At a recent session of the Liaison Committee, the parliamentary committee at which chairs of all select committees are given the chance to quiz the Prime Minister, the chair of the Public Accounts Committee Margaret Hodge put some pithy questions to the PM about value for money and accountability with increasing private and voluntary sector involvement in public services. The exchange is recorded
here (at about 16:30) and goes something like this:
Hodge: How do you follow the public pound with so much private sector involvement?"
PM: Literally to follow it. The citizen should be able to choose between services on the basis of much better published information about outcomes and making sure the tax payer can follow his or her pound through the system.
Hodge: Take the case of academies . How do we know they provide value for money?
PM: People can increasingly see the funding per pupil that goes into the school and if we are successful in introducing a more national funding formula for schools that will be even clearer. The parent/teacher /local community knows how much follows the pupil into the school and can then see the results. We need to see how much money going into the schools and the results coming out. This will produce results for very transparent amounts of money that are going in.
The main problem with this answer is that Mr Cameron has got his facts wrong. Parents, and the wider community, can't see how much money per pupil is going into academies because his government refuses to publish this information. Let's take on very high profile example - Mossbourne Academy in the London Borough of Hackney. Mossbourne has certainly performed impressively since it was opened just under ten years ago but we can't see what, if any, impact differential funding may have had on the outcomes of the pupils. Information about the schools 2011 GCSE results was published
here in the government's new all singing all dancing performance tables. All the information is present and correct apart from the table showing income and expenditure per pupil which is now published with the performance data for all maintained schools . So if you look at two of Mossbourne's neighbouring schools,
Stoke Newington School and
Haggerston School, that information is presented transparently(at the bottom of each set of tables between Pupil Absence and School Workforce figures) as the PM suggests. Or take another part of the country like the West Midlands. The
Ormiston Sandwell Community Academy is compared with two local maintained schools
here and
here. I have chosen these areas at random but parents and teachers might want to check similar information in their areas . I believe they will find that the same issues arise - a very basic lack of accountability about funding in the case of both sponsored and converter academies. Here is an example of one high profile early converter, the
Tollbar Academy.
My colleague Henry Stewart's
recent analysis of the 2011 GCSE results of English secondary schools , has received widespread coverage including a page lead in the
Observer newspaper. It revealed that the performance of academies is no better than maintained schools on a range of different indicators. However if we want to make a really valid comparison on school performance, and follow the public pound, as Mr Cameron is urging us to do,surely we should be able to see how the funding per pupil compares? The PM should get his facts right and Mrs Hodge should continue to press him on this issue.
Comments
The school league tables do not contain financial information about academies. The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Schools, Lord Hill, whose responsibilities include academies, should ensure that all state-funded schools provide this information if Mr Cameron feels it is essential for transparency.
http://www.education.gov.uk/cgi-bin/schools/performance/school.pl?urn=13...
http://www.education.gov.uk/cgi-bin/schools/performance/school.pl?urn=13...
Technically, academies become new schools on conversion. Will this mean that the figures for previous year's Sat results of GCSE attainment will not appear in the school's performance tables? If so, then the only way to compare an academy's performance with that of its predecessor school would be to search previous years for the name of its predecessor which if the name of the school has been changed substantially only those with local knowledge would be able to find this information.
Or those who know how to Google.
You are correct - the information might be found by Googling. However, it's an extra obstacle put in the way of transparency. Information about LA maintained schools is all in one place - results, spend per pupil, links to Ofsted. With academies this isn't the case.
If not, where's the mystery?
If you listen to the televised Q+A session (linked in Fiona's post) you will hear the PM say that he wants taxpayers to be able to view the information in order to assess whether it is value for money. The questioner then asked him how an Academy Trust, which is private, could be judged in this way. The information is not available in the DfE tables. She gave an instance where a whistleblower had revealed that one academy federation had purchased a property in France and then paid the travelling expenses of Governors to visit the property. Of course, such dubious spending wouldn't be available on any school spending table - no governing body would readily admit to such spending - but perhaps questions could be asked if the gap between income and expenditure per pupil was sufficiently wide to raise questions about what happened to the money that wasn't spent on pupils.
How can we know if we can't see their budgets?
Academies fill in WGA data forms, don't they?
The question still remains: why is the financial information for academies not in 2011 school performance tables? The PM says it's possible for parents to check this information easily - it isn't.
http://www.usethekey.org.uk/administration-and-management/financial-mana...
http://www.education.gov.uk/schools/leadership/typesofschools/academies/...
I guess the real answer to this is that the whole point of academies is that they are "independent". If they had to jump through all the same bureaucratic hoops that maintained schools have to jump through, how independent and autonomous would they really be?
That said, they should still be accountable for the taxpayers' money they receive, and presumably are through audit processes/the DfE, WGA etc.
