To Local Education
Authorities and the Governors of Direct Grant, Voluntary Aided and Special
Agreement Schools.
DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION AND SCIENCE,
CURZON STREET, LONDON, W.1.
All communications should be addressed to
THE PERMANENT UNDER-SECRETARY OF STATE.
THE ORGANISATION
OF SECONDARY EDUCATION
I
INTRODUCTION
1. It
is the Government's declared objective to end selection at eleven plus and to
eliminate separatism in secondary education, The Government's policy has been
endorsed by the House of Common's in a motion passed on 21st January 1965:
'That this House, conscious of the need to raise educational standards at all
levels, and regretting that the realisation of this objective is impeded by the
separation of children into different types of secondary schools, notes with
approval the efforts of local authorities to reorganise secondary education on
comprehensive lines which will preserve all that is valuable in grammar school
education for those children who now receive it and make it available to more
children; recognises that the method and timing of such reorganisation should
vary to meet local needs; and believes that the time is now ripe for a
declaration of national policy.' The Secretary of State accordingly
requests local education authorities, if they have not already done so, to
prepare and submit to him plans for reorganising secondary education in their
areas on comprehensive lines. The purpose of this Circular is to provide some
central guidance on the methods by which this can be achieved.
II MAIN FORMS OF
COMPREHENSIVE ORGANISATION
2. There are a number of ways in which
comprehensive education may be organised. While the essential needs of the
children do not vary greatly from one area, to another, the views of individual
authorities, the distribution of population and the nature of existing schools
will inevitably dictate different solutions in different areas. It is important
that new schemes build on the foundation of present achievements and preserve
what is best in existing schools.
3. Six main forms of comprehensive
organisation have so far emerged from experience and discussion: (i) The
orthodox comprehensive school with an age range of 11-18 (ii) A two tier
system whereby all pupils transfer at 11 to a junior comprehensive school and
all go on at 13 or 14 to a senior comprehensive school. (iii) A system
under which all pupils on leaving primary school transfer to a junior
comprehensive school, but at the age of 13 or 14 some pupils move on to a
senior school while the remainder stay on in the same school. There are two
main variations: in one, the comprehensive school which all pupils enter after
primary school provides no course terminating in public examination, and
normally keeps pupils only until 15; in the other, this school provides G.C.E.
and C.S.E. courses, keeps pupils at least until 16, and encourages transfer at
the appropriate stage to the sixth form of the senior school. (iv) A two
tier system in which all pupils on leaving Primary school transfer to a Junior
comprehensive school. At the age of 13 or 14 all pupils have a choice between a
senior school catering for those who expect to stay at school well beyond the
compulsory age, and a senior school catering for those who do not. (v)
Comprehensive schools with an age range of 11 to 16 combined with sixth form
colleges for pupils over 16. (vi) A system of middle schools which straddle
the primary/secondary age ranges. Under this system pupils transfer from a
primary school at the age of 8 or 9 to a comprehensive school with an age range
of 8 to 12 or 9 to 13. From this middle school they move on to a comprehensive
school with an age range of 12 or 13 to 18,
NB The terms 'junior' and
'senior' refer throughout this Circular to the lower and upper secondary
schools in two-tier systems of secondary education.
4. The most appropriate system will
depend on local circumstances and an authority may well decide to adopt more
than one form of organisation in the area for which it is responsible.
Organisations of types (i), (ii), (v) and (vi) produce schools which are fully
comprehensive in character. On the other hand an organisation of type (iii) or
(iv) is not fully comprehensive in that it involves the separation of children
of differing aims and aptitudes into different schools at the age of 13 or 14.
Given the limitations imposed by existing buildings such schemes are acceptable
as interim solutions, since they secure many of the advantages of comprehensive
education and in some areas offer the most satisfactory method of bringing
about reorganisation at an early date. But they should be regarded only as an
interim stage in development towards a fully comprehensive secondary
organisation.
