1
YORKSHIRE POST MONDAY APRIL 22 2019 0800 031 9230 †Total amount claimed back is subject to fees and taxes. Registered in England: Unit 1C Riparian Way, The Crossings Business Park, Cross Hills, West Yorkshire, BD20 7AA (Co Reg No: 07769324). PPI Claimback is a trading style of Investor Compensation (UK) Limited, regulated by the Claims Management Regulator in respect of regulated claims management activities; that registration is recorded on the Claims Regulation website: www.gov.uk/moj/cmr (CRM28889). Trust us to make your claim. We have claimed back over £400 MILLION for our customers since 2007. DON’T MISS THE PPI CLAIM DEADLINE ACT NOW or you could miss out on the chance to Mr and Mrs Irving, Glasgow £5,662 from Egg. Aſter 29th August 2019, you will lose your right to claim. Starting your PPI check with PPI Claimback is simple just call us to get started and we’ll do the rest. If you don’t have PPI, you won’t pay a single penny! CALL FREE FROM ANY PHONE The clock is really ticking to find out if you are owed £THOUSANDS CLAIM UP TO £7,000 “We are very grateful for what you’ve done, we would never have done this without you, we only expected about £800, we didn’t expect so much!” Space scientist to speak at futures fair A SPACE scientist is to be guest of honour at a Yorkshire school’s ca- reers fair on Friday. Queen Mary’s School’s female futures’ fair, open to girls and par- ents across the region, is aimed at inspiring a generation of women in their careers. Dr Suzie Imber, winner of the BBC 2 series As- tronauts: Do You Have What it Takes?, is to aend on Friday af- ternoon. Further guests include keynote speaker Wendy Loreo BCon PhD, Dean of the University of Edinburgh Business School. Carole Cameron, head of Queen Mary’s School, said: “We are extremely excited to be wel- coming Suzie Imber and Wendy Loreo alongside a whole host of successful women from a range of professional backgrounds. “This event provides an oppor- tunity for the school to inspire and empower girls from across the region to believe that they can achieve anything.” Tributes to headmaster who led school through time of changes TRIBUTES HAVE been paid to a former headmaster who led Har- rogate’s Ashville College through a period of significant change. Michael Crosby, Ashville’s sev- enth headmaster, died on Thurs- day, April 11. He was 74. Leading the school from 1987 to 2003, he oversaw radical devel- opments in its history, including the development of a new music and drama centre, an expand- ed boarding house for girls and, above all, its sixth-form centre. Pre Prep began in Mr Crosby’s time, initially as part of Junior School, before its own building was constructed. Mr Crosby and his wife Dianne, along with their two children Helen and Peter were involved with all aspects of Ashville and the Ashvillian community, the school has said. “He encouraged Ashville to look outward, raising tens of thousands of pounds for domes- tic and overseas causes, espe- cially Open Arms Malawi. He en- couraged overseas tours to widen experiences, even taking part in a Great War Balefields Tour which involved him plodding through muddy trenches near Ypres. “Shortly into his retirement Michael was diagnosed with can- cer which he faced with great dig- nity and courage. “His broad Christianity was a key feature of his appreciation of everyone he met. Ashville owes him deep respect and gratitude – without him, many aspects of current school life would be miss- ing.” Headmaster Richard Marshall said that he was well aware of Mr Crosby’s “fine standing” within the school community. “He will be greatly missed, and we extend our condolences to Di- anne, Helen and Peter and their families as they and we come to terms with their loss.” Jamie Search, chair of gover- nors, said: “Michael worked with my father, as then chair at Ash- ville, so I know first-hand the enormous dedication Michael gave to the school. “He always strived to make things beer for all at Ashville, pupils and staff alike.” MICHAEL CROSBY: Ashville College’s seventh headmaster, who has died at the age of 74. Education on Monday 6 Twier @yorkshirepost YP Tablet Apps Visit your app store Parents back calls for lessons on same sex relationships in school PARENTS SHOULD not have the right to refuse lessons on same- sex relationships, according to the results of a new poll, but there are concerns about the age that children are involved. Researchers at Leeds Beck- e University, polling 366 par- ents and teachers in the wake of protests in parts of the country, asked questions over opinionson the access and delivery of lessons. There is overwhelming back- ing for schools to teach children about LGBT identities, the poll has found, with 94 per cent of re- spondents agreeing it was impor- tant. But a lower proportion, at 73 per cent, agreed that lessons in same-sex marriage should be delivered from the age of four, and just 50 per cent agreed that children of this age should learn about transgender identities. Professor Jonathan Glazzard and Samuel Stones, from the uni- versity’s Carnegie School of Edu- cation, jointly carried out the re- search. “It is possible that respondents feel that young children need to be protected from learning about LGBT identities and relation- ships, either because they feel that the content will