COVID-19 – Department for Education (DfE) guidance on admissions to selective schools
The Department for Education (DfE) has recently published updated guidance for schools that have admission arrangements that admit pupils by implementing selective arrangements.
Please note: the information contained in this legal update is correct as of the original date of publication.
The Department for Education (DfE) has recently published updated guidance for schools that have admission arrangements that admit pupils by implementing selective arrangements. The guidance will apply to admission authorities responsible for grammar schools, partially-selective schools, schools that select by aptitude or schools which operate banding.
Guidance overview
The guidance sets out that the usual practice of holding selection tests during the early part of the autumn term (September onwards) in the year before entry may well disadvantage children this year, in the absence of formal education since March 2020. The DfE is concerned that this disadvantage will be more keenly felt in disadvantaged groups of children. As such, the DfE suggests that testing procedures are moved to later in the autumn term, and that the practical arrangements for those tests is reviewed to ensure that it complies with other guidance for schools on minimising the risk of transmission of COVID-19.
Given the requirements of the School Admissions Code 2014 on admission authorities to set out testing arrangements within the admission arrangements for the school, it will be necessary to review those arrangements, and consider whether an application needs to be made to vary the admission arrangements to allow compliance with the wider COVID-19 guidance on schools. In addition, it will be important to communicate any changes clearly to parents whose children may be looking for a place at the school.
Recommendations
We would suggest the following steps would be appropriate for admission authorities to consider:
- Review existing arrangements, including guidance for parents, regarding the testing arrangements and update this in line with the new DfE guidance on selection tests and the wider DfE guidance on opening schools.
- Review the admission arrangements for the school. Where the testing arrangements, including the dates of testing and back-up arrangements for further testing due to illness, are set out in detail within the admission arrangements, these should be updated to reflect the proposed new arrangements for this autumn term.
- Notify the statutory consultees of the proposed variations to the admission arrangements. The statutory consultees will be the organisations set out in paragraph 1.44 ― other admission authorities in the relevant area, whichever of the local authority or governing board is not the admission authority of the school, the religious body where the school is a faith school, and the governing boards of community and voluntary controlled schools in the relevant area.
- Make an application for variation under paragraph 3.6 School Admissions Code 2014, due to a major change in circumstances (the impact of COVID-19). The application will be made to the ESFA for academies and the Schools Adjudicator for maintained schools.
- The application must be made as soon as possible so that a decision can be made, in order for the updated arrangements to be published on the school’s website and provided to the local authority for publication in the composite prospectus.
In reviewing the arrangements, the DfE suggests that the wider COVID-19 guidance will set a useful starting point for ensuring the arrangements are safe. In addition, the guidance suggests that:
- The timing of the testing must consider the wider timescales for admission decisions to be taken in accordance with the co-ordinated scheme and for offers to be made by National Offer Day in 2021.
- The security and integrity of the test papers must be considered where, due to the COVID-19 restrictions on numbers, the testing takes place over a number of sessions or across a number of days.
- Any revised arrangements may need to be as flexible as possible in terms of ‘mop up’ sessions for children who were unable to sit the test on the dates offered. The guidance suggests consideration must be given to testing at home, if this is seen as necessary (for instance, as a reasonable adjustment for a disabled applicant).
Browne Jacobson’s Education team is available to provide advice and support to admission authorities wishing to take steps to review and/or vary their admission arrangements. Please get in touch with your usual contact or contact the team via email: education@brownejacobson.com.
Related expertise
You may be interested in...
Online Event
Wellbeing and financial considerations – practical solutions for challenging times
Legal Update
be connected - Spring 2023
Legal Update
Teacher strikes – lessons learnt so far
Opinion
Can toilet facilities amount to sex discrimination?
Legal Update
New support launched to manage school complaints
Legal Update
Cyber security and data breaches
Legal Update
#EdCon2023 virtual event hailed a success
Online Event
Flexible working in schools webinar
Legal Update
What does the new Provider Access Legislation mean for schools?
