The recent visit of Lords Denham and Adonis to University College London in an attempt to bolster support for the proposed Camden Academy should serve as a warning to all working in higher education.
There has been such embarrassment about and public opposition to the handing over of schools to secondhand car dealers, religious fundamentalists and tax evaders that the Government is now seeking university involvement to give a veneer of respectability. The academies project remains, however, a form of privatisation, with or without universities as co-sponsors, involving the removal of local democratic control, increased market competition and the power of academies to select pupils.
The involvement of universities as co-sponsors of academies may, superficially, look attractive to those who wish to cement links with their local communities. The concessions proposed by Schools Secretary Ed Balls, who reassures us that "the test of whether an organisation can be a potential sponsor should not be its bank balance but whether it can demonstrate leadership, innovation and a commitment to act in the public interest" may have a benign ring. We should not, however, be fooled.
The Government's plans can only cause disruption and division. Sponsors aim to buy influence over the curriculum and an ability to ignore national agreements on pay and conditions for staff. Procedures for special needs provision, exclusions and admissions can override equitable local arrangements.
Many academics already work in close partnership with schools. In those cases where provision is in danger of falling below an acceptable level we remain willing to work with schools and local authorities to help to address the situation. This is quite different from helping to set up schools where local accountability does not exist, where democratically elected governing bodies are a thing of the past and where selection and hierarchy masquerade as diversity of provision.
 Sean Wallis, Branch Secretary, UCL UCU  
 Simon Renton, President, UCL UCU; UCU National Executive Committee 
 Tamsin Piper, Branch Secretary, UCL Unite 
 Mark Campbell, UCU London Region HE Secretary  
 Karen Evans, UCU National Executive Committee 
 Professor Malcolm Povey, UCU National Executive Committee 
 Howard Miles, UCU National Executive Committee 
 Andy Scally, Vice President, Bradford UCU 
 Professor Michael Edwards, UCL UCU Executive Committee 
 Elizabeth Clear, UCL UCU Executive Committee 
 George Paizis, UCL UCU Executive Committee 
 Luca Salice, Chair of Governors, Torriano Junior School, London 
 Richard Reiser, Director, Disability Equality in Education 
 Bob Archer, President, Redbridge NUT 
 Professor Ken Jones, Keele University 
 Mary Lightfoot, Birkbeck College 
 Bahadur Najak, University of Durham 
 Professor Dennis Leech, University of Warwick 
 Hera Cook, University of Birmingham 
 Richard Hatcher, Birmingham City University 
 Ron Mendel, President, Northampton TUC 
 Jon Berry, University of Hertfordshire 
 Pat Yarker, University of East Anglia 
 Professor Dave Hill, University of Northampton 
 Shirley Franklin, Institute of Education 
 Alisdair Smith, Institute of Education 
 Terry Wrigley, Edinburgh University
 
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