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New Law Says Schools Must Listen to Children

A new law to place a duty on all maintained schools in England and Wales to consider the views of children and young people was passed by the House of Lords on the 11th November 2008.

 

This significant legal reform will substantially strengthen the legal rights of children to participate in school decision making. The move follows decades of campaigning by children's rights advocates.

 

The Children’s Rights Alliance for England (CRAE), a Participation Works partner, has been lobbying for the move on behalf of the partnership. Carolyne Willow, National coordinator of CRAE said: “This is a historic moment that we have worked for years to achieve. It was simply unacceptable that schools should have no legal obligation to consider children's views. This change in the law should help transform the culture of schools, with children being firmly at the centre of policy and practice.“

 

The move is one of the first major actions to protect children's rights taken by new children's minister Baroness Delyth Morgan of Drefelin. The minister explained: ”… I am sure that the whole House will agree that the voice of pupils and young people is extremely important … The new duty in these amendments sends a clear message about the importance that we place on the involvement of pupils, which the Children’s Rights Alliance for England also eloquently advocates, in matters that affect their education and school life. Through regulations, we intend to require governing bodies to invite views on a core set of policy matters. As a minimum, schools should seek and take account of pupils’ views on policies on the delivery of the curriculum, behaviour, the uniform, school food, health and safety, equalities and sustainability, not simply on what colour to paint the walls.”

 

The new duty will require governing body of a maintained school to invite and consider the views of pupils about prescribed matters. The Government promised a full consultation on implementation of the duty in Spring 2009 with it coming in to force soon after: the minister assured parliament that ‘we do not intend to drag our heels’.

 

The lack of participation rights for school students was raised by the UN Committee on the Rights of the Child in its concluding observations on the UK issued on 3 October 2008 (as well as in 2002 and 1995).

 

As its contribution to the Participation Works partnership, CRAE appointed a dedicated post holder, Tom Burke, in 2007 to lead lobbying on this and other policy developments.


Posted on Monday, November 17, 2008 (Archive on Monday, November 24, 2008)
Posted by James  Contributed by James
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