Rebecca Pearce (cropped) Cowes Enterprise College

Vote of ‘no confidence’ in principal at Cowes Enterprise overwhelmingly carried by staff

A meeting called by trade unions and professional associations of staff at Cowes Enterprise College was held on Wednesday afternoon and a vote of ‘no confidence’ in Rebecca Pearce, the Principal of the College, was overwhelmingly carried.

Over 50 staff, including teachers and support staff attended the meeting to express their serious concerns about the leadership of the school that has been plagued with troubles over recent years.

What has led to lack of confidence
A number of issues were highlighted at yesterday’s meeting that have led to the erosion of confidence in the leadership at the school. These include:

  • A failure to adequately explain in person the educational rationale behind the proposed staffing restructure and the huge reduction in the number of support staff – including a failure to adequately clarify who had actually devised the draft structure and the extent of the Principal’s own involvement in this
  • A general sense of a lack of communication about key issues and a related failure to adequately fulfil a duty of care to staff
  • A situation in which many staff had initially learnt about issues arising from the recent OFSTED report from OnTheWight rather than from the school leadership
  • A sense of outrage about comments in a recent school bulletin about the role of support staff which left them feeling badly demoralised and seriously undervalued
  • A sense of deep concern about a dangerous loss of control of the College on the last day of term in which a number of leadership decisions had potentially serious health and safety implications for pupils as well as putting the fabric of the building at risk.
  • A general feeling of dismay that all of these issues are further serving to undermine the reputation of the school in the eyes of both parents and the wider community.

Governors: “Unhappiness is inevitable during periods of change”
OnTheWight got in touch with the Ormiston Trust for a comment, they responded with the following statement from CEC governors,

“A section of staff has submitted a vote of no confidence in the principal and a discussion will be scheduled with governors and OAT to investigate.

“Unhappiness is inevitable during periods of challenge and change, but the principal is focussed on getting the best possible education for the students at CEC within the available resources.

“The principal has received very positive feedback, including from Ofsted. We will do everything that we can to achieve a resolution that is satisfactory to all.”

Concerns expressed about chair of Governors
At the meeting a similar vote of ‘no confidence’ in Rachel Fidler, the Chair of Governors was also considered. A number of strong comments were made by speakers at the meeting that the level of confidence in the Chair of Governors is also at an alarmingly low level.

It was decided instead to give Ms Fidler and the Governing body the chance to respond to the concerns of staff about the school leadership.

Public meeting
A public meeting for parents and staff has been arranged by Cllr Richard Priest, Executive member of the Isle of Wight council for Children’s Services. It takes place at Cowes Enterprise College on Monday 28th April from 6pm. All are welcome to attend.

Advertisement
Subscribe
Email updates?
19 Comments
oldest
newest most voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
The Sciolist
25, April 2014 7:07 am

Councillor Priest has done the right thing here, the meeting is overdue and welcome – on the condition that some answers are given as to why and how this mess arose. With little chance of anyone from the former council attending to offer any excuses, it will be up to the new administration to speak honestly. Islander’s want some frankness from their councillor’s and public servants. Covering… Read more »

David
25, April 2014 9:19 am

There is still no word from the school itself about the meeting. Understandably, the meeting will be dominated by questions on the “mismanagement” of the building project and the subsequent snagging issues. There appears to be no formal channel for the parents to voice their concerns about the staff restructuring. Ormiston Academic Trust and the Principal cannot be blamed for the school running up a huge budget… Read more »

Colin
25, April 2014 10:38 am

It isn’t just Cowes that is reducing SENs, LSAs and other support staff; all the other senior academies are too. These posts have built up over the years as many pupils have been identified as needing support. However they are seen as easy targets by management to reduce costs/increase profits. Are not schools run as charities/not for profit, I hear you say? Supposed to be is the… Read more »

Cynic
Reply to  Colin
25, April 2014 10:57 am

“The country’s largest academy chain, Academies Enterprise Trust (AET), is considering outsourcing most non-teaching roles to private companies in a deal worth up to £400 million. The 10 year contract would include school business managers, librarians and IT staff as well as a range of back office positions such as HR, finance, and secretaries.” (TES News 31 Jan 2014) Is this strategy also in the mind of… Read more »

Cynic
Reply to  Cynic
25, April 2014 11:01 am

Some will recall that one years ago AET was alleged to have paid almost £500,000 over three years to private businesses owned by its trustees and executives.
(per Observer 20 July 2013).