I'm not sure the income/expenditure data put in per pupil terms is much use for comparing schools anyway. It would just invite invidious comparisons.... a bit like the original league table approach.
Just to confirm NO information about individual academy funding is available either from the DFE or via the Charity Commission as they have now all become exempt charities. Before that one could see the sponsoring chains accounts but they weren't much use as they didn't show income and expenditure for individual institutions. It really is quite outrageous that we are funding these schools but can't get information about this - also very amateurish of the PM not to to even understand his own policies. I understand that Margaret Hodge means to pursue this and we will back her all the way.
http://www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm201012/cmselect/cmliaisn/uc60...
A school doesn't need to be an academy in order to have "clear leadership". The PriceWaterhouseCoopers report 2008 found that when schools improved they used similar methods which were nothing to do with academy status. Strong leadership was one of these methods. And he's right that teachers want "ownership" of what they do - they don't need amateurs to keep telling them what methods to employ across the board. They need to be able to use their professional judgement to decide which methods and resources to use with particular children.
I agree with you that the spend-per-pupil information is unhelpful and could lead to invidious comparisons. There might be valid reasons why School A receives more funding that School B. And when the pupil premium is distributed parents would need to look at the number of disadvantaged pupils in order to try and work out how much of a school's income comes from this source.
It's simplistic for anyone to say that one school is more efficient than another because, say, 90% of its KS2 pupils reach the benchmark at only £4000 per pupil, while the school down the road spends £5000 per pupil but only 65% of its pupils reach that standard. It doesn't necessarily mean that the second school is "worse" than the first and offers less value for money. It might, for instance, cater for a large number of immigrants who need help in speaking English, or SEN pupils who need support.
Nevertheless, the PM has said parents can see the financial information for all schools. They can't. To misquote Orwell again, "All schools are equally transparent, but some schools are more transparent than others."
My concern is that given the ability of the students the surrounding area and that fact Harris use a banded entry policy, how is it that they able have such a skewed intake?
Under the new admissions code objections to Academies admission arrangements go to the Schools Adjudicator rather than the Education funding Agency. The code says ‘Any person or body who considers that any maintained school or Academy’s arrangements are unlawful, or not in compliance with the Code or relevant law relating to admissions, can make an objection to the Schools Adjudicator’.
It should be noted that the website of the Schools Adjudicator gives incorrect information about who can complain (it limits complaints to parents/carers - this has been overturned by the new admissions code). The Schools Adjudicator emailed me some weeks ago to say they would be updating its website but it hasn't been done so. This doesn't bode well for complaints handling if an incorrect statement on its website can't be corrected in reasonable time.
http://www.education.gov.uk/schoolsadjudicator/howwecanhelp/a0076144/how...
Applicants will be allocated to an ability band on the basis of their NVRT test score. There will be 9 ability bands with the percentage of places available in each band being determined by the profile of the distribution of ability of the applicants for the Academy.
I think this explains the skewed distribution.
Is there a way of finding out the KS2 scores of the students that applied to the academy and forcing the academy to hold its random banding done in public?
Do you think that only 4% of the those that applied to the academy were below the average standard? I know the area around Harris CP quite well and I would find that highly unlikely.
The Crystal Palace Academy was originally a City Technology College (CTC) and it became an academy in 2008. When Kenneth Baker set up CTCs he said that their intake should reflect the ability range in the catchment area but this doesn't seem to be the case. In fact, only two of the academies which were once CTCs had a proportion of low attainers over 10% in the 2011 cohort: Leigh Technology Academy (16%) and Djanogly City Academy (28%). Some ex-CTCs even have a proportion lower than Harris Crystal Palace in the 2011 cohort. Brooke Weston College had only 2%, CTC Kingshurst Academy only had 1%. Thomas Telford, which is still a CTC, also had only 1% low attainers.
I don't know how this can be - perhaps you can suggest a reason why these so-called comprehensive schools have so few low attainers.
Do you think that if someone was to send a FOI request to Croydon Council to find out the KS2 results of students that applied to Harris CP, they would issue the data?
They do not say they take equal numbers from each ability band but 'the percentage of places available in each band being determined by the profile of the distribution of ability of the applicant'. Therefore if the majority of applicants are from the top bands this will result in a skewed intake.
That is what they state, but I would like to see if distribution of the applicant's KS2 levels back that up, hence the FOI request to Croydon Council. I would also like to find out who observes the random draw.
The definition of "low attainers" is NOT "below average"; it is "failing to achieve Level 4 at KS2.
One of the closest primaries to Harris Academy Crystal Palace is Paxton, which achieved 100% Level 4 or above at KS2 in 2011.
This may go some way towards explaining why HACP has so few low attainers.
Given the thrust of this site is that local kids should go to their local secondary...... it would seem perverse to complain if Paxton kids went to HACP.
