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Ashmount Primary School: Difference between revisions

Coordinates: 51°34′21″N 0°08′02″W / 51.5724°N 0.1340°W / 51.5724; -0.1340
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The postal address is Ashmount Road, London N19 3BH, but the main entrance is off [[Hornsey Lane]], the school is within the [[Whitehall Park]]
The postal address is Ashmount Road, London N19 3BH, but the main entrance is off [[Hornsey Lane]], the school is within the [[Whitehall Park]]
[[Conservation Area]]. The school building, an early example of Modernist design by the Architect "Jim"H. T. Cadbury Brown (one of the Architects at the [[Festival of Britain]]) is regarded by the [[20th Century Society]] as a fine example of its kind which ought to be preserved; they fear that when, as planned, Ashmount School ceases to use the building by the end of 2012, it will be at risk of demolition.<ref>http://www.c20society.org.uk/news/cadbury-brown-school-should-be-listed/</ref> and so oppose the move. Their views have had a sympathetic airing in the [[Islington Tribune]] A group of residents living on [[Gresley Road]] and [[Whitehall Park]] whose gardens back on to the school site also oppose the move and established the "Ashmount Site Action Group" in 2009 to campaign against it, thereby putting themselves in opposition to the governors and parents of Ashmount School. Having failed in this aim ASAG have moved their focus to seeking to keep the school site in use for educational purposes opposing current Islington council proposals to use the site for social housing.<ref>http://www.asag.org.uk/background.html</ref> A collection of documents relating to the controversy not all written from ASAG's point of view is available from the "Ashmount" section of the [http://www.whpara.org.uk/InfoAshmount.html Whitehall Park Residents Association website.] (Ashmount is to move to a new building at [[Parkland Walk#Crouch Hill Park Project|Crouch Hill Park]] adjacent to the [[Parkland Walk]] on [[Metropolitan Open Land]] at the end of 2012).<ref>http://www.islington.gov.uk/islington/news-events/news-releases/2011/05/Pages/PR4406.aspx</ref> In April 2012 the school underwent an OFSTED inspection in accordance with the January 2012 inspection framework, which concluded that it was a "good" school.<ref>http://www.ofsted.gov.uk/inspection-reports/find-inspection-report/provider/ELS/100432</ref> The Head Teacher is Mrs. Pana McGee,<ref>http://www.linkedin.com/pub/pana-mcgee/12/505/595</ref> the Chair of Governors is Mr David Barry.<ref>http://www.linkedin.com/pub/david-barry/a/824/a97</ref>
[[Conservation Area]]. The school building, an early example of Modernist design by the Architect "Jim" [[H. T. Cadbury-Brown]] (one of the Architects at the [[Festival of Britain]]) is regarded by the [[20th Century Society]] as a fine example of its kind which ought to be preserved; they fear that when, as planned, Ashmount School ceases to use the building by the end of 2012, it will be at risk of demolition.<ref>http://www.c20society.org.uk/news/cadbury-brown-school-should-be-listed/</ref> and so oppose the move. Their views have had a sympathetic airing in the [[Islington Tribune]] A group of residents living on [[Gresley Road]] and [[Whitehall Park]] whose gardens back on to the school site also oppose the move and established the "Ashmount Site Action Group" in 2009 to campaign against it, thereby putting themselves in opposition to the governors and parents of Ashmount School. Having failed in this aim ASAG have moved their focus to seeking to keep the school site in use for educational purposes opposing current Islington council proposals to use the site for social housing.<ref>http://www.asag.org.uk/background.html</ref> A collection of documents relating to the controversy not all written from ASAG's point of view is available from the "Ashmount" section of the [http://www.whpara.org.uk/InfoAshmount.html Whitehall Park Residents Association website.] (Ashmount is to move to a new building at [[Parkland Walk#Crouch Hill Park Project|Crouch Hill Park]] adjacent to the [[Parkland Walk]] on [[Metropolitan Open Land]] at the end of 2012).<ref>http://www.islington.gov.uk/islington/news-events/news-releases/2011/05/Pages/PR4406.aspx</ref> In April 2012 the school underwent an OFSTED inspection in accordance with the January 2012 inspection framework, which concluded that it was a "good" school.<ref>http://www.ofsted.gov.uk/inspection-reports/find-inspection-report/provider/ELS/100432</ref> The Head Teacher is Mrs. Pana McGee,<ref>http://www.linkedin.com/pub/pana-mcgee/12/505/595</ref> the Chair of Governors is Mr David Barry.<ref>http://www.linkedin.com/pub/david-barry/a/824/a97</ref>


