‘An extended school is one that provides a range of services
and activities often beyond the school day to help meet the needs of its pupils,
their families and the wider community’. (DfES 2002). A particular model being
promoted by DfES is the `full-service’ school, which offers childcare, study
support, family and lifelong learning, health and social care services and
access to school facilities including ICT, and embodies the principles of
integrating children’s services. Other schools can develop the `extended’ idea
in different ways - which or may not involve adult learning.
The Policy Context
The idea of extended schools builds on a wide range of existing practice.
Increasingly, Government has encouraged and funded schools to provide learning
opportunities and other services to their communities. National programmes such
as Sure Start, Excellence in Cities and Education Action Zones have significant
elements of adult learning, particularly through family learning, and the city
learning centres of EiC. Specialist status schools and technology colleges and
secondary schools are required to spend a proportion of their additional budget
on community activities including adult learning.
The 2002 Education Act clarified and strengthened the legal position of
schools wishing to provide services beyond their core task of educating pupils.
It made clear that school governing bodies can:
provide facilities and services which benefit families and the community as
well as pupils;
make agreements with other partners to provide services on school premises;
charge for services.
The Act does not alter the requirement that a school’s delegated budget may
only be spent on the education of pupils; additional activities must therefore
be financed from other sources.
Since the Act, DfES has actively promoted the principle of extended schools
as an aspiration ultimately for all schools - see `Teachernet’ - Resources,
below. DfES is now funding LEAs in England to develop extended schools: by
2005/6 each will have a coordinator to promote practice across its area, and at
least one `full-service school’ located in a deprived neighbourhood. The focus
on children’s services in the `full-service school’ links to the proposals
in the 2003 Green Paper Every Child Matters, the 2004 Children Bill
and the accompanying Next Steps document, for integrating the work of
education and social services departments, health services and careers agencies
in the interests of children, and the development of Children’s Trusts. Extended
/ full service schools are seen as a key means of delivering the Government’s
new agenda for children.
Raising children’s attainment is the dominant theme in the Government’s
educational thinking; adult learning through extended schools is often presented
as mattering because it contributes to this. But extended schools also respond
to other government priorities for adult learning:
Widening participation through access to local learning
Adult literacy and numeracy, particularly via family learning and the
`Skills for Families’ programme
Access to ICT and e-learning through UK Online and local learning centres
Neighbourhood renewal - building reengagement and community capacity
Specifically, the `Building learning communities’ proposal in the 21st
Century Skills: Realising our Potential White Paper 2003: local
partnerships including schools to raise aspirations, develop the `collective
base of skills’ and re-engage adults in learning.
Early research suggests that extended schools have been successful in
offering adult learning programmes, possibly where they can build on existing
strengths such as family learning, or on partnerships within the `education
family’.
Issues
What is the LEA’s role? LEAs should provide strategic guidance as well
as advice on legal, financial and employment aspects. Schools must consult
them on any proposals. LEA Extended Schools Coordinators need to ensure that
schools have a clear strategic context to work in and are networked with other
providers and agencies who can build their capacity. LEA Adult and Community
Learning (ACL) Services should have a key role in both planning and delivery
of adult learning.
Who else should be involved? Schools without a long-established
community role may not have the expertise to develop an adult learning
programme and should be encouraged to work with others for this purpose. In
addition to LEA ACL Services, colleges could take a lead in planning and
delivery, and voluntary and community organisations might also contribute.
There is no single model for how such partnerships work and both schools and
providers may need to develop their own capacity to work productively
together.
Learning Partnerships, Local Strategic Partnerships and similar networks
should be involved to ensure that provision through schools is part of an
integrated strategy for meeting local aspirations and is adequately supported.
Local LSCs may be directly involved depending on their priorities, and will
expect LEA ACL services to include extended schools in their planning.
Governance and `ownership’: school governing bodies are responsible for
extended school activities and are expected to represent their community’s
views. Extended schools need to address both the formal lines of
accountability to governors and to partners, and how they create a sense of
ownership by the wider community - for example through management groups,
neighbourhood forums, special interest groups, community activists and
learning champions. Active involvement of the school’s governing body is
important and links with governor training services can be used to raise
governors’ awareness and understanding.