5. Against this general background, the
Secretary of State wishes to make certain comments on each of the systems
described in paragraph 3:
(i) Orthodox
comprehensive schools 11 to 18 (see paragraph 3(i)
6. There is now a considerable volume of
experience of all-through comprehensive schools; and it is clear that they can
provide an effective and educationally sound secondary organisation. If it were
possible to design a new pattern of secondary education without regard to
existing buildings, the all-through comprehensive school would in many respects
provide the simplest and best solution. There are therefore strong arguments
for its adoption wherever circumstances permit.
7. In practice, however, circumstances
will usually not permit, since the great majority of post-war schools and of
those now being built are designed as separate secondary schools and are too
small to be used as all-through comprehensive schools, There is of course some
scope for building new schools of this type; and it should be borne in mind
that such schools need not be as large as was once thought necessary to produce
a sixth form of economic size. it is now clear that a six or seven form entry
school can cater properly for the whole ability range and produce a viable
sixth form. In rural areas or in small towns where only one secondary school is
needed its size will inevitably be determined by the number of children for
whom it must cater; and this may well not support a six form entry school. But
wherever a six form entry is possible, within the limits of reasonable
travelling for secondary pupils, it should be achieved.
8. It will sometimes be possible to
establish a single comprehensive school in buildings designed for use as
separate schools. But any scheme of this type will need careful scrutiny. If
buildings are at a considerable distance from each other, or separated by busy
roads, the disadvantages are obvious. Even where they are close together the
amount and type of accommodation available may cause groupings of pupils which
are arbitrary and educationally inefficient. It is essential that any such
school could make a satisfactory timetable, deploy its staff efficiently,
economically and without undue strain, and become a well-knit
community.
9. There are examples of schools which
function well in separate buildings, and there will often be advantages to
offset the disadvantages mentioned above. For example, the sharing of different
premises by a single school may ensure that all the children enjoy at least
part of their secondary education in a new building. Moreover additional
building already approved or likely to be included in an early programme may
help to overcome the drawbacks of the initial arrangements.
(ii) Two-tier
systems whereby all pupils transfer at 11 to a junior comprehensive school and
at 13 or 14 to a senior comprehensive school (see paragraph
3(ii))
10. Two-tier systems consisting of junior
and senior Comprehensive schools, each with its own head teacher, and with
automatic transfer of all pupils at 13 or 14, have two clear advantages over
other two-tier systems. They avoid discrimination between pupils at the point
of transfer; and they eliminate the element of guesswork about the proportion
of pupils who will transfer to the senior school. They may, it is true, produce
problems of organisation, particularly where a senior school is fed by more
than one junior school. If pupils are not to suffer unnecessarily from the
change of school, the schools involved will have to co-operate fully and
positively in the choice of curriculum, syllabus and teaching method (see
paragraph 34). In the interest of continuity all the schools will have to
surrender some of their freedom. But this system is attractive in that it will
often fit readily into existing buildings; and it can develop into an
all-through system of orthodox comprehensive schools in the course of time as
new buildings become available. (iii) A two-tier system under which all
pupils transfer at 11 to a junior comprehensive school and at 13 or 14 some
pupils move on to a senior school while others remain in the junior school.
(see paragraph 3(iii))
11. The two main forms which this system
may take have been described in paragraph 3(iii) above. That in which the
junior comprehensive school keeps pupils only until 15 can clearly be no more
than an interim arrangement; there must eventually be automatic transfer of all
pupils from the junior to the senior school.
12. If local circumstances rule this out
for some years then at the very least there should be a reorganisation of the
junior schools to make satisfactory provision until 16 for those pupils who do
not transfer at 13 or 14. Such provision will certainly have to include courses
leading to the C.S.E. examination; whether it should also include G.C.E.
