Meet the Other Phone. A phone that grows with your child.

Meet the Other Phone.
A phone that grows with your child.

Buy now

Please or to access all these features

Covid

Mumsnet doesn't verify the qualifications of users. If you have medical concerns, please consult a healthcare professional.

Headteachers' unions ask Gav WTF is the plan for September?

44 replies

noblegiraffe · 02/07/2021 12:33

In an absolutely scorching letter to Gavin Williamson, Headteachers' unions accuse the DfE of treating them with contempt, with the lack of clarity around what will be expected in September, and the constant unfair criticism. How is this man still in a job? Can someone please snog him under a CCTV camera as that appears to be the only way to get someone to leave the cabinet these days.

Dear Gavin

We are writing to express our anger and dismay at the way in which the government is currently treating school and college leaders.

As you know, our members have risen to every challenge thrown at them this year. They have taken on the burden of contact tracing, spending many hours during their evenings, weekends and holidays identifying contacts of positive cases and informing families that they need to self-isolate.

They have, at very short notice, set up asymptomatic test sites to test pupils as they returned after Christmas and then the spring lockdown. They have received and distributed thousands of home test kits, and done everything they can to encourage students to use them.

This is on top of implementing the constantly changing government guidance, providing high quality remote education to pupils having to isolate, and (for secondary schools and colleges) the enormous task of determining and quality-assuring teacher-assessed grades – as well as all the usual work involved in running a school or college.

They have done all of this against a constant backdrop of criticism. Only yesterday, the Prime Minister’s official spokesperson implied that schools were capriciously choosing to send home more pupils than necessary, telling journalists that this is “something that is being picked up through the regional schools commissioner teams”.

Currently, a week before the end of term for some schools, and no more than fourteen working days for most, school and college leaders still have little idea of how they will be expected to run their settings in September. You told Parliament yesterday that you “believe pupils would not be facing bubble arrangements in September”, but nothing has been communicated to schools and colleges about this. Your officials have told us that they hope to publish updated guidance “before the end of term”, but are not able to commit to a date.

Alongside this uncertainty, there is a growing concern among school and college leaders that the burden of public health responsibilities they are currently carrying may actually increase next year. As the rest of society anticipates the lifting of most restrictions on 19 July, secondary schools and colleges are being asked to set up asymptomatic test sites again in September. It is also currently unclear whether or not daily contact testing may be introduced as an alternative to isolation from September, and if so whether the expectation is that that testing would need to take place in schools and colleges on an indefinite basis.

Furthermore, all the thinking to date on this issue appears to relate only to secondary schools, leaving primary schools even more in the dark about what may be expected of them.

We understand from your officials that our members will also be told that they have to spend the first six days of the summer break continuing to contact trace, as they have done during every other holiday this year. The Department has not yet, however, had the courtesy to inform them of this fact. We reiterate, this is a week to fourteen days from the end of term.

We appreciate that we continue to be in a dynamic and fast-moving situation, and that many of these decisions need to be taken across government. We do not accept, however, that it is appropriate to continue to treat school and college leaders with what is, frankly, starting to feel like contempt.

We do not accept that the demands on their time over the summer break should be so great that they cannot see how they can take even a short amount of time off to rest and recuperate. And we do not accept that schools and colleges should be expected, on an indefinite basis, to continue to undertake public health duties, to the detriment of our members’ health and wellbeing, and to their capacity to focus on providing the high-quality education that children and young people desperately need.

We ask that the government commits, as a matter of urgency, to the following actions:

Direct NHS Test and Trace to provide more support to schools and colleges with contact tracing, while this is still required. Urgently, ensure this support is in place for the beginning of the summer holidays. As we have been making clear to the Department for many weeks, large numbers of secondary school and college leaders in particular simply won’t be available to do this work for the first six days of the summer break, as this is the only time they can take a break before results days and the subsequent workload involved in managing the appeals process.

If there is a requirement for students to be tested on-site (whether on return in September or on an ongoing basis), limit the role of schools and colleges to providing appropriate space (if possible), and organising the throughput of students. The organising and running of the ATS, and the administration of tests themselves where required, should be carried out by an appropriate public health body.

Where individual schools and colleges aren’t able to provide appropriate space for testing, alternative approaches must be found, such as the use of mobile test centres or other nearby facilities.

We cannot overestimate the importance of taking these actions immediately and communicating them clearly to schools and colleges.

This is imperative if the government is to retain the support of leaders, to ensure public health requirements are adequately met, and to enable schools and colleges to focus on their crucial role of helping children and young people to catch-up and recover from the impact of the pandemic.

Best wishes

Geoff Barton, general secretary – ASCL Paul Whiteman, general secretary – NAHT Mary Bousted and Kevin Courtney joint general secretaries – NEU.

OP posts:
Lovelydovey · 02/07/2021 12:37

Brilliant letter! I cannot believe what schools have been asked to do this year, how well they have adapted and yet that they are still criticised.

