The Future Leaders Trust

The Future Leaders Trust
Motto Great leaders make great schools. Great schools change lives.
Founded 2006
Type Educational Charity
Focus Educational leadership, Succession planning, Children's Rights, and Social mobility
Location
Area served
England
Products Future Leaders, Leading Impact, NPQH, Talented Leaders
Key people
Heath Monk, Sally Morgan, Baroness Morgan of Huyton, Jo Owen, Sue Williamson
Mission To address educational inequality by developing the next generation of leaders for challenging schools so that more schools in disadvantaged areas can offer their pupils a better future.
Website future-leaders.org.uk

The Future Leaders Trust is a UK charitable organisation with the mission of addressing educational disadvantage. It recruits and trains aspiring school leaders who focus on raising the achievement and attainment of pupils from disadvantaged backgrounds. It aims to change a system that allows children from deprived backgrounds to be educationally marginalised.

A participant enrolled on the Future Leaders programme is commonly referred to as a ‘Future Leader’.

Origins

Following a feasibility trip to the US and seeing the work of New Leaders, The Future Leaders Trust was set up in 2006 as an independent charity by Absolute Return for Kids, National College for Teaching and Leadership, and The Schools Network. These organisations shared the vision for a leadership programme to improve the life chances of pupils from disadvantaged backgrounds. Key people involved in establishing the organisation included Lord Adonis, who provided support from Government, and Jay Altman and Sir Iain Hall helped to design the initial programme. Heath Monk is currently CEO of the charity.

It became a registered charity on 15 November 2006, with charity number 1116801.

Activities

The Future Leaders programme

The Future Leaders Trust was set up to deliver the Future Leaders programme; an accelerated leadership development programme for current and former teachers to become headteachers of challenging schools in around four years.

Around seven out of ten of the poorest children are still leaving school without five or more good GCSEs including English and maths.[1] Based on OECD research, the UK has one of the widest achievement gaps in the developed world.[2]

The Future Leaders programme was established based on evidence that effective, inspirational school leadership can have a significant impact on closing this gap.

In 2009 the largest and most extensive study of contemporary leadership to be conducted in England found that effective inspirational school leadership can eradicate educational disadvantage.[3]

A McKinsey & Company report in 2012 commented that Ofsted reports show that 93 out of 100 schools with good leadership also have good standards of achievement, while only one out of 100 schools without good leadership will have good standards of achievement.[4]

The Future Leaders programme combines residential and on the job training, including a one-year placement under a mentor headteacher in a challenging school, a study tour to visit schools in the UK and ongoing leadership coaching from an experienced headteacher.

In 2006, Future Leaders recruited 20 participants in London onto their inaugural cohort. The programme expanded to the North West in 2008, the Midlands in 2009, Yorkshire & the Humber and South Coast in 2010[5] and the North East in 2012.[6] It now serves the whole of England and works with primary and secondary schools.

In April 2015, there were over 350 Future Leaders working in over 250 schools across England impacting on the lives of more than 250,000 pupils.

Notable Future Leaders

Andrew Day

Future Leader Andrew Day grew up in Cape Town, South Africa and began his teaching career under the apartheid regime. Security problems forced him to emigrate to the UK and continue teaching in British schools. He decided to explore the business world, completed an MBA and worked in the travel industry. But he soon returned to teaching through joining the Future Leaders programme in 2006.[7]

In January 2009, he was appointed Principal of Haberdashers' Aske's Knights Academy in London, at a time when the school had achieved 19% 5A*-C including English and maths. This year it achieved 57% - an impressive 16 percentage point increase on 2010 and the best results in its history and most improved school in the borough - showing the great strides the Academy has made to improve the life chances of all students.[8]

Mr Day has subsequently been appointed as Executive Director (CEO) of The Northumberland Church of England Academy and starts his new role in September 2012.[9]

Glen Denham

Previously an Olympic basketball player and talk show host in New Zealand, Glen joined the Future Leaders programme in 2007 and completed his first year at Woolwich Polytechnic School for Boys before going onto become Deputy Headteacher. He took up post as Principal of Oasis Academy Shirley Park in 2009;[10] his first year saw a 20% increase in 5 A*-Cs GCSEs including English and maths from the predecessor school.[11] The 2011 results saw a further increase to 56% of pupils achieving 5A*-C GCSEs.[12]

Peter Hughes

Peter previously worked as a supply teacher in New South Wales, Australia. He joined the Future Leaders programme in 2007 and worked at Mossbourne Community Academy,[13] where he has risen up the ranks under the guidance of Sir Michael Wilshaw, the former Principal. He became Principal of Mossbourne in April 2012.[14]

Peter Hyman

Peter starter his career as a journalist, before becoming political advisor to Gordon Brown and then Tony Blair. He was also previously Head of Communications at Downing Street.

