When principals, teachers, parents and children turned up for work at our Junior school on Friday, two deputy heads were on welcome duty at the gate, as you can see. On the left is Mrs Lindsay King, Deputy Head and to the right is Mrs Chantal Hankin, Deputy Head Lower Juniors & Nursery. As you can see from the kit, Mrs Hanking is wearing the current England Hockey kit, ready to play in the 4 nations home internationals over the weekend. ‘Chants’ was back in school this morning, dressed more as you’d expect for a leading school teacher, but flushed with pride, because, the England team won the tournament – that’s a result, no question.

There’s an old age that us teachers can’t bear, which is “If you can DO if you can’t TEACH!” Well in a school that has very many teachers who can absolutely DO brilliantly, and IN ADDITION choose to pass on their skills, talent and know-how, I’m moved to add to my post of 10 years ago, highlighted below.
Thus year, I’ve done my best to challenge the government’s decision to cause irreparable damage to our sector through their decision to impose 20% VAT on independent schools. Their stated aim (albeit hugely confused by their own statements suggesting it woul also fund health, care and housing) is to employ 6,500 more teachers in state schools. As the emerging data is now clearly showing, the growing loss (last year 30,000) of children from our sector is adding to the financial burden as well as damaging the amazing diversity of choice are sector offers, which enriches our society many times over.
On 11 June, the Education Endowment Foundation’s report on the Evolution of the Attainment Gap highlights the incredible importance of early and primary years education. https://educationendowmentfoundation.org.uk/projects-and-evaluation/projects/growing-apart-evolution-of-disadvantage-gap. The report highlights that it’s intervention and support that’s needed, a determination powered by knowledge not bodies, and when the teacher recruitment at primary level is diminishing, and the loss of specialist staff accelerating, the disadvantage for those who are currently being failed can only get worse.
This March, teacher Hannah Gee spoke at the TEDx Royal Tunbridge Wells on ‘Why our exams need to change https://youtu.be/M5_zj2FZ6KY?si=Z51xZZvqfUsFCpYA . As Hannah makes really clear, it’s not about diluting the challenges, but making them fairer. It’s also about permitting breadth in Education, and attracting really talented adults into the profession, so they can be the role models children need around them. The Gove reforms of the last decade are now shown to be absolutely not the solution the country needed. Narrowing the GCSE curriculum to core Maths, English, Science, 2 Humanities and an MFL drove out all the opportunities that before then could encourage those whose skills diverge from this ‘norm’.
But most schools in our sector ignored that narrowing, provided diverse choice AND exam approaches, and as a consequence have become the beacon of excellence for the UK international sector across the globe. Indeed, even the government recognises the soft power our sector provides, and our value to the nation’s GDP. The Labour party will never recognise that the GDP our private schools create locally in our towns and countryside alike is even more vital to our communities’ success. Which is where I started…
It is the case that school doesn’t have any alumni playing in the current World cup. But the children at Claires Court can look forward to watching Mrs Hankin play in the Hockey World Cup this Summer. Knowing that one of ours is playing for her country, and still finds time to fit in being a parent, partner, teacher and leader is inspirational indeed. Go ‘Hanks’, you’ve got this! OK, it’s more than a ‘Nudge’, more a real shove!












