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Falling Rolls,Year 10 through to GCSE

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On Tuesday, The Times newspaper headlined a story about schools removing pupils or encouraging them to leave in the run up to GCSE, followed by two pages of analysis inside the paper. This is an issue I have followed closely in recent years, mainly from the viewpoint of numbers of children being Home Educated and Permanently Excluded, most recently here.

Medway UTC 1


This article explores schools where the roll has fallen way above the norm over this period. On average 2% of Kent children leave mainstream schools in Years 10 and 11, and 4% in Medway, raising the question of why this should happen at all. Surprisingly, the schools losing the most pupils are generally different between 2016-17 and 2017-18, suggesting that none have a consistent policy to remove pupils unlikely to do well before GCSE, although several have extremely high levels of ‘Elective’ Home Education. This is contrary to the examples given in The Times.

For the cohort taking GCSE in 2018, the five biggest losses of pupils were: were: Medway UTC 25%; New Line Learning and Victory (Medway) Academies 13%; Oasis Isle of Sheppey Academy 10% and Robert Napier School (Medway) 9% the only school to appear in the lists for both years. In 2017 they were: Orchards Academy 17%; Brompton and Strood Academies (both Medway) 12%; Ebbsfleet Academy and Thamesview School 11%. In all cases that is three or more pupils on average from every class. Below I give a fuller list for each year.

For 2017, the grammar school losing most pupils was the Harvey Grammar with 6%, followed by Invicta Grammar with 3%. For 2018, Harvey was one of five with 2% of pupils lost.

The key date is the January census in Year 11, as pupils leaving after this time are still counted in the GCSE statistics, so there is not such a strong incentive for schools to see them leave. For 2017, I have both sets of data, showing that in some schools, another 2% of the pupil roll leaves in the run up to GCSE. 2018 GCSE results will enable me to update this figure. You will find the 2015-16 Kent figures here, looking in particular at High Weald Academy with its 19% figure, the highest in the county, and a special look at the tactics applied by Oasis Academy Isle of Sheppey, which show no sign of weakening after yet another new Principal has been appointed, as identified here

 

Schools with high proportions of pupils leaving
between the start of Year 10 and GCSE
January 2018
GCSE 2017Jan 2017
Medway UTC (M)25Orchards Academy 1716
New Line Learning13Brompton Academy (M) 1211
Victory Academy (M)13Strood Academy (M) 1211
Oasis Sheppey10Ebbsfleet Academy
 119
Robert Napier (M)9Thamesview 119
Hartsdown 9Duke of York's 108
Marsh Academy9Robert Napier (M) 108
Geenacre (M)8King Ethelbert 88
St John Fisher (M)8Canterbury Academy  88
Walderslade (M)8Swadelands 77
High Weald7St Augustine's 77
Cornwallis6Towers School 76
Hugh Christie6Aylesford School 76

Note: M = Medway school

I am unable at present to draw a firm conclusion as to why so many pupils leave as I am awaiting 2018 data from Kent and Medway. However, my previous article looks at the evidence for 2017, revealing very high figures for families ‘choosing’ Extended Home Education (EHE) for their children from certain schools, with oral evidence of some being encouraged to leave from OAIOS,  and very high permanent exclusion figures for Medway schools. There are also considerable numbers of children who simply disappear from schools without trace.

Individual Schools
This section looks at some of the individual schools in the table above.

Medway UTCis clearly a disaster area as explained in an article I wrote in May which also looked at the failures of the UTC concept in general. With pupils only joining the school in Year 10,  they have found a very poor school as set out in great detail by Ofsted and so it appears that up to a quarter of pupils have clearly realised their mistakes, with many presumably returning to their previous schools.

I have also looked at Ebbsfleet, Oasis Academy Isle of Sheppeyand Hartsdown in an article called ‘Tough Love Academies’ and elsewhere, showing how they operate a pressured environment that sees pupils unable to cope being withdrawn, often with nowhere else to go, so they ‘opt’ for EHE, certainly in the case of Sheppey with active encouragement from the school. Another about the Brook Learning Trust also looks at Ebbsfleet, along with High Weald Academy.

Both New Line Learning and Cornwallis Academies have been struggling for some years, as I have also recorded, to the extent that the Academy Trust which ran them is being taken over next month by the Every Child, Every Day Academy Trust, which has recently been supporting both schools. It is fair to point out that both schools, along with Hartsdown, suffer from having part of their intake being somewhat mobile in the first place.

Orchards Academy with the highest losses leading up to the 2017 GCSEs, also features in an earlier article, which highlights that school as one of the top performers at Progress 8, the key GCSE measure, in 2017. Losing 17% of the cohort no doubt helped! Another top performer was the controversial Duke of York’s Royal Military Academy, which lost 10% in 2017. However, in its capacity as a Boarding School primarily for military families, this fall could either be for families moving on for service reasons, or else removing their children from the school because of the controversies. Surprisingly, the consistently highest non-selective GCSE performer, Bennett Diocesan Memorial School, had next highest losses at 6%.

St John Fisher Roman Catholic School in Medway is surely the least popular school in the Authority with 58 Local Authority Allocations this year. This means there are many families taking up places at the school who don’t want to be there, a factor also affecting Ebbsfleet (67), Hartsdown (85), OAIOS (70), and Victory (41, highest Non-Selective Progress 8 performance at GCSE in Medway).

Please note that I have limited data from Medway Council who have resisted providing the relevant information. They have recently been found guilty of refusing to provide data to me, by the Information Commissioner. In spite of instructions from the Commissioner, the Council has failed to provide the data I have provided.

 


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