He made the career change into teaching and started as a classroom assistant in a London comprehensive, before joining the Future Leaders programme in 2007 and working up the ranks to Deputy Headteacher. He successfully bid under the free schools programme to start School 21 in Newham, London. The new school opens in September 2012, with Peter as Principal.[15]

Jane Keeley

Jane was born in Baghdad and previously worked as a research scientist, university lecturer and counsellor. She completed her first year on the Future Leaders programme at Stockwell Park School in 2007 and went on to become Assistant Principal at Westminster Academy, both in London.

Jane became the first female Future Leader to secure a headship when she was appointed Headteacher at Haggerston School in September 2010.[16]

Future Leaders Headteachers

Since the programme began in 2006, over 160 Future Leaders have reached headship positions.[17]

Impact

Research shows that Future Leaders are improving their schools GCSE results above the national rate of improvement. Exam results from 2012 showed that schools with an established Future Leaders headteacher improved the percentage of students getting 5 or more A*-C GCSEs (including English and maths) by an average of 5.9 percentage points.[18] This compares to the national improvement in England of 0.6 percentage points and the average improvement in challenging schools of 1.3 percentage points. These findings are supported by an earlier report by Learning Plus UK, which found that schools with senior leaders who have been trained on the Future Leaders programme were, on average, improving GCSE performance faster and had significantly smaller attainment gaps, than comparable schools.[19]

The Future Leaders Trust’s other work

Accredited senior leadership training and NPQH

The Future Leaders Trust was awarded a National College for Teaching and Leadership license to provide accredited training qualifications and will be offering two new programmes - Leading Impact, the National Professional Qualification for Senior Leadership (NPQSL) and Keys to Headship, National Professional Qualification for Headship (NPQH).[20]

Primary programme

The Future Leader Trust announced in July 2012 that it is expanding into primary schools. The Future Leaders programme is now open to both primary and primary candidates. [21]

Teaching Leaders

It also recruits for another National College programme called Teaching Leaders which offers accelerated leadership development for middle leaders in challenging schools.

Free School Principal Designate assessment centres

It has previously been commissioned by Department for Education (DfE) to assess the proposed principals of Free Schools.

Consultancy

The National College for Teaching and Leadership has commissioned the organisation to consult on creating modules aimed at school leaders who are leading Free Schools or start-up schools.

Training and development

The organisation has worked with individual schools that are interested in their training and developmental tools to drive improvement in their leadership teams.

See also

External links

References

  1. Department of Education, "New data reveals the truth about school performance". 26 January 2012.
  2. OECD, "VIEWING THE UNITED KINGDOM SCHOOL SYSTEM THROUGH THE PRISM OF PISA". Retrieved 31 July 2012.
  3. Department for Children, Schools and Families and National College for Teaching and Leadership, "The Impact of School Leadership on Pupil Outcomes". University of Nottingham 2009. ISBN 978 1 84775 445 5.
  4. McKinsey & Company, "Capturing the leadership premium". Retrieved 31 July 2012.
  5. Portishead People, 9 February 2010, "Wanted: 12 teachers to transform Bristol schools".
  6. Future Leaders, "Other work we do". Retrieved 31 July 2012.
  7. The Guardian, 20 February 2012, "Who'd be a headteacher in 2012?"
  8. Department of Education, "Haberdashers' Aske's Knights Academy". Retrieved 17 May 2012.
  9. NCEA "NCEA April News". Retrieved 17 May 2012.
  10. Oasis Academy Shirley Park, "Early appointment of new Academy Principal Designate ensures smooth transition". Retrieved 31 July 2012.
  11. Croydon Today, 21 January 2011, "The pupils come first".
  12. Department of Education, "Oasis Academy Shirley Park". Retrieved 31 July 2012.
  13. The Independent, 17 May 2012, Richard Garner, "Mossbourne Academy: A class act that's hard to follow".
  14. Mossbourne Academy, "History of Mossbourne". Retrieved 31 July 2012.
  15. The Guardian, 3 January 2012, Janet Murray, "Tony Blair's adviser starts a free school".
  16. Future Leaders, Participant Case Study: Journey to Headship.
  17. Future Leaders Trust, "The Future Leaders Trust Impact Update 2016". Retrieved 2 March 2016.
  18. The Future Leaders Trust, "The Future Leaders Trust 2013 Impact Report". 20 June 2013.
  19. Learning Plus UK, "An Evaluation of the Future Leaders Programme 2010/11". 15 June 2012.
  20. Department of Education, "National College licensees". Retrieved 31 July 2012.
  21. Future Leaders, "Other work we do". Retrieved 17 August 2012.
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