City Technology College

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In England, a City Technology College (CTC) is an urban all-ability specialist school [1] for students aged 11 to 18 specialising in science, technology and mathematics. [2] They charge no fees and are independent of local authority control, being overseen directly by the Department for Education. One fifth of the capital costs are met by private business sponsors, who also own or lease the buildings. The rest of the capital costs, and all running costs, are met by the Department. [3]

Contents

Description

CTCs operate as limited companies with articles of association and a board of governors. A CTC is governed through an operating agreement made between the Secretary of State for Education and whoever is responsible for establishing and running the school. This agreement includes the regulations for the school's educational provision (e.g. its curriculum and admissions policy). These are negotiated between the two parties and must be enforced by the school should it wish to receive government funding from the Secretary of State. [4] This funding covers most capital costs and all running costs, although one fifth of capital costs are instead met by private business sponsors, who also own or lease the buildings. [3] More government funding is granted to be spent towards the school's pupils. This funding fluctuates on a per capita basis and depends on the size of the total pupil population. [5]

CTCs teach the National Curriculum, but specialise in mainly technology-based subjects such as technology, science and mathematics. Like maintained schools, they are regularly inspected by the Office for Standards in Education. CTCs also forge close links with businesses and industry (mainly through their sponsors), and often their governors are directors of local or national businesses that are supporting or have supported the colleges. The programme has been successful in the long term with all the CTCs being considered strong establishments with consistently high academic results. [3]

Development

Plans to establish schools or colleges for technology in major urban areas were first reported in an article from The Sunday Times in December 1985. There would be between sixteen and twenty of these institutions serving 1000 pupils each. They would charge no fees and would be publicly funded through an educational trust, but would select their pupils on a "special" basis. Unlike other state-funded schools at this time, these institutions would not be run by their local education authority (LEA or simply local authority). [6] These plans were the brainchild of Schools Minister Bob Dunn, who had been pushing the Secretary of State for Education and Science Keith Joseph to introduce British magnet schools, [7] with the ultimate aim of encouraging specialisation and increased parental choice in the education system. [8] These schools, if introduced, would be known as technology-plus schools, specialist schools for technology with extra funding from private sector sponsors. [9] [10]

In January 1986, a Centre for Policy Studies meeting was held in the House of Lords. The meeting was organised by Cyril Taylor and focused on the growing issue of unemployment amongst the youth. Among the attendees were Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, Secretary of State for Employment David Young, who chaired the meeting, and sixty other business leaders and politicians, twenty of whom were invited by Taylor. [11] [12] The twenty business leaders explained to Thatcher that the cause of youth unemployment was schools teaching the wrong skills to their pupils. They recommended, with Taylor, the creation of a hundred secondary schools similar to Bob Dunn's proposed technology-plus schools to deal with this issue. They would be urban inner city specialist schools for technological and technical education, funded by the central government via direct grant legislation and independent of local authority control, instead being partially controlled by private sector sponsors investing into them. [11] [13] [14] Taylor thought that these schools could meet the growing demands for business qualifications in the workforce and also proposed a new provision for teacher training in these schools to combat the ongoing teacher shortage at the time. [15]

A new Secretary of State for Education and Science, Kenneth Baker, was appointed on 21 May 1986. An advocate of technical education and technology in general, [16] Baker was drawn towards the concept of schools for information technology, [12] having formed this interest during his tenure as the Minister for Industry and Information Technology in the early 1980s. Computers were a rarity in schools at the time, so Baker set up an initiative to introduce a computer to every school in the country. [17] Now in his position as Education Secretary, Baker wished to further improve digital learning and computing in the education system, and wanted to introduce schools for computing and information technology as a way to do so. [18] In addition, schools for general technology were expected to give pupils the correct skills for employment, [19] which supported the recommendations made some months prior by Cyril Taylor and his business leaders.