What kind of learning? In line with the policy context, extended
schools are likely to focus on family learning, basic skills, IT skills, or
learning for employability. Schools need to be helped to create a broader
programme which engages adults in learning for their own purposes, with routes
for continuing learning or progression. LSC Strategic Area Reviews need to
reflect the potential of extended schools to meet adult learning needs.
Funding: funding sources available directly to schools are usually
time-limited. Partnerships will be needed for sustainability, the likeliest
being with LEA ACL services or colleges. Although this may be limited by the
pressure on funding for programmes which do not meet the 21st Century
Skills priorities, family learning or neighbourhood renewal funding
streams could be used productively.
Quality assurance and evaluation: the current Ofsted inspection
framework for schools includes a section on how the school works with the
community, and Ofsted reports will explicitly deal with extended schools
activities. However, school strategies for looking at the experience of adult
learners are likely to be under-developed. School self-evaluation within the
Ofsted framework needs to be complemented by the tools used for provider
self-assessment in further and adult and community learning and to meet Common
Inspection Framework requirements - for example, means of recognising and
recording achievement - if LSC-sourced funding is used.
Equality and Diversity: schools need to be aware of the implications of
equal opportunities legislation and what their duties in relation to adult
learners are under the Race Relations Amendment Act 2000. The Disability
Discrimination Act and SENDA apply to opportunities for adult learners in
schools, and access audits and action plans need to take account of this.
Security: schools need to make a judgement about levels of risk and
practical measures to minimise these if adult learners are on school premises
during the school day and do not use a separate suite. CRB checks would not
normally be required for adult learners, volunteer helpers or tutors, unless
they are working directly with children or vulnerable adults, or having
unsupervised access to them.
For legal issues concerning the use of school premises, see `Teachernet’ -
Resources, below.
NIACE’s View
Extended schools are a significant development in enabling the community to
benefit from public investment in schools and widening participation. To make
this work, the following issues need to be tackled:
Coherence: schools need to work in cooperation with others to create a
coherent system of local learning opportunities for adults. Activities planned
in isolation may also detract from existing provision rather than using
resources well.
Maximising potential: both in full-service schools and those
considering other kinds of extension, there should be attention to exploiting
all the opportunities for adult learning.
Capacity: funding and support is needed to build schools’ capacity to
work with adults, and capacity should be tested more rigorously when
development proposals are considered and delivery is evaluated.
Funding: legal restrictions on the use of school budgets and the nature
of teachers’ workloads mean that schools need funding for development and
organisation, as well as delivery.
NIACE would advocate a presumption that all schools should work to widen
access and participation, in partnership with planners, providers and the
community, and where a need or community aspiration has been identified.
NIACE Contacts
Jeanne Haggart - Family Learning, Development Officer
Lenford White - Race Equality/Neighbourhood Renewal Development Officer
References and Useful Resources
Childcare in Extended Schools: Providing Opportunities and
Services for All. DfES 2002. (Available via the Teachernet website)
Extended Schools: Providing Opportunities and Services for All. DfES 2002
(Available via the Teachernet website)
Local Government Association - for information on local government support for
extended schools and pathfinder projects. www.lga.gov.uk
Ofsted - site for school inspection frameworks and reports including school and
community issues. www.ofsted.gov.uk
Teachernet - DfES site to support schools: the extended schools pages contain
DfES guidance, research studies and contacts. Other teachernet pages cover
management issues. www.teachernet.gov.uk/wholeschool/extendedschools:
NIACE Publications
Learning for the future: neighbourhood renewal through adult and community
learning: a guide for local authorities. Bryan Merton, Cheryl Turner,
Jane Ward and Lenford White. NIACE 2003. ISBN 1862011486 £60.00
Opening up schools for adult learners : Lifelines 16. Judith
Summers. NIACE, 2004. ISBN 1862011923 £6.95
Schools are for adults too: schools, adults and communities in the learning
age. Judith Summers. NIACE, 2002. ISBN 186201154 0 £8.95
Starting points in developing wider family learning. Clare Chisholm,
Jeanne Haggart and Jackie Horne. NIACE, 2004
Talking it through: a practitioners’ guide to consulting adults in adult and
community learning. Sue Duffen and Jane Thompson. NIACE, 2003. ISBN
1862011893 £24.95
Walking ten feet tall: a toolkit for family learning practitioners.
Jeanne Haggart. NIACE 2001. ISBN 186201132X £60.00