Northern Education Trust

Northern Education Trust is a multi-academy trust operating in the North of England. It was established in 2010 and operates 21 academies; 11 primary and 10 secondary. In 2017 it was instrumetal in setting up the Northern Alliance of Trusts

Northern Education Trust
FoundedMarch 15, 2010 (2010-03-15)
TypeMulti-academy trust
Registration no.07189647
Location
  • Thorp Academy, Main Road, Ryton, NE40 3AH
Websitenortherneducationtrust.org
UID 4036

History

It has brought a one-size-fits-all approach to its schools, and excluding a large proportion of its students. Questions were raised about the trust's approach to its pupils when it was revealed that they had suspended over 50% of their pupils from Red House Academy in 2017-2018 and 40% of its pupils from North Shore Academy against a national average of 2.3%. Students were given fixed term suspensions for trivial reasons such as choice of jewellery and having eyebrows that were unnaturally dark.[1]

The proportion of students at Red House academy who attained a pass in English and maths rose from 32% in 2017 to 58% in 2019. [1]

Academies

As of 2019, there are a total of 21 academies affiliated with Northern Education Trust: 11 primary academies and 10 secondary academies.[2]

Secondary Academies

Primary Academies

  • Abbey Park Academy
  • Badger Hill Academy
  • The Ferns Primary Academy
  • Frederick Nattrass Primary Academy
  • Hilton Primary Academy
  • Merlin Top Primary Academy
  • Mount Pellon Primary Academy
  • Norton Primary Academy
  • The Oak Tree Academy
  • Ryecroft Primary Academy
  • Whitecliffe Academy

Northern Alliance of Trusts

The Conservative Education minister, Lord Agnew, in response to comments that academies are no better at managing deprived schools than the Local education authority they replaced, urged smaller academy trusts to team up to create bigger academy trusts.[3] The Northern Alliance is the first formal partnership of its kind between larger chains.

The Northern Alliance of Trusts is made up of eight members:

The academy trusts continue to act as independent legal entities, but were sharing resource for the good of its members.[4]

It receives a public money grant from the Strategic School Improvement Fund which targeted resources at the schools most in need to improve school performance and pupil attainment. They favoured schemes where schools helped each other. It was opened in 2017 and gave grants for two years. [5] . The alliance is working on common procurement, leadership standards, fund raising and to work on recruitment and retention of teachers.[6]

gollark: Which of your criteria does Python not fit?
gollark: Rust tooling is so great that it's basically like it being a standard library thing.
gollark: It has libraries for bigints.
gollark: Then use Rust.
gollark: ++exec```hsmain = putStrLn $ show $ repeat "nobody is stupid"```

References

  1. McIntyre, Niamh; Perraudin, Frances (31 August 2019). "Sunderland school suspended more than half its pupils in a year". The Guardian. Retrieved 31 August 2019.
  2. "NORTHERN EDUCATION TRUST - GOV.UK". Get Information About Schools. Retrieved 6 September 2019.
  3. "No point giving schools more money if it's not spent properly". Schools Week. 20 June 2019. Retrieved 31 August 2019.
  4. "Prominent academy chains form 'Northern Alliance' – Edexec.co.uk". Education Executive. 15 November 2017. Retrieved 15 December 2019.
  5. "Strategic School Improvement Fund". GOV.UK. Retrieved 19 December 2019.
  6. "Northern Alliance of Trusts". Northern Education Trust. Retrieved 31 August 2019.
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