Ordinary level courses is a more open question. Where staffing permits, there
is much to be said for including G.C.E. courses in the junior schools. This
gives an added stimulus to the work and to the teaching; it gives
intellectually able pupils who do not transfer an opportunity nevertheless of
gaining the qualifications which they would have won if they had transferred;
it makes it easier for them, through gaining G.C.E. Ordinary levels, to
transfer in due course to the sixth form in a senior school or to a college of
further education; and it reduces the danger of creating social differences
between junior and senior schools, with the junior schools regarded as 'poor
relations'.
13. Whatever dividing line is drawn
between the junior and the senior school, the Secretary of State will expect
certain conditions to be observed: (a) It is essential, if selection is not
to be reintroduced that transfer to the senior school should be at parents
choice. (b) Guidance to parents on transfer should be given on an organised
basis and should not take the form of advice by one teacher only. (c)
Guidance should ensure that children who would benefit from a longer or more
intellectual course are not deprived of it by reason simply of their parents'
lack of knowledge of what is involved. The parents must have the final
decision; but parents from less educated homes in particular should have a full
explanation of the opportunities open to their children. (d) The junior
school must be staffed and its curriculum devised so as to cater effectively
for the whole ability range in the first two or three years. This is of great
importance whatever transfer age is chosen; but with a transfer age of 14 it
becomes critical. The more able children must not be held back or denied the
range of subjects and quality of teaching which they would have enjoyed in a
grammar school. Equally their needs must not be met at the expense of other
children.
14. If these conditions are met schemes
of this type have the merit of fitting comparatively easily into existing
buildings and of taking full account of parental choice at the point of
transfer. They are therefore acceptable as transitional schemes. But
eventually, as paragraphs 4 and 11 will have made c1ear, the Secretary of State
expects that all two-tier systems involving optional transfer at 13 or 14 will
give way to systems under which transfer is automatic.
(iv) Two-tier
systems whereby all pupils transfer at 11 to a junior comprehensive school with
a choice of senior school at 13 or 14 (see paragraph
3(iv))
15, These differ from the schemes
described in paragraphs 11 to 14 in that the junior comprehensive school has
the same age range for all its pupils. No children remain in it beyond the age
of 13 or 14. All pupils then have a choice of senior school: one senior school
will aim at Advanced level and other sixth form work, while the other will not
take its pupils beyond Ordinary level, although the dividing line between the
schools can be drawn at different points and they may overlap. The comments
made in paragraphs 12, 13 and 14 above apply equally to schemes of this
kind.
(v)
Comprehensive schools with an age range of 11 to 16 combined with a sixth form
college for pupils of 16 and over (see paragraph
3(v))
16. Two conceptions of the sixth form
college have been put forward. One envisages the establishment of colleges
catering for the educational needs of all young people staying on at school
beyond the age of 16; the other would make entry to a college dependent on the
satisfaction of certain conditions (e.g. five passes at Ordinary level or a
declared intention of preparing for Advanced level). A variation of the sixth
form college pattern is that which attaches the sixth form unit to one school;
under such an arrangement pupils from schools without sixth forms can transfer
to a single sixth form at another school.
17. A sixth form college may involve
disadvantages for the lower schools; there are few obvious arguments in favour
of comprehensive schools with an age range of 11 to 16. Children in this age
group may lose from a lack of contact with senior pupils of 16 to 18. There is
a danger that the concentration of scarce specialist teachers in the sixth form
college will drain too much talent away from the schools. Some teachers may
find unattractive the prospect of teaching the whole ability range in a school
offering no opportunities for advanced work and many teachers express a
preference for work in schools catering for the whole secondary age
range.
18. But the possibility of loss to the
lower schools has to be weighed against possible gains to pupils in the sixth
form colleges. The risk of draining away teaching talent from the lower schools
may be outweighed by the concentration of specialist staff in the colleges,
thus ensuring their more economic use: a point of particular importance while
the present teacher shortages continues. The loss to the younger pupils from
lack of contact with sixth formers may be outweighed, not only by the greater
opportunities for leadership which the younger pupils themselves will have in
the lower school, but also by the gain to the sixth formers from their
attaining something of the status and freedom from traditional school
discipline enjoyed by students.
