Schools: Academies Debate

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Department: Department for Education

Schools: Academies

Lord Lexden Excerpts
Tuesday 3rd May 2016

(8 years ago)

Lords Chamber
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Lord Nash Portrait Lord Nash
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I have seen that report. The issue is purely technical, based on different year-ends for schools and for the department, which will not be an issue this year because of methodology. I also saw the Audit Commission’s 2014 report, which found 200 cases of fraud in local authority-maintained schools in the previous year. Given that I walked into the Department for Education in 2010 to find a department completely financially out of control after 13 years of Labour government, I do not take lessons from the party opposite.

Lord Lexden Portrait Lord Lexden (Con)
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My Lords, there has been considerable concern about poorly performing primary schools. How many have been taken over by academy sponsors and with what results?

Lord Nash Portrait Lord Nash
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There are 960 primary sponsored academies open as of April this year, many of which previously suffered from chronic underperformance. In 2015, the percentage of pupils in sponsored primary academies achieving the expected level in reading, writing and maths at the end of key stage 2 rose by four percentage points to 71%. Results in primary sponsored academies open for two years have improved on average by 10 percentage points since opening—more than double the improvement in local authority-maintained schools over the same period.