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NGSA
Hon. Secretary:-
Mrs Jenny Jones,
18 Leomansley Road,
Lichfield,
Staffordshire
WS13 8AW
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Parents and headteachers from grammar schools in
England and Northern Ireland joined forces in London on the 21st of January
to fight for the survival of their schools. Delegates at the conference,
organised by the National Grammar Schools Association (NGSA), warned that
if Northern Ireland's grammar schools are destroyed, England's 164 remaining
grammar schools will probably follow.
Northern Ireland's 70 grammar schools are under imminent threat of destruction
by the Westminster government, which intends to outlaw academic selection
in Ulster. However, the government's own consultations have repeatedly
shown that the destruction of Northern Ireland's grammar schools is against
the wishes of a majority of the local population. It is, therefore, totally
undemocratic, especially when 64% of parents and 62% of teachers in Northern
Ireland oppose what the politicians are doing.
Nevertheless, Angela Smith MP, Labour's Northern Ireland education minister,
is pressing ahead with regulations to come into operation on 1 October
2006, which will ban academic selection and enforce rigid political control
of education in Ulster. This is contrary to human rights legislation,
which allows parents to choose an education in accordance with their own
religious and philosophical convictions. Taken together, Northern Ireland's
grammar and secondary modern schools produce the best examination results
in the UK and the greatest social mobility. They should not, therefore,
be sacrificed by unaccountable politicians on the altar of a failed comprehensive
system that is based on ideology rather than evidence.
Concerns were also expressed about Conservative leader David Cameron's
position on academic selection and grammar schools. He and his Party should
be unambiguously defending Northern Ireland's excellent schools in Westminster
from where they are threatened. (Note for editors: Every year, many thousands
of parents in England and Northern Ireland voluntarily enter their children
for an 11-plus test to compete for a place in a grammar school. If they
are successful, they know they will receive a free education similar to
that costing many thousands of pounds at a private school. They also know
that, if they are not selected, at least they have tried. And many all-ability
comprehensives, such as those in Bristol, produce worse exam results than
the average for all secondary modern schools.)
Welcoming new members from Northern Ireland, the NGSA, whose membership
was previously limited to schools in England, pledged its full support
for colleagues in Northern Ireland.
Speakers at the NGSA conference included: Roger Peach, a solicitor and NGSA
vice-president, who spoke about the rights of parents and the state's duty
to offer education in accordance with parents' religious and philosophical
convictions'; Stephen Elliott, a parent from Belfast and chairman of the
Parental Alliance for Choice in Education (Northern Ireland), who explained
the undemocratic nature of the Northern Ireland 'story'; Peter Morris, a
teacher and national executive member of the Professional Association of
Teachers, who has called for the re-introduction of grammar schools in Wales.
The conference was chaired by Stephen MacMillan, a parent and NGSA vice-chairman.
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