The policy for the schools proposed in January's meeting, dubbed City Technology Colleges or simply CTCs, was developed in the five months following Baker's appointment. This was influenced from talks surrounding other proposed technical schools, namely the technology-plus schools proposed by Bob Dunn, which occurred at the same time. [9] Like CTCs, Dunn's technology-plus schools would be inner city specialist schools for technology with independence from their local authorities with some involvement from industry sponsors. [10] Baker and Dunn worked together to develop the CTC policy, with the help of six other main individuals. They were Chris Patten, Cyril Taylor, [20] George Walden, Virginia Bottomley, Alistair Burt and Tony Kerpel, all of whom served as ministers or advisers to Baker and his predecessor at the Department for Education and Science, Keith Joseph. [13] The schools' independence from local authority control attracted Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher and her policy adviser Brian Griffiths, both of whom wanted local authorities phased out of the education system. Thatcher supported the policy on these grounds, alongside the belief that it would improve education and give schools increased autonomy from their local authorities. [21]

Implementation

Finally, Baker announced the City Technology Colleges programme at the 1986 Conservative Party Conference, which had a goal of creating a national network of new CTCs that would boost educational diversity and parental choice in the school system, while also improving educational standards in their local areas. As expected, around twenty of these new schools were planned for creation in urban inner cities next to secondary schools already in operation, and all of them would have total independence from their LEA. [22] [1] They would serve pupils aged from eleven to eighteen, selecting them based on their "attitudes" towards a technological education. Despite this, the schools would not use an eleven-plus exam as was customary in other selective schools, [22] and would be classified as comprehensive schools. They would specialise in science, technology and mathematics and have a strong provision for information technology and vocational education. [1]

The first CTCs opened under the terms of the Education Reform Act 1988 in the late 1980s and early 1990s. The first City Technology College opened was The City Technology College, Kingshurst in 1988, which was later converted to an academy in 2008. The original intention was to improve education inside cities, but the programme was hampered by the refusal of local authorities in the targeted areas to provide suitable school sites. Building entirely new schools was much more expensive, requiring a greater contribution from the government, and the resulting schools tended to be on the outskirts of cities. After the programme was abandoned, the government embarked on the more modest aim of designating some existing schools as Technology Colleges, the first non-CTC specialist schools. [23]

The Learning and Skills Act 2000 introduced a similar type of school, the City Academy, later renamed Academy. Differences from CTCs include halving the financial commitment of the sponsor, and being bound by the Schools Admissions Code. The Labour government encouraged CTCs to convert into academies. [3]

List of CTCs

The BRIT School for Performing Arts and Technology in Croydon, London Britoutside.jpg
The BRIT School for Performing Arts and Technology in Croydon, London

Established

In all, 15 City Technology Colleges were created, of which all but three have converted to academies: [3] [24]

SchoolLocal AuthorityPrimary Sponsor [25] [26] Opened as a CTCConverted to Academy
ADT College Wandsworth ADT Limited 19922007
Bacon's College Southwark Southwark Diocesan Board of Education,

Philip and Pauline Harris Charitable Trust

19912007
BRIT School Croydon British Record Industry Trust 1991no
Brooke Weston College Corby Hugh de Capell Brooke, Garry Weston [27] 19912008
Dixons Bradford CTC Bradford Dixons Group plc 19902005
Djanogly CTC Nottingham Harry Djanogly 19892003
Emmanuel CTC Gateshead Reg Vardy Foundation1990no
Haberdashers' Aske's Hatcham College Lewisham The Haberdasher's Company 19912005
Harris CTC CroydonPhilip and Pauline Harris Charitable Trust19902008
John Cabot CTC South Gloucestershire Wolfson Foundation, Cable & Wireless plc 19932007
The City Technology College, Kingshurst Solihull Hanson Industries 19882008
Landau Forte College Derby Landau Foundation, Forte plc 19922006
Leigh CTC Kent Sir Geoffrey N. Leigh [28] 19902007
Macmillan CTC Middlesbrough British American Tobacco [29] 19892006
Thomas Telford School Telford and Wrekin The Mercers' Company, Tarmac plc 1991no

Proposed

Although there were only 15 City Technology Colleges by the end of the programme, there were a number of additional proposed CTCs that never opened: [30]

School/Site Awaiting ConversionLocal AuthorityPrimary Sponsor
Stretford Grammar School Manchester Biwater
Thames Wharf London Docklands Cable & Wireless plc, London Docklands

Development Corporation

De La Salle College of Higher Education Manchester Pentland Industries, British Aerospace
Allan Glen's School, Our Lady and St

Francis' All-girls Secondary School [31]

Glasgow Trusthouse Forte
None, new school would be built Swindon W H Smith
No site decided Coventry Jaguar and Wates
King Richard School Portsmouth No sponsor decided
No site decidedNo area decided Paul Hamlyn
Richard Taunton School Southampton Beebe Chamber of Commerce
Merchant Venturers School Bristol Merchant Venturers, Bristol Polytechnic
No site decided Leeds Asda, Vickers

See also

Related Research Articles

Education in England is overseen by the Department for Education. Local government authorities are responsible for implementing policy for public education and state-funded schools at a local level. State-funded schools may be selective grammar schools or non-selective comprehensive schools. All state schools are subject to assessment and inspection by the government department Ofsted. England also has private schools and home education; legally, parents may choose to educate their children by any suitable means.