19. It is essential that no scheme
involving the establishment of a sixth form college should lead to any
restriction of existing educational opportunities for young people of 16 to 18.
Where authorities are considering the establishment of sixth form colleges they
should review all the educational needs of the 16-18 group in their area and
the provision they have hitherto made for them, both in sixth forms and in
colleges ol further education. Where, in the light of this review, it is
proposed to establish sixth form colleges, the relationship between these
colleges and colleges of further education, and their respective functions,
will require careful consideration to avoid unnecessary duplication of
resources and to ensure the best use is made of the educational potential of
each.
20. In this country there is so far
little experience on which to base final judgements on the merits of sixth form
colleges. Nevertheless the Secretary of State believes that the issues have
been sufficiently debated to justify a limited number of experiments. Where
authorities contemplate the submission of proposals, he hopes that they will
consult with his Department at an early stage.
(vi) An
organisation which involves middle schools straddling the primary/secondary age
ranges (see paragraph 3(vi))
21. Section 1 of the Education Act 1964
makes it legally possible for new schools to be established which cater for an
age range covering both primary and secondary schools as defined in Section 8
of the Education Act 1944. The establishment of middle schools with age ranges
of 8 to 12 or 9 to 13 has an immediate attraction in the context of secondary
reorganisation on comprehensive lines. In the first place such schools seem to
lead naturally to the elimination of selection. In the second they shorten the
secondary school span by one or two years and thus make it possible to have
smaller all-through comprehensive schools.
22. Notwithstanding the attractiveness of
middle school systems, the Secretary of State does not intend to give his
statutory approval to more than a very small number of such proposals in the
near future. This is for reasons relating to the age of transfer from primary
to secondary education; see paragraph 30 below.
III SOME GENERAL
CONSIDERATIONS
(i)
Buildings
23. The disposition, character and size
of existing schools particularly of the schools built since the war which must
be assumed to remain in use for a considerable time, must influence and in many
cases go far to determine the shape of secondary organisation. Sometimes the
existing buildings will lend themselves readily to a new organisation; in other
cases they will exhibit marked deficiencies if they are used, with little or no
modification, for purposes for which they were not intended.
24. During the next few years growing
demands for new schools arising from the increase in the school population, new
house building and the raising of the school leaving age are unlikely to permit
any relaxation of the criteria for inclusion of projects in building
programmes. It would not be realistic for authorities to plan on the basis that
their individual programmes will be increased solely to take account of the
need to adapt or remodel existing buildings on a scale which would not have
been necessary but for reorganisation.
25. Where existing buildings cannot
easily be adapted to a new pattern authorities, in drawing up their plans, must
balance against each other the following factors: (a) the consideration
mentioned in paragraph 24; (b) the educational disadvantages which may
attach to schemes designed to make use of existing buildings where these do not
lend themselves adequately to a comprehensive system; (c) the possibility
of recasting building programmes announced but not yet implemented (see
paragraph 44(b) below).
26. It is for authorities to weigh these
considerations and to devise the most satisfactory plans in relation to local
circumstances. In doing so, they should appreciate that while the Secretary of
State wishes progress to be as rapid as possible, he does not wish it to be
achieved by the adoption of plans whose educational disadvantages more than
off-set the benefits which will flow from the adoption of comprehensive
schooling.
(ii)
Staffing
27. The changeover to a comprehensive
system should not affect the numerical demand for teachers significantly. But
the short term plan called for in paragraph 44(b) will have to be devised
against the background that the secondary schools will still be short of
teachers in 1969 (though their staffing standards will be better then than now)
and have still to face the staffing strain of a higher leaving age in 1970-71.
The Secretary of State will not be able to modify the quota arrangements to
take account of individual authorities' proposals in response to this
Circular.
28. It will be clear from Section II
above that reorganisation can have other important and complex implications for
staffing see, for example, the comments on staffing of particular types of
scheme contained in paragraphs 13(d) and 17. Authorities should consider
carefully how best to effect any redistribution of teaching staff which their
plans may entail and, in particular how to ensure that specialist staff in
scarce categories are deployed and used as efficiently as
possible.
