Trisha Shetty (Editor)

Bristol Free School

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Established
  
2011

Headteacher
  
Paul Jones

Founded
  
2011

Type
  
Secondary Academy

Phone
  
+44 117 959 7200

Gender
  
Mixed-sex education

Trust
  
Bristol Free School Trust

Founder
  
Russell Education Trust & Parents Voice

Location
  
Concorde Drive, Burghill Road Bristol BS10 6NJ England

Address
  
Concorde Dr, Avon, Bristol BS10 6NJ, UK

Capacity
  
1,090 (Data from January 2016)

Number of students
  
702 (Data from January 2016)

Nick gibb visits bristol free school


Bristol Free School is a Secondary Academy that opened in Westbury-on-Trym, Bristol, England, in September 2011.

Contents

BFS has capacity for 1050 pupils across Key Stage 3 and Key Stage 4. In addition, the school opened a Sixth Form recently in September 2016, which will educate students from Bristol who have achieved grades A* to C in at least 5 of their subjects at GCSE level.

It is located in the Westbury on Trym and Southmead ward areas, at former Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (DEFRA) and Environment Agency offices, which were converted for use by the school, which have been rebuilt. Bristol Free School is secular and non-selective. The curriculum is broad with an emphasis on Physical Education and Science. The school day is average, timed at 8:30am to 3:00pm. The school teaches on English official boards Assessment and Qualifications Alliance (AQA), Oxford, Cambridge and RSA Examinations (OCR), and Edexcel.

BFS was first inspected by Ofsted in February 2013, when it was given an overall judgement of Good, with Outstanding Leadership and Management, and Outstanding Pupil Behaviour and Safety, which is a huge achievement for a first.

History

Bristol Free School was proposed following a 20-year history of parental campaigning in response to a perceived lack of suitable secondary school places in North Bristol. The campaign group, Parents Voice, wanted to open a secondary school either at an Adult Education Centre at Stoke Lodge, or on the former St Ursula's School site, to serve the Westbury-on-Trym, Stoke Bishop, Sneyd Park and Henleaze districts of north west Bristol which had no nearby state secondary school. However residents near Stoke Lodge wanted no development, and Bristol City Council wanted to use St Ursula's E-ACT Academy for a primary school, which is currently being rebuilt. (Data from September 2016).

Initial approval for the school's plan and business case was given by the Department for Education in November 2010. Final approval was given in May 2011.

In January 2011, 417 members of the community signed a petition to ask Bristol City Council to allow a secondary school on the St Ursula's site. Following this and other representations, Bristol City Council Cabinet gave an "agreement in principle" to allowing Bristol Free School to move to St Ursula's in 2012, in a split-site arrangement with a new Primary Academy.

In July 2011, the school was granted planning permission to use a former Environment Agency and DEFRA site on Burghill Road, in the neighbouring area of Brentry within the Southmead electoral ward. This was expected to be a temporary site as the school anticipated moving to the St Ursula's site in September 2012. The Burghill Road site was earmarked to rehouse on a single site over 1,000 civil servants based in nearly 60 buildings in Bristol, prospectively saving more than £6 million per year.

In July 2012 it was confirmed that Bristol Free School would remain at the further developed Brentry site. DEFRA held a 39 year lease on the site, which is owned by Bristol City Council. An £8 million contract was let by the Department for Education to refurbish existing buildings and build new buildings to support the expansion of the school from 2013. Total capital spending by the department to set up the school was £9.6 million, the largest amount amongst the first batch of fifteen free schools, plus £0.75 million of extra initial revenue funding. On the 25th of June, Bristol Free School opened its new building to students.

At the end of its first year the school was featured in an ITV News report about Free Schools.

General Information

The school is a able school in England with good resources such as a large Learning Resource Centre or Library, 2 floors with wheelchair accessibility, a MUGA (Multi Use Game Area),a grass field with Cricket Nets, and a sports hall. The school day lasts from 8:30am to 3:00pm. It has school years 7-11, with the following subjects offered to study for GCSE: Optional: Spanish, French, Design and Technology, Art, Computer Science Geography, History, Graphics, Business Studies, Textiles, Product Design, Religious Studies, and Music. Compulsory by UK Law: English Language, English Literature, Biology, Chemistry, Physics, Physical Education, Mathematics, Religious Studies, and Modern Foreign Languages, and a catchment area of Henleaze, Westbury-on-Trym, parts of Horfield, Southmead and Henbury.

Pupil Recruitment

BFS was proposed to open with 150 Year 7 pupils, expanding by 150 pupils in subsequent years, to accommodate up to 750 pupils across 5 year-groups (Year 7 to Year 13) by 2016 once it was fully open. When the school opened in September 2011 it had 80 Year 7 pupils, and the reduction in projected numbers was blamed on the uncertainty over site arrangements. Pupil recruitment into Year 7 increased in subsequent years, and the school was reported to be oversubscribed from September 2013 onwards.

Criticism

The Headmistress of nearby Henbury School, and Chair of the Bristol's Secondary Head Teachers' Association, Clare Bradford, said that if funding for BFS was approved by the DfE then she would seek a judicial review. She put this in a letter to Michael Gove, the Secretary of State for Education, but was reported to have received an unequivocal response. She said that BFS was being established only for middle-class parents, that it would damage existing schools, and that it wasn't needed because there were already surplus places. However the Bristol Free School Trust said that it would reserve places for families in less affluent areas. School census figures reported in 2015 indicated that the number of children at BFS on Free School Meals was higher than the national average.

Bristol City Council Leader, Barbara Janke, and another Lib Dem cabinet member, expressed disappointment that BFS would not be offering places to Oasis School Westbury Senior Phase pupils after they originally said that they would.

The President of the National Union of Teachers, Nina Franklin, who was a critic of Free School policy in general, was quoted in media reports as criticizing the decision to fund BFS specifically, saying that other local schools would suffer as a result.

When it was confirmed that BFS would be remaining at the Brentry site permanently, the school adjusted its admissions criteria, which was originally designed to cater for families living close to the St. Ursula's site. It extended its main catchment area to include the school site in Burghill Road. A local media report raised concerns that children living in Henbury and Southmead might not be able to access the school.

In 2012, the Royal Society of Arts published a study which showed that the school, in common with many Free Schools, had been set up in an area with no shortage of school places, with 300 surplus secondary places within a few miles. The Department for Education later released the impact assessment for the school, showing the context in which that decision was made. Figures from Bristol City Council published in 2013 indicated that, notwithstanding the establishment of BFS, further Secondary provision would be required in the medium to long term.

References

Bristol Free School Wikipedia