The Emmanuel Schools Foundation (ESF) is a charitable trust which has been involved in education since 1989.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Comprehensive school</span> Type of school

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Grant-maintained schools or GM schools were state schools in England and Wales between 1988 and 1998 that had opted out of local government control, being funded directly by a grant from central government. Some of these schools had selective admissions procedures.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Specialist schools programme</span> UK Government programme for schools

The specialist schools programme (SSP), first launched as the Technology Colleges programme and also known as the specialist schools initiative, specialist schools policy and specialist schools scheme, was a government programme in the United Kingdom which encouraged state schools in England and Northern Ireland to raise private sponsorship in order to become specialist schools – schools that specialise in certain areas of the curriculum – to boost achievement, cooperation and diversity in the school system. First introduced in 1993 to England as a policy of John Major's Conservative government, it was relaunched in 1997 as a flagship policy of the New Labour governments, expanding significantly under Prime Minister Tony Blair and his successor Gordon Brown. The programme was introduced to Northern Ireland in 2006, lasting until April 2011 in England and August 2011 in Northern Ireland. By this time, it had established a near-universal specialist system of secondary education in England, with almost every state-funded secondary school in England having specialised. This system replaced the comprehensive system which had been in place since the 1970s.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Academy (English school)</span> Type of independent state school in England

An academy school in England is a state-funded school which is directly funded by the Department for Education and independent of local authority control. The terms of the arrangements are set out in individual Academy Funding Agreements. 80% of secondary schools, 40% of primary schools and 44% of special schools are academies.

SSAT Limited is a UK-based, independent educational membership organisation working with primary, secondary, special and free schools, academies and UTCs. It provides support and training in four main areas: teaching and learning, curriculum, networking, and leadership development.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Technology College</span> Specialist secondary school in the UK

In the United Kingdom, a Technology College is a specialist school that specialises in design and technology, mathematics and science. Beginning in 1994, they were the first specialist schools that were not CTC colleges. In 2008, there were 598 Technology Colleges in England, of which 12 also specialised in another subject.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Schools of Ambition programme</span>

The Schools of Ambition programme, also called the Schools of Ambition initiative, was a government programme in Scotland that aimed to improve school character and performance by offering struggling secondary schools philanthropist money and an extra annual £100,000 in government funding for three years. This would then be spent towards implementing a transformation plan that could include environmental changes, investment into curricula and staff, and cooperation with businesses, sixth forms and the local community. Participating schools became Schools of Ambition, specialist schools that likely had a change in management, which aimed to stand out as innovating, leading schools that would inspire the youth. The scheme was launched by Jack McConnell's Labour–Liberal Democrat coalition government in 2005 and discontinued by Alex Salmond's SNP government in 2010.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">King Edward VI Academy</span> School in Spilsby, Lincolnshire, England

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Free school (England)</span> Education policy in England

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">University technical college</span> Type of secondary school in England

A university technical college (UTC) is a type of secondary school in England that is sponsored by a university and has close ties to local business and industry.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Specialist schools in the United Kingdom</span>

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Comprehensive school (England and Wales)</span> Term for a non-selective secondary school in England and Wales

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References

Citations

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  7. Walford (2005), p. 174
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  10. 1 2 Bailey (2016), pp. 170–171
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  13. 1 2 Bailey (2016), p. 168
  14. Taylor (1986), p. 2
  15. Taylor (1986), pp. 29 and 37
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  18. Baker, Kenneth; Jarvis, Fred; McVittie, Joan (13 July 2018). "Education would never be the same again..." TES Magazine .
  19. Bailey (2016), p. 136
  20. Bailey (2016), p. 170
  21. Bailey (2016), pp. 169–170
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Bibliography