JANEG70 · 02/07/2021 12:43

Well said. Absolutely correct!

Cookiecrisps · 02/07/2021 12:46

Totally agree with all the points made in this letter. It is a shameful situation and one which could and should be improved with better communication starting with listening to school leaders on the ground and proper funding.

Zandathepanda · 02/07/2021 12:48

P.s. please give vulnerable 12-15 pupils the chance to be vaccinated before September
and make sure teachers get boosters ASAP

ticolac · 02/07/2021 12:49

Yes!

JustGotToKeepOnKeepingOn · 02/07/2021 12:49

Brilliant letter. Schools and teachers have been and continue to be treated appallingly.

Our local School FB page is still full of awful comments about how useless teachers are. I'm not a teacher and it makes my blood boil. Can't even begin to think how those dealing with this plus the never ending tirade of abuse and criticism are feeling.

thecatfromjapan · 02/07/2021 13:08

That letter is a proper reality-check.

It's extraordinary to actually think about what schools have had to do.

TokyoSushi · 02/07/2021 13:11

Excellent letter. Unfortunately, I'd bet my house that Gav has absolutely no clue what's going to happen in September, and won't think of a plan until mid-August at the earliest.

Hax · 02/07/2021 13:13

@Zandathepanda

P.s. please give vulnerable 12-15 pupils the chance to be vaccinated before September and make sure teachers get boosters ASAP
That presupposes that teachers have already been vaccinated! My teacher DS only got first dose last week.
MargaretThatcherMilkSnatcher · 02/07/2021 13:21

Let’s not forget that, when we first returned to school in the summer term, we still had not received the guidance on how the GCSE and A Levels were going to be assessed and awarded this year. When the guidance finally arrived it was the very end of April 2021; I mean, Gav had only had a whole year to prepare for it….!

Gav’s lack of strategy and leadership, and his general contempt for school staff, school children and their parents is scandalous. I can’t work out whether he doesn’t care or, like Hancock, he is floundering waaaayyyy out of his depth. Either way, he’s useless.

megletthesecond · 02/07/2021 13:22

He probably start thinking about it on the 30th August.

MrsHerculePoirot · 02/07/2021 13:24

Good letter. I cannot believe the shit that has been heaped on headteachers with their ever changing, unclear, last minute guidances.

Cornettoninja · 02/07/2021 13:34

Can someone please snog him under a CCTV camera as that appears to be the only way to get someone to leave the cabinet these days

There’s taking one for the team and there’s being cannon fodder - the man looks like he suck your soul out with his eyes 😱

PatriciaHolm · 02/07/2021 13:52

Turns out Gazza's got form, too -
www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/gavin-williamson-cheating-defence-secretary-admit-romance-affair-russia-marriage-wife-a8179056.html

But What About the Mobile Phones??

Clearly the far far more pressing issue.

Sigh.

Getawaywithit · 02/07/2021 14:02

Yep. Well said. I have personal concerns, as the parent of a CV child, about being asked to participate in testing. At the risk of being called a jobsworth, it really isn't out job to be overseeing it or actually doing testing. It is utterly unacceptable that SLT are facing not being able to holiday or even just rest a bit because of having to plan for every eventuality. And children need to be offered the vaccine now.

Allmyarseandpeggymartin · 02/07/2021 14:44

He is absolutely fucking useless isn’t he. Like knickers on an avocado.

Come on then - who is going to take one for the team and snog him under cctv?

everybodysang · 02/07/2021 14:47

brilliant letter. School leaders are being treated with complete contempt and it's appalling.

motherrunner · 02/07/2021 15:11

Obviously, as a fellow teacher, we have lived through this for the last 18 months but to see it so bluntly laid out like that makes me feel despondent. No wonder we are on our knees.

lonelyplanet · 02/07/2021 15:17

A brilliant letter. Awaiting news of the answers! Thank you for sharing.

noblegiraffe · 02/07/2021 16:44

Aren't we all, lonely!

Mass testing of secondary kids took a couple of weeks last time. Is the start to September term going to be similarly delayed?

OP posts:
ChloeDecker · 02/07/2021 16:51

Interesting that NASUWT haven’t added their name to that letter-what does Patrick think?

noblegiraffe · 02/07/2021 16:52

I saw that Chloe. Maybe they’re excluded from the club because they didn’t support the section 44.

OP posts:
mrshoho · 02/07/2021 17:04

Great letter. The abysmal handling of our schools by the dfe has been steadily slumping to new lows. The latest criticism that schools have been misinterpreting the isolation guidance is nothing but lies.

BlackeyedSusan · 02/07/2021 17:55

nah, they'll give you plenty of warning. what date's august bank holiday again?

Hmm
WrongKindOfFace · 02/07/2021 18:09

@BlackeyedSusan

nah, they'll give you plenty of warning. what date's august bank holiday again?

Hmm

Optimistic. My money is on the first Sunday in September. Around 10pm.
Swipe left for the next trending thread