== References ==
== References ==

Revision as of 17:39, 13 November 2012

Ashmount Primary School [1] is a Community School in the London Borough of Islington.[2] (Postal address is Ashmount Road, London N19 3BH ) This means that it is supported by the LBI in its capacity as a Local Education Authority. The council employs the staff (but the Ashmount Governing Body appoints them on the advice of the Head), owns the land and buildings, and sets the admission criteria.[3] There are normally more applicants to Ashmount than there are places with Islington selecting the successful applicants according to the published admission criteria, which are the usual ones for community schools in Islington. Applicants are ranked in priority with looked after or adopted children first, children with a statement of special needs, children with siblings at the school, and then the rest. Inside these categories, if required, children are ranked by the straight line distance from the school. In practice as looked after children and children with a special needs statement naming the school are rare, the ranking consists of children with siblings at the school, and then by distance, followed by all other children and then by distance. Each year, in due course, the distance of the child furthest from the school who was admitted on distance alone is published.[4] Ashmount is a "two form entry" primary school; that is it admits 60 pupils each year into the reception class.[5] There is also a nursery class. The day to day management of the school is in the hands of the Head Teacher while the strategic direction of the school is set by the Head and the Governing Body.[6] The Head is appointed by the school governors; the annual budget of the school is proposed by the Head subject to the approval of the Governing Body. The terms of employment of the Head are, subject to national guidelines, set by the Governing Body. Should circumstances require it, and subject to the ordinary protections of employment law, the Head of a community school may be removed by the Governing Body, but only by the Governing Body. Consequently the Head is accountable to the Governing Body but not managed by it. These arrangements for the governance of schools in England date from the Education Reform Act 1988 (This Act took all schools out of the financial control of Local Authorities). Ashmount School itself dates from 1957, it was established by the London County Council.

Governing Body

Ashmount Governing Body has a full complement of eighteen members; six are elected by parents, three by staff, four are co opted by the other governors and four are appointed by Islington Council. The Head is also a governor ex officio. (Of the current Governing Body (April 2012) eight are currently parents of children at the school and another two are former parents.) The Governing Body normally meets three times a year with special meetings when required. At its Autumn meeting it elects the chair and vice chair of the governors for a one year, renewable term; it also decides which subcommittees to appoint and what their terms of reference shall be. There are, at present, three sub committees:- Finance and Personnel, Curriculum, and Premises. Like the Governing Body they normally meet three times a year. it is their function to consider matters in detail, and if need be, at length and then report to the full Governing Body meeting following with recommendations for action, if relevant. Current governors with Wikipedia entries of their own are Frances Wood and Helen Castor; a former governor with her own entry is Sarah Teather. Another former governor, now deceased, referred to in a Wikipedia entry, (although without an entry of his own) was Alan Clinton recorded as a founder member of the Workers' Socialist League; at the time he was on Ashmount Governing Body he was active in local labour Politics and held a number of positions on Islington Borough Council[7]

Parent Teacher Association

There has been an active Parent Teacher Association (PTA) for may years (at least twenty) which organises events both of a social and fund raising nature; it is a member of PTA UK " the national charity representing over 13,750 PTAs across England, Wales and Northern Ireland".[8] Arabella Weir is a former chair of Ashmount Primary School PTA with her own Wikipedia entry.

Former pupils

Jasmia Robinson is a former pupil with her own Wikipedia entry.

Location and planned move

The postal address is Ashmount Road, London N19 3BH, but the main entrance is off Hornsey Lane, the school is within the Whitehall Park Conservation Area. The school building, an early example of Modernist design by the Architect "Jim" H. T. Cadbury-Brown (one of the Architects at the Festival of Britain) is regarded by the 20th Century Society as a fine example of its kind which ought to be preserved; they fear that when, as planned, Ashmount School ceases to use the building by the end of 2012, it will be at risk of demolition.[9] and so oppose the move. Their views have had a sympathetic airing in the Islington Tribune A group of residents living on Gresley Road and Whitehall Park whose gardens back on to the school site also oppose the move and established the "Ashmount Site Action Group" in 2009 to campaign against it, thereby putting themselves in opposition to the governors and parents of Ashmount School. Having failed in this aim ASAG have moved their focus to seeking to keep the school site in use for educational purposes opposing current Islington council proposals to use the site for social housing.[10] A collection of documents relating to the controversy not all written from ASAG's point of view is available from the "Ashmount" section of the Whitehall Park Residents Association website. (Ashmount is to move to a new building at Crouch Hill Park adjacent to the Parkland Walk on Metropolitan Open Land at the end of 2012).[11] In April 2012 the school underwent an OFSTED inspection in accordance with the January 2012 inspection framework, which concluded that it was a "good" school.[12] The Head Teacher is Mrs. Pana McGee,[13] the Chair of Governors is Mr David Barry.[14]

References

51°34′21″N 0°08′02″W / 51.5724°N 0.1340°W / 51.5724; -0.1340