UK Parliament / Open data

Academies Bill [Lords]

I shall seek to do that during the rest of my speech. If I do not get round to the hon. Gentleman's point, I shall write to him. We believe that the impact of an increase in academies and the freedoms they provide will lead to improvements in standards across the education sector as the best heads and the best schools drive improvements and expertise. The noble Lords were concerned about schools changing their age range and the Bill was amended to allay those concerns. Subsection (4) of clause 9 makes it clear than when a maintained school becomes an academy under the current school closure processes, further to the Education and Inspections Act 2006 and not further to an academy order, when the age range is not like-for-like, the school would be classed as an additional school, so the Secretary of State would be required to evaluate the impact. That would include, for example, an academy created as a result of the amalgamation of two or more schools or an 11-to-18 academy that replaced an 11-to-16 maintained school, if that involved a closure rather than a conversion. Any school wishing to add a sixth form would need to follow the relevant statutory provisions. The answer to the question whether the admissions code and the appeals code will apply to free schools, too, is yes, it will. The problem with the Minister's opening remarks—

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Reference

514 c809 

Session

2010-12

Chamber / Committee

House of Commons chamber
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