Latest News
-
Histon and Impington Junior School awarded Teaching School Hub status for Cambridgeshire and Peterborough
Thu 11 Feb 2021Histon and Impington Junior School, part of Cambridge Primary Education Trust (CPET), will be the designated Teaching School Hub for Cambridgeshire and Peterborough schools, following an announcement by the Department for Education (DfE) on 10th February.
A total of 81 new Teaching School Hubs have been selected to provide high-quality professional development to teachers and leaders in England, with a £65 million investment from the DfE over an initial three years. Each hub, all of which will be operational and helping schools from September, will have its own defined geographical patch and will be expected to be accessible to all schools within that area, serving on average around 250 schools each.
The Teaching School Hub led by Histon and Impington Junior School will help in delivering the Early Career Framework reforms as well as a reformed suite of National Professional Qualifications (NPQs), including new specialist NPQs, in Cambridgeshire and Peterborough. It will also deliver Initial Teaching Training (ITT) and additional high-quality evidence-based professional development.
“We are delighted to share the good news that Histon and Impington Junior School will be the designated Teaching School Hub for Cambridgeshire and Peterborough,” explained CPET CEO/Executive Principal Lesley Birch. “We would like to thank all those involved in the Cambridge Teaching Schools Network (CTSN) and Teaching School partners across the area, as well as Cambridgeshire County and Peterborough City Councils, for supporting this application which has led to this successful outcome for the region.”
“We already have extensive experience in delivering high-quality teacher development and school improvement, but we are not complacent and are excited about building existing capacity and capability to address specific needs, gaps, and barriers of the Hub area. We will be working in partnership with over 330 schools in our region, as well as with the other designated Hubs, to do that. What, and how, we do this is to be carefully considered and it will be a gradual journey.”
In the DfE’s statement Minister of State for Schools, The Rt Hon Nick Gibb MP, said: “We know teachers are already providing the best education possible for pupils, and this is especially true while schools are closed to most pupils. These new Teaching School Hubs will further support the profession by providing the best possible training and development opportunities. It is important that teachers and school leaders feel supported in their career. The Hubs will make this substantially easier, with expert practitioners able to give experienced advice to those schools able to benefit from it.”
Chair of the Teaching Schools Council, Richard Gill, added: “The Teaching Schools Council (TSC) congratulates all 81 schools and/or Trusts which have been designated as a Teaching School Hub. They will now join the existing six ‘test and learn’ hubs that were announced in January 2020 to form a national network of excellence in teacher training and development. The work of the TSC has been instrumental in supporting this programme to date and we are proud to be the sector body that will continue to be a key partner in these reforms.”
-
Histon and Impington Park Primary School build opens its doors as staff bid a “fond farewell” to Infant School site
Tue 02 Feb 2021Cambridge Primary Education Trust’s £16 million primary school build in Histon and Impington has opened its doors to children for the first time.
Following handover from contractor and designers R G Carter in December, Histon and Impington Infant School relocated from its site in New School Road to the Buxhall Farm site off Glebe Way just before the Christmas holidays, and ahead of the 6th January return date.
Originally, it was planned that 310 Reception, Year 1 and Year 2 pupils at Histon and Impington Infant School would move over to the Buxhall Farm site – but a new national lockdown announced on the evening of 4th January meant that the Trust has had to limit this to around 95 children initially.
From September, Histon and Impington Infant School will convert to a primary school and serve up to 420 children aged 4-11 under the new name of Histon and Impington Park Primary. Meanwhile, Histon and Impington Junior School, which has already expanded on its current site in readiness to extend its intake to ages 4-11, when it too becomes a full 420-pupil primary school, will be called Histon and Impington Brook Primary from the 2020-21 school year.
“It isn’t quite the celebratory opening we were hoping for, but we are absolutely delighted to be in the new school,” said the Trust’s CEO/Executive Principal Lesley Birch. “Colleagues have moved mountains before and during the Christmas holidays to ensure the building was ready for the returning children. In the immediate term, we are thrilled to be able to support those children who are able to come into school. For those we are unable to physically see due to the new restrictions we are offering remote learning which enables us to offer a high standard of learning tasks to all our children. “Whilst everyone’s focus, and rightly so, is on the ‘here and now’, we should not lose sight of how significant this move is to give the local Histon and Impington community the enlarged high-quality primary provision it so desperately needs given the growth of our community. Our mission is to provide an outstanding education for all our pupils by offering a broad and balanced curriculum whilst working closely with the local community. Having two all-through primary schools in Histon and Impington, both with inspiring learning environments, will help to deliver that commitment as we move forward.”
Histon and Impington Infant School Headteacher Jonathan Newman added: “We are all incredibly excited about the new journey we are taking. It would have been wonderful to have had the opportunity to welcome everyone into the school and to start planning an official opening, but we will be doing that as soon as it is appropriate and possible to do so. Clearly this was not the start to the New Year at a new school that any of us wanted but we are looking forward to making new memories here. At the same time we bid a fond farewell to the Infant School site which housed many of our children’s parents, grandparents, great grandparents and possibly even great, great grandparents.”
The new school comprises 14 classrooms, a main and small hall, library, staff and breakout areas, and a food technology area and kitchen. As part of the construction, highway upgrade works were undertaken along with the creation of a new footpath and alterations to the nearby junction and a toucan crossing for students’ safety. The construction team from R G Carter will be back on site in the spring to finalise the landscaping and seeding of the new nature garden at the rear of the school, which also provides play areas and a mini wooden amphitheatre. The school also has an adjoining space which will be used for Breakfast and After-School Clubs and wraparound care facilities with the potential to provide pre-school provision for up to 52 children.
Will Robinson, Project Manager for R G Carter, explained: “It has been a pleasure to work on another exciting project with Cambridgeshire County Council to deliver this new and much-needed primary school in the local area and we look forward to the students benefitting from this amazing facility.”