Legal Update
High Court dismisses Welsh RSE right to withdraw claim
Opinion
Term-time school worker entitled to national minimum wage for unworked basic hours
On-Demand
Industrial action essentials: what you need to know
Legal Update
Education Software Solutions Limited breaks against the CMA’s intervention: A victory for freedom and flexibility in contracting for MIS services
Legal Update
Safeguarding at scale report published
Legal Update
Trade unions announce plans to re-ballot members
Legal Update
Widespread industrial action now confirmed for schools
Legal Update
Industrial action and minimum service levels within education
Opinion
Consultation on holiday entitlement – part-year and irregular workers
Guide
FAQs - converting to academy status
Guide
FAQs - becoming a sponsored academy
Guide
FAQs - becoming an academy sponsor
Guide
FAQs – single academy joining a MAT
Legal Update
EdCon2023 launch: Thursday 12 January
Legal Update
The importance of understanding the transitional provisions under the Electronic Communications Code
Legal Update
Biodiversity Net Gain: positive for nature and an opportunity for landowners
Legal Update
Discrimination comes of age
Guide
#EdCon2023: Access a range of expert guidance and resources at our FREE virtual conference
Legal Update
be prepared for the 2022-23 academic year
Legal Update
Teacher Pay Survey 2022
Legal Update
be connected newsletter for schools - Winter 2022
Guide
Good governance essential to avoid falling foul of the ESFA
There’s been little evidence of interventions or financial management reviews this year and it appears the Education and Skills Funding Agency (ESFA) has re-focussed on financial delivery. It’s also telling that there were no discernible changes to the reporting of financial irregularities in the Academies Trust Handbook 2022.
Legal Update
Children's commissioner recommendations for SEND reform
The Children’s Commissioner, Rachel De Souza, has recently published a report “Beyond the labels: a SEND system which works for every child, every time”, which she intends to sit alongside the DfE’s SEND Review (2019) and SEND Green Paper (2022) and which she hopes will put children’s voices at the heart of the government’s review of SEND system.
Legal Update
School complaint management - exploring a new way forward
There’s greater opportunity than ever for parents, carers and guardians to voice any concerns they have relating to their child’s education and for their concerns to be heard and to be taken seriously. While most staff in schools and academies are conscious of their legal duties relating to complaints management, many are struggling to cope with such a significant increase in the volume of complaints they must manage.
On-Demand
The UK's green agenda - the outcomes of COP27 and actions since COP26
Guide
Setting up a trading subsidiary – a guide for academy trusts
We’re pleased to collaborate with Lloyds Bank, who recently asked us and audit and risk specialists Crowe UK to offer guidance that academy trusts would find helpful when considering setting up a trading subsidiary.
Legal Update
DfE Trust Capacity Fund
The DfE has published new guidance and opened the application process for window two of the Trust Capacity Fund (TCaF) for 2022/2023, with a fund of £86m in trust capacity funding focused particularly on education investment areas.
Guide
The Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse - A guide for schools and trusts
The Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse was established in March 2015. We now have its report. As you would expect with such a broad scope, the report is long and makes a number of far-reaching recommendations. In this article, Dai Durbridge highlights seven of the 20 recommendations, sets out how they could impact on schools and suggests what steps to take now.
Press Release
Law firm picks up record breaking sixth Education Investor Award
Browne Jacobson’s education team has been named as winner of the ‘Legal Advisors to Education Institutions’ category at the Education Investor Awards 2022 for a record sixth time.
Legal Update
Managed moves between schools
Since the new Suspensions and Exclusions Statutory Guidance was published, we have received a lot of questions about the use of managed moves. For the first time, the Statutory Guidance does explain what a managed move is, but in relatively broad terms and does not cover the mechanics of how a managed move should operate.
Press Release
Thousands take part in virtual careers event to help increase diversity in the legal profession
Over 3000 young people from across the UK and Ireland took part in a virtual legal careers insight event, aimed at making the legal profession more diverse.