29. Plans to reorganise secondary
education are bound to affect the pattern of higher posts in the schools,
especially headships. The Secretary of State is glad to note that the Burnham
Primary and Secondary Committee has under consideration the question of
safeguarding teachers' salaries in the event of school
reorganisation.
(iii) Age of
transfer to secondary education
30. Pending any recommendations which the
English and Welsh Central Advisory Councils for Education might make on the age
of transfer from primary to secondary education, the normal age of transfer
should be regarded as eleven plus. Except where they have agreed a limited
departure from this principle with the Secretary of State, authorities should
prepare their plans on this basis. Decisions taken by the Secretary of State
when he considers the Councils' recommendations may have a bearing on secondary
school organisation but this situation is not likely to arise in the near
future. Authorities will appreciate that there is bound to be a considerable
period between the making of any recommendations and the implementation of
Government decisions on them; these would be reached only after wide
consultation and careful consideration of all the factors
involved.
(iv) Transfer from
junior to senior secondary schools in two-tier systems
31. With a school leaving age of 16,
authorities adopting a two-tier organisation, including organisations of the
type described in paragraph 3(iii), will have a choice between a three-year
course in the junior secondary school and a two-year course subsequently, or
vice versa, Two years is not ideal as a period in one school at any stage; but
a choice has to be made, and the balance of argument seems to favour transfer
to a senior school at 13.
32. If the age of transfer were 14,
pupils would enter the senior school at a stage when the number of subjects
studied was being reduced and the course began to focus more narrowly on
examinations. Some subjects would never be begun, either because they needed a
course of some years or because they were not subjects which the particular
pupil needed to offer in an examination. Although for subjects such as history
and geography the age chosen for transfer might not be very important, for
others, such as science and modern languages, delay of transfer until 14 would
probably be harmful. A two-year course geared to an external examination would
be likely to be planned on the basis of giving a large amount of time to
comparatively few subjects; this is the very reverse of liberal
education.
33. With 13 as the age of transfer the
senior school could afford to introduce specialisation more gradually, and
there would be more likelihood of effecting a smooth transition. Arguments in
favour of a three-year run in the junior schiool apply with even greater force
to the senior school where the pace is accelerated and the course reaches its
climax both for pupils who have to face examinations and for those about to
enter the world of work.
34. A change of school is a stimulus for
some pupils but for others it means a loss of momentum; the break imposed by
transfer therefore calls for a deliberate effort to bridge it. To achieve
continuity close co-operation between the staff of the different schools will
be necessary, particularly where several junior schools feed one senior school,
in the cnoice of curriculum, syllabus and teaching method. If a two-tier system
is to function efficiently, there will also be a need for systematic and
continuous guidance and observation of pupils' development, together with
careful recording of findings and a regular exchange of information and views
between. junior and senior schools.
35. In two-tier systems which allow a
choice of school during the secondary course (see the forms of organisation
described under sub-headings II (iii) and (iv) above), it is importeat to
ensure that children whose parents choose the lower school for them when they
are 13 or 14 should be able to transfer to the senior school at the sixth form
stage as a matter of right, if by this stage they find that they wish to
continue in full-time education at school. But, as has already been made clear,
the Secretary of State expects that optional will eventually give way to
automatic transfer.
(v) The school
community
36. A comprehensive school aims to
establish a school community in which pupils over the whole ability range and
with, differing interests and backgrounds can be encouraged to mix with each
other, gaining stimulus from the contacts and learning tolerance and
understanding in the process. But particular comprehensive schools will reflect
the characteristics of the neighbourhood in which they are situated; if their
community is less varied and fewer of the pupils come from homes which
encourage educational interests, schools may lack the stimulus and vitality
which schools in other areas enjoy. The Secretary of State therefore urges
authorities to ensure, when determining catchment areas, that schools are as
socially and intellectually comprehensive as is practicable, In a two-tier
system it may be possible to link two differing districts so that all pupils
from both areas go to the same junior and then to the same senior comprehensive
schools.
