National Audit Office report on Converting maintained schools to academies
Converting schools to academies is central to the Department for
Education’s approach to improving the quality of education. At
January 2018 it had converted 6,996 maintained schools to
academies. However, the Department is taking longer than intended
to convert a sizeable proportion of the underperforming schools it
believes will benefit most from academy status, says today’s report
by the National Audit Office (NAO). Converting maintained
schools to academies has cost the...Request free trial
Converting schools to academies is central to the Department for
Education’s approach to improving the quality of education. At
January 2018 it had converted 6,996 maintained schools to
academies. However, the Department is taking longer than intended
to convert a sizeable proportion of the underperforming schools it
believes will benefit most from academy status, says today’s report
by the National Audit Office (NAO).
Converting maintained schools to academies has cost the Department an estimated £745 million since 2010-11, of which £81 million was spent in 2016-17. A much higher proportion of secondary schools than primary schools are academies – 72% of secondary schools, including free schools, are academies compared with 27% of primary schools. This leaves local authorities with responsibility for most primary and specialist schools, but few secondary schools. In areas where a high proportion of secondary schools are academies, it is more difficult for local authorities to take an integrated, whole-system approach to the education of children in their area. Most local authority areas are likely to contain both academies and maintained schools for the foreseeable future. The NAO report found, however, that the proportion of schools that are now academies varies widely across England, from 93% in Bromley to 6% in Lancashire, Lewisham and North Tyneside. There are 23 local authorities (15%) that have 150 or more maintained schools, while 55 local authorities (37%) had fewer than 50 maintained schools. The Department directs maintained schools that Ofsted has rated as inadequate to convert to academies, with the support of a sponsor, aiming to open them within nine months. However, almost two-thirds of these schools take longer than this to open as academies. The NAO estimated that, at January 2018, there were 37,000 children in maintained schools that Ofsted had rated as inadequate more than nine months before but that had not yet opened as academies. The Department has found it difficult to find sponsors for some of the most challenged schools. In particular, small, sometimes remote, primary schools can find it challenging to attract local sponsors and integrate into multi-academy trusts. There are 242 sponsored academies that are more than 50 miles from their sponsor. Furthermore, there is considerable regional variation in the number of available sponsors located close to underperforming schools and a shortage of sponsors and multi-academy trusts able to support new academies. From 2012-13, the Department began offering grants aimed at boosting sponsors’ ability to take on more academies. The National Audit Office did not see evidence that the Department has assessed whether this funding is helping. The Department has recently improved its process for converting schools to academies. This has involved closer scrutiny of the financial position of maintained schools applying to become academies and prospective sponsors. It has also increased the standards of governance it expects from academy trusts. Nonetheless, the NAO has found further scope for the Department to make the process more effective, particularly when it comes to identifying financial risks and strengthening assurance that trustees and senior leaders are appropriate people to be responsible for public money. Amyas Morse, head of the National Audit Office, said today: “It is unclear how feasible it will be for the Department to continue converting large numbers of schools to academies. There is extensive variation across the country, leaving many local authorities with responsibility largely for primary schools. “To cut through this complexity, the Department needs to set out its vision and clarify how it sees academies, maintained schools and local authorities working together to create a coherent and effective school system for children across all parts of the country.”
Key facts
- ENDS - Notes for Editors
3. The Department does not routinely collect data on the amounts spent on conversion by other bodies, including schools, sponsors and local authorities. 4. Early in the academies programme, many schools set up as individual academies, known as single-academy trusts. Since August 2012, however, an increasing proportion of academies have formed or joined groups of schools, known as multi-academy trusts. |