection in June, which assessed the school as needing
'special measures'.
The Governors
were shocked at the Ofsted assessment as the previous inspecions
had been so positive. There is something wrong with either the
County Council Inspections or the Ofsted - both cannot be right.
Further, the
Key Stage 2, Yr.6, examination results this summer were the
best ever for the school, showing a consistent increase over
the past four years. The KS2 results are very very close to
the national average, in science well above and in writing,
below. The school is NOT failing in that respect, particularly
as the intake is significantly below national levels.
The children
at Holmfield are happy in what they feel as a safe enviropnment
with an extremely low levelof bullying. Children transfering
in from other schools comment on this. Any bullying is immediately
dealt with.
Ofsted will visit again in December/January and Holmfield hs
the opportunity to attain a satisfactory assessment. If it does
not, so be it.
All at Holmfield
will work extremely hard for a positive Ofsted assessment in
December/January. We completely take on board the Government's
determination to raise educational standards all round and the
Leicestershire 'Pathways to Excellence' program.
The site is about
twelve acres and its sale as building land would go some way
towards the projected County Council deficit. Expect disinformation
and 'economy of truths' on this.
>>
What happens next - what
can you do <<
Holmfield
Primary School
website
Inspection
Report: Holmfield Primary School, 18th &19th June 2008
Opens in new window as a PDF File
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