Harris Crystal Palace has just finished consulting about changes to the admission criteria for 2013/14. The proposed code contains detailed information about technology tests and how the 10% of pupils will be selected on basis of aptitude (the ones with the highest scores). The proposed code is here:
http://www.harriscrystalpalace.org.uk/uploads/document/HCACP%20Admission...
As my post above pointed out, the three remaining CTCs have a tiny proportion of low attainers: Emmanuel College, Gateshead, only has 6%; the BRIT school, Croydon, only has 5%; and Thomas Telford, Telford, only has 1%. And only two of the academies which were once CTCs have a proportion of low attainers above 10%. Clearly something is undermining the principle of these academies/CTCs being fully comprehensive.
“Forty-three per cent of academies said they resolve over-subscription with ‘fair banding’, which involves testing applicants to identify their ability range, and awarding a fixed percentage of pupils within each range a place. While supporting the ‘mixed ability’ policy objective, fair banding can in theory reduce the extent to which a school serves its immediate area (another key tenet of the academies policy), since local children may be refused a place in favour of those from further afield who match the required profile.”
There appears, then, to be a mismatch between two competing tenets of the academies programme as conceived under Labour: that academies should be fully-comprehensive and serve the local area.
It seems that in some cases it may not be possible to reconcile these two tensions. It is important, then, when judging the effectiveness of schools to take note of their ability range. It is surely no coincide that the "worst" performing (in terms of raw results) ex-CTC academy - Djanogly in Nottingham - had the highest number of low attaining pupils in the 2011 cohort. In fact, it could be said that Djanogly was the only one of the ex-CTC academies that had a fully-comprehensive intake.
Mr Gove holds up CTCs and ex-CTCs as examples of high academic achievement - it's important, therefore, to realise that the majority of them have a very low proportion of low-attaining pupils in their ability range. It's almost like saying grammar schools are "better" than secondary moderns because the results of the former are higher than the latter. Well, they would be, wouldn't they?
http://www.nao.org.uk/publications/1011/academies.aspx
That's why I welcome the data on the performance and progress by prior-attainment group being included in the new tables.
However, the danger remains that many schools will adopt a fatalistic attitude, or think it is okay to maintain the differentials they have inherited from primaries. Yet, surely the point is to intervene and change things? Shouldn't we expect secondaries to use Year 7 to get low-attainers to catch up?
The matrix doesn't assume that all pupils will get a GCSE C. If it did, then this would indeed be a sign of dumbing-down. Remember, GCSE C was supposed to show above-average ability when it was first introduced. If it is now regarded in some quarters as the minimum level of attainment - not just a sign of average ability but a threshold of competence. How standards would have slumped in 25 years if this is the case.
Mr Gove's doublethink about standards is discussed here:
http://www.localschoolsnetwork.org.uk/2012/03/the-doublethink-of-standar...
If all low attaining pupils at KS2 reached the 5 A-C GCSE benchmark which was set for the above average pupil then something would be wrong.
After all Cypress Junior is the nearest junior school to Harris Crystal Palace, Crypress Junior have a much larger cohort than than Paxton School and it also happens to have a far lower set of KS2 results than Paxton School.
So, if GCSE C is now regarded as the basic threshold, which grade shows above-average ability? And which one, if any, shows exceptional talent? And is GCSE any longer a fit preparation for A level? Or has the standard of A levels also fallen?
Governments have fallen over themselves to show that they are raising standards by requiring more children to be pushed through GCSE C. In doing so they have devalued the grade and brought GCSE into disrepute.
None of this has much bearing on the main point - that Harris Ac enjoys a situation where it attracts candidates from admission from some pretty good nearby schools in Lambeth and Bromley as well as Croydon.
That does not explain the skewed admissions and the only way this point would be settled would be for Croydon Council to published the ks2 performance data for the students that applied to the Harris.
Those who applied to the Harris would have applied to other schools too. Some would have put other schools as first preference (and got their first preference). Harris will have made offers of places that were turned down. I don't think you could unravel this ball of string without finding the KS2 results of all of those made offers by Harris (who wouldn't have known if they were first preference or not), whether they ended up there or not. I don't think a school can game the system really.
That is true and as I posted Croydon Council would have that information. And a school can quite easily game the admissions system.
As I understand it, a school might get 1000 applications for 150 places.
It then places them in order 1- 1000, according to its admissions criteria.
The school does not now which applicants have put it first, or where else each might have applied.
The council then allocates candidates to their first preferences, then second (if first prefs full) etcetera.
The school will then be told that Nos: 3, 5, 16, 24, 39, 41, 106, 209 etc. have accepted places. If it cannot know who will, how can it skew anything?
At what stage does the school actually get to now the KS2 results of applicants?
So there would be no need for the school to know the KS2 scores but the council would know the ability profile of students they applied.
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