Can free schools really do better?

DORSET’S first experience of the government’s “free schools” idea has not, so far, gone smoothly.

The people behind the Parkfield School scheme chose a Lansdowne office building as its location – only to be gazumped in their bid to buy it.

They insist their free secondary school will open next September.

Now, Poole councillor Tony Woodcock is gauging interest in the idea of a free junior school at the site of the former Fourways Day Centre on Constitution Hill.

We will see what obstacles this scheme might face, but at least the site seems more readily suited to education.

The challenge for any backers of this bid will be to prove that parents, businesses and community groups can get a school off the ground more efficiently than education bosses who have been running schools for decades.

The rest of us will be waiting to see whether free schools are a great idea or a gimmick.

Comments(2)

Square Old Codger says...
2:31pm Wed 26 Sep 12

It's a brave parent who entrusts their children to what is after all a political "gimmick". They don't need to have to employ qualified teachers, don't have to provide either a playing ground or playing field and have no track record to check either. It's not something that my Wife or I would have considered, children only have the one chance of getting a good education..

Yankee1 says...
10:06pm Wed 26 Sep 12

Another free school on the drawing boards - The Swanage School - had its site (the old grammar school) withdrawn by the site owners, leaving it without a site to be developed for its opening scheduled for September 2013. Swanage School has just announced that it will open sharing classrooms with Harrow House, a residential school for TEFL students.

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