Future Academies Explained

Type:Multi Academy Trust
Established:2006
Key People:Lord Nash, Caroline Nash, Lawrence Foley
Website:FutureAcademies.org
Footnotes:UID 3152

Future Academies is a multi-academy trust running 10 primary and secondary schools, a teacher training college and the Centre for Latin Excellence. The schools are located in London and Hertfordshire in England. The trust's motto is Libertas Per Cultum (freedom through education).

It was set up by the charity Future, established by former stockbroker Caroline Nash and her husband, Lord Nash,[1] in 2006.[2] Lord Nash is a venture capitalist and UK Conservative Party donor, and was a schools minister between 2013 and 2017.[2]

Establishments

Academies

Teacher training college

Controversies

In 2013 Labour councillors called for an inquiry after a new Pimlico primary school, where Nash was co-chairman of the governors, appointed an unqualified teacher as headmistress ahead of its opening with 60 pupils in September 2013.[3] Further criticism followed in October when she resigned after four weeks in the job.[4] [5] The school said that the headmistress had successfully set up the school and wished to pursue other opportunities.[5] Also in October 2013, a second headteacher, the acting head of nearby Churchill Gardens academy, was allegedly forced from her position following bullying by Future Academies managers.[6]

In 2014, Future Academies pushed ahead and opened the Trinity Academy in an area with 200 surplus school places when it only had 17 pupils prepared to attend. It is not understood why the Conservative government did not cancel the project, as it did in 2012 with another under-subscribed school, Newham Free Academy.[7] Previously the government had spent £18 million securing the site for the trust.[8]

In 2016, discussing issues raised by deregulation of the education sector, the National Union of Teachers cited Future Academies after the Nashes' daughter Jo, unqualified as a teacher, was given an unpaid teaching position at the trust's Pimlico Academy.[9] An Oxford University history graduate, Jo Nash had previously worked in the office of the Tory minister Iain Duncan Smith; she joined Future as an unqualified teacher and as an adviser to help design the history curriculum and recruit teachers.[9]

In 2018, Hemel Hempstead's Cavendish School was reopened as Laureate Academy during an expansion of Future Academies[10] which also extended to other schools in Hertfordshire in 2019 despite concerns about the trust's governance and despite parents' opposition.[11] Concerns were raised about the introduction of compulsory Latin at Laureate Academy, with parents fearing the trust planned a grammar school-type emphasis on academic rather than vocational options. in July 2020, Laureate Academy was ranked the 7th worst school in Hertfordshire.[12] In June 2023, the school was inspected by Ofsted and graded Good.[13]

In January 2019, Future Academies was criticised for poor governance practices, having four board members of whom three were also trustees.[14] Government guidance, supported by Nash in 2017, recommended that trust boards should have five members and that most members should be independent of the board of trustees; if members also sit on the board of trustees this "may reduce the objectivity with which the members can exercise their powers".[14]

In 2020, Pimlico Academy appointed a new head-teacher who changed the dress code in a way that alienated pupils, staff and parents and was seen as racist, because it forbade colourful hijabs and hairstyles with a lot of height, such as afros.[15] In September 2020 students took down a union jack that had been erected outside their school, and burned it; graffiti appeared "Ain't no black in the Union Jack …".[16] Staff held a no confidence vote, which passed with 99%, and 98% of the staff voted for strike action.[17]

In September 2022, teachers from the academy chain voted to go on strike, claiming the trust was "blighting the life chances of the children" with a curriculum developed by Caroline Nash that was said to be among the most narrow in the country.[2]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: FUTURE ACADEMIES - GOV.UK . get-information-schools.service.gov.uk . 17 April 2021 . en.
  2. News: Mansell . Warwick . Boffey . Daniel . Teachers at ex-Tory minister’s academy chain set to strike . 6 October 2022 . Guardian . 16 September 2022.
  3. News: Teacher training head defends Pimlico appointment. BBC News. 3 April 2013 . 18 October 2013.
  4. News: Free school headmistress with no qualifications quits after four weeks. Independent newspapers. 10 October 2013. 18 October 2013.
  5. News: Pimlico free school head teacher Annaliese Briggs steps down. BBC News. 10 October 2013. 18 October 2013.
  6. News: Syal . Rajeev . Second headteacher quits at schools minister's academy chain . 6 October 2022 . Guardian . 18 October 2013.
  7. News: Newham Free Academy school plans collapse . 9 October 2022 . BBC News . 19 July 2012.
  8. News: Nye . Philip . EXCLUSIVE: Secondary opens with 17 pupils Academies Week . 17 April 2021 . Academies Week . 19 September 2014.
  9. News: Syal . Rajeev . Unqualified daughter of minister teaches in his academy schools . 6 October 2022 . Guardian . 12 May 2016.
  10. News: Robertson . Alix . Lord Nash's Future Academies expands into Hertfordshire . 23 August 2022 . Schools Week . 22 September 2018.
  11. News: Mansell . Warwick . 'It's a dictatorship.' Angry parents fight back against school takeovers . 23 August 2022 . Guardian . 25 January 2019.
  12. News: Miller . Claire . Gouk . Annie . Smith . Matthew . Real Schools Guide Hertfordshire 2020: The best and worst secondary schools in the county ranked . 23 August 2022 . Herts Live . 11 July 2020.
  13. Ofsted (2023). Laureate Academy: Rating and reports. Retrieved: 15 December 2023.
  14. Web site: Dickens . John . Ex-minister's academy trust ignores governance guidelines . Schools Week . 17 April 2021 . 20 January 2019.
  15. News: Parveen . Nazia . Thomas . Tobi . Pimlico academy pupils stage protest over 'discriminatory' policies . 17 August 2021 . The Guardian . 31 March 2021 . en.
  16. News: Parveen . Nazia . Turmoil at London school hit by flag and hairstyle row . 30 March 2021 . The Guardian . 30 March 2021.
  17. News: Parveen . Nazia . Pimlico academy staff in strike talks after head loses confidence vote . 1 April 2021 . The Guardian . 1 April 2021 . en.