David
Reply to  Colin
25, April 2014 11:30 am

LSA and support staff are easy targets. This decision is not being made on ‘need’ but on quick fix cost cutting – probably to appease Ofsted and, more likely, the Ormiston Academic Trust.

Meanwhile the ones that suffer are the most vunerable – students with special needs.

It’s shameful.

David
Reply to  David
25, April 2014 3:00 pm

Apparently the school is now paying for the services of a PR company….money that could have been spent on teachers and LSAs.

It beggars belief!!

And, as for the extra 9 million that might be needed to repair the building, someone needs to get a grip. It’s spiralling out of control.

lammasu
25, April 2014 7:36 pm

It has been shyly revealed today that the meeting on Monday at the College will have “stewards” present to ensure that no-one is allowed to be other than in the entrance foyer of the building or the main hall. The word “marshall” was also used, but these people are not believed to be employees of the school. If this is true it is most unusual. Schools work… Read more »

Cynic
Reply to  lammasu
25, April 2014 8:47 pm

“Elf n Safety”? :-))

Cynic
Reply to  Cynic
26, April 2014 8:17 am

A| serious question. Who currently owns the building and whom could be sued if a member of the public injured him/herself going off-piste when attending the meeting? It would not be surprising if the current owner took action (i.e. marshals/stewards/guides) to prevent possible injury. On the other hand taking such action might also indicate a parlous state of construction in which such an accident ws possible if… Read more »

lammasu
26, April 2014 9:50 am

Are the children safe, then? This is not a subject for faint humour. If the governance of Cowes do this for Monday’s meeting it has to be acknowledged this is not normal practice, for stewards to be used to prevent access to parts of a school, a building used by 1000 people every day. What is the real reason? If it is safety concerns, then parents, staff… Read more »

Cynic
Reply to  lammasu
26, April 2014 10:11 am

I was being serious not indulging in “faint humour”.

???
Reply to  lammasu
26, April 2014 12:18 pm

If the children were not safe, the building would not be open. Many schools use staff to make sure parents are going to the right areas on parents evening. Its not a new practice. If Cowes are employing a company specifically to provide this service, perhaps they are worried about people wandering around the building to try and get photos of various areas – with a few… Read more »

JipperNipper
Reply to  ???
26, April 2014 1:27 pm

I think you will find that as the meeting to discuss the building has been called and organised by the Isle of Wight Council that it is they that have organised the marshalls for the event and is nothing to do with the school whatsoever. They just happen to be providing the venue for the event.

lammasu
Reply to  Sally Perry
28, April 2014 9:58 am

“Across the Island?”
Surely not!
There is a real chance this meeting will now lack focus. It needs to conventrate on the issues of CEC, not the whole Island.

Cynic
Reply to  Sally Perry
28, April 2014 10:58 am

Agree! This smells like the classic political bull-doodoo of trying to divert attention from the salient problem (i.e. CEC construction and management) by spreading the meeting’s focus more thinly over a broader area.

Disappointing for the Asministration that boasts transparency! It is either naive or politically insidious!

lammasu
Reply to  ???
28, April 2014 7:59 am

Cowes is a school, built with public money, but it is a deeply flawed new building put up at great cost. So why should it’s many issues not be in the public arena then? Who is deciding these flaws may not be seen or talked about? What matter if the problems that affect a school built for our community are photographed and made public? CEC is not… Read more »

lammasu
26, April 2014 5:37 pm

The new build of Cowes Enterprise College was intended to provide 21st century educational facilities that would be a beacon of good practice and facilities, arguably the envy of Europe. Other educationalists would view it and take away ideas to improve their own delivery. Something this Island could be proud of. Instead we have an unfinished, incompletely resourced building. It is not even an effective teaching space.… Read more »

reCaptcha Error: grecaptcha is not defined