(vi) Voluntary
schools
37. In a number of areas, which have
already introduced or planned a comprehensive organisation, the voluntary
schools have not been included, but the plans which the Secretary of State is
now requesting authorities to prepare should embrace them. Authorities which
have already devised their plans for county (and sometimes controlled) schools
alone should take the initiative in opening discussions with the governors of
the aided and special agreement schools which they maintain and, where
appropriate, with diocesan authorities, with a view to reaching agreement on
how these schools can best be reorganised on comprehensive lines. Other
authorities should proceed with consultation and planning for voluntary schools
as part of their general planning. It will clearly be of great assistance,
particularly in areas with a large number of voluntary school places, if
negotiations can lead to the early integration of voluntary schools into a
reorganised structure. The Secretary of State asks that local education
authorities and the governors of voluntary schools should enter into
discussions to this end at the earliest practicable stage in the preparation of
plans.
38. It is not essential that the same
pattern should be adopted for denominational and other voluntary schools in any
given area as is adopted for that area's county schools. The disposition and
nature of the existing voluntary school buildings may dictate a different
solution; voluntary schools of a particular denomination may serve the
population of more than one local authority area, and the school or diocesan
authorities may be able to devise an appropriate and acceptable scheme which
does not coincide directly with that adopted for the authorities' county
schools; or a denomination may at present rely heavily on direct grant schools
for its selective places. There will not be a single and easy solution to these
difficulties, but the Secretary of State hopes that where they occur, the
schools, denominational authorities and local education authorities will be
able to negotiate solutions which ensure that while selection is eliminated,
parents are not deprived of places which meet their religious wishes, and on
which they have hitherto been able to rely.
(vii) Direct Grant
schools
39. In a number of areas, and especially
in large towns, direct grant grammar schools make a substantial contribution
alongside the maintained schools to the provision of secondary places. The
proportion of such places paid for by local education authorities is in the
case of many schools, particularly those of a denominational character, very
high. The Secretary of State looks to both local education authorities and the
governors of direct grant schools to consider ways of maintaining and
developing this co-operation in the context of the policy of comprehensive
education. He hopes that authorities will study ways in which the schools might
be associated with their plans, and that governing bodies will be ready to
consider changes, for instance in curriculum and in method and age of entry,
which will enable them to participate fully in the local scheme. The Secretary
of State asks that authorities should open discussions at an early stage with
the governors of direct grant schools in which they take up places; it may be
appropriate for such discussions to be in consultation with any other
authorities taking up places in the same schools.
(viii)
Consultation
40. The smooth inception and continuing
success of any scheme of reorganisation will depend on the co-operation of
teachers and the support and confidence of parents. To secure these there must
be a process of consultation and explanation before any scheme is approved by
an authority for submission to the Secretary of State. An authority should take
all those concerned into its confidence at as early a stage as
possible.
41. The proper processes of local
government must leave initiative on matters of principle and the ultimate
responsibility for decisions with the elected representatives of the community.
But the Secretary of State believes that once the principles and main outlines
of a possible plan of reorganisation have been formulated there should follow a
period of close and genuine consultation with teachers. The precise methods
cannot be prescribed and will necessarily vary from one authority to another.
On the general character of a plan and on matters affecting an authority's
teachers as a whole, consultation with teachers' associations would normally be
appropriate. Working groups composed of local education authority officers and
teachers have also been found successful in some areas. Individual teachers or
school staffs affected by particular schemes should always be taken into
consultation, to whatever extent is reasonable and practicable, at the
appropriate stage. The arrangements must strike a balance between the
fundamental right and duty of the authority to take decisions and the practical
good sense of accepting that teachers have a very real contribution to make
from their knowledge of the children and their needs. In the last resort only
teachers can make any educational system work well.
42. Parents cannot be consulted in the
same way as teachers; but it is important that they should be informed fully
and authoritatively as soon as practicable in the planning stage. Explanations
by elected members and officers can be given at meetings, in schools, in
booklets and through the press. A scheme may easily arouse anxiety and
hostility among parents if they are dependent for information about it on
unreliable and incomplete reports spread by word of mouth or partisan reports
of any kind. The early and widespread dissemination of information will help to
strengthen parental confidence and should avoid the risk of the submission of
ill-informed and unnecessary objections where schemes involve the publication
of notices under Section 13 of the 1944 Act.
IV PREPARATION AND
SUBMISSION OF PLANS
43. In the light of the considerations
mentioned above, local education authorities are requested to submit plans to
the Secretary of State for the reorganisation of secondary education in their
areas on comprehensive lines.
44. Plans should be submitted within one
year of the date of this Circular, although the Secretary of State may
exceptionally agree an extension to this period in the case of any individual
authority. Plans should be in two parts (15 copies of each) as
follows:
(a) A general statement of the
authority's long-term proposals. This should indicate the type or types
of comprehensive organisation which it is intended to establish; should cover
all parts of the authority's area and should embrace in its scope both county
and voluntary maintained schools. It will be clear from paragraphs 37 and 38 at
that voluntary schools should in due course be as fully part of any scheme as
county schools, though they need follow an identical pattern and it may take
longer for necessary adjustments to be achieved. Authorities which at present
supplement their maintained provision by taking free or reserved places in
direct grant schools or by paying fees in whole or in part for pupils at
independent schools should indicate their future intentions. They should also
indicate the extent to which direct grant schools are participating in their
plans.
(b) A detailed statement of the
authority's proposals whether not they have already been discussed with the
Department covering a period of three years starting not later than September
1967. This part should describe what it is proposed by the
authority should happen to every secondary school affected by this first stage
of their plan. It should be made clear whether what is proposed for this period
is an instalment of a long-term plan or whether it represents interim
arrangements designed to be modified or superseded. Each school affected should
be identified by name, present size, status, denomination, sex of pupils and
type. Its short and long-term future should then be described. The
arrangements proposed for the admission of children to the comprehensive
schools should be explained. This explanation should cover initial admission to
schools recruiting at the normal age of transfer from primary to secondary
education and any later transfer which is involved in two-tier systems.
This three-year instalment of the plan should include a statement of estimates
of costs of all major and minor building programme proposals which will be
involved in carrying it out. The Secretary of State does not intend to amend of
his own initiative the major school building programmes already announced for
1965-66, 1966-67 and part of 1967-68. But authorities may themselves wish to
recast some of their programmes in order to bring secondary school projects
into line with their plans for reorganisation; in this case proposals for
recasting programmes should made at the time of the plan's submission. When
preparing such proposals authorities will need to bear in mind the building
needs created in their areas by the raising of the school leaving age in
1970-71. The total cost of a recast programme must not exceed that already
authorised for 1965-66 and 1966-67; there may however be some scope for
increase in 1967-68 since the full programme for that year has not yet been
settled.
45. The Secretary of State hopes that
local education authorities, voluntary school governors, denominational
representatives and direct grant school governors will consult freely with the
officers of his Department at any stage in their deliberations at which they
believe that informal discussion would be helpful. He would in particular ask
that local education authorities should consult the Department when their plans
are at a sufficiently advanced stage but before they are finally approved for
submission.
46. The Government are aware that the
complete elimination of selection and separatism in secondary education will
take time to achieve. They do not seek to impose destructive or precipitate
change on existing schools; they recognise that the evolution of separate
schools into a comprehensive system must be a constructive process requiring
careful planning by local education authorities in consultation with all those
concerned. But the spontaneous and exciting progress which has been made in
this direction by so many authorities in recent years demonstrates that the
objective is not only practicable; it is also now widely accepted. The
Government believe that both the education service and the general public will
welcome the further impetus which a clear statement of national policy will
secure.
HERBERT ANDREW |