cover sex or because they believe that young children are easily influenced,” they said. “This raises some interesting issues. Firstly, some children at the age of four have same-sex par- ents. They are aware of same-sex relationships and they may have brothers, sisters, aunties and un- cles in their family who identity as LGBT. “If these identities are not vis- ible in the school curriculum they can start to feel that their lives are not reflected in the school. “Secondly, it is interesting to note that there is divided opin- ion on the teaching of same-sex marriage, despite the fact that in the early years children learn about heterosexual relationships through topics on ‘family’ and role-plays of mock straight wed- dings. “Why is it acceptable to teach children about heterosexual rela- tionships and not about LGBT re- lationships and identities?” There has been much debate on the subject nationwide, with teaching union delegates last week backing a motion for les- sons to be made compulsory in UK primary schools. Earlier this month, the Educa- tion Secretary said that children should learn about diversity in the classroom, and not in the school playground or from the in- ternet. Damian Hinds, speaking in re- lation to a parent protests over the issue in Birmingham, said learning about the diversity of so- ciety was an important lesson for children to grow up with. The results of the new poll are reflective of this, with 88 per cent of respondents feeling parents should not have a right to with- draw children from lessons. The majority, 94 per cent, felt that schools had a responsibility to promote inclusion. “The curriculum simply seeks to educate children that peo- ple and relationships are differ- ent but differences should be respected and celebrated,” re- searchers Mr Stones and Prof Glazzard concluded. “Young children need to be aware of LGBT people and rela- tionships because the school cur- riculum should prepare children for life in a socially inclusive so- ciety. “The LGBT curriculum does not teach children about sex. It teaches children about identities and relationships.” RUBY KITCHEN EDUCATION CORRESPONDENT Email: [email protected] Twier: @ReporterRuby The school curriculum should prepare children for life Professor Jonathan Glazzard, Leeds Becke University. A LESSON in Victorian education has been delivered to primary pupils as they stepped back in time to when their school was first built. Chapel Allerton Primary School, in Leeds, was established in 1876, shortly aſter a decree was passed that every child should aend education, and still has its original school hall. To explore its history and heritage, staff and students have held a Victorian day, with pupils invited to dress up for the occasion. Children were invited to line up and pay their pennies for entry on the day, before traditional lessons were delivered on slate boards. The school, having asked its community for information on the school’s history, was also sent a book outlining head teachers’ recollections from the era, as well as the hymns that would have been sung in assembly. “We ended up learning one, and singing it on the day,” said deputy head teacher Becca Pinder. “This would be the first time it had been heard in the hall for 150 years.” All the children were invited to choose their own Victorian names for the day, and there were traditional activities including life-drawing of peacock feathers and making peg dolls. “They spent the day in the way in which every Victorian child would have done,” said Mrs Pinder. “We did a lot of times table practice, and they all loved the dunce’s hat. We even inspected their hands to ensure they’d all washed. “It was really successful. The children were so engaged – it was incredibly relevant to them. They were all thinking about the children, of a long time ago, but in the same place as them.” Elements of the modern day curriculum were also incorporated into lessons, such as times tables, handwriting, and learning about the oceans and continents. “The lesson content wasn’t too dissimilar,” adds Mrs Pinder. “It was maybe just delivered in a very different way.” PAST TIMES: Deputy Head of Chapel Allerton Primary School Mrs Becca Pinder with, from left, Leo Dimbleby, Elizabeth Bailey and Amar Mohammed, all seven. PICTURE: GARY LONGBOTTOM Lessons delivered in Victorian education Sixth-form head hails ‘golden’ benefits of gap year A GAP year can be a “golden op- portunity” at a critical time in young people’s lives, a sixth form leader has said, calling for stu- dents to consider all options. Terry Fell, head of sixth form at Ripon Grammar School, says it can be tempting to “follow the crowd” at an overwhelming time in those final months in school. But, speaking on the benefits of a pause in education for those con- sidering a traditional route into university, he said there are many benefits to a gap year. “More and more of our stu- dents are choosing to pause for breath aſter completing their A-Levels, and to build into their plans a period away from formal education or training,” he said. “As a school we, like most uni- versities, see immense potential value in a gap year so long as it is used productively, and to en- hance the student’s experience and skillset.” Ripon Grammar School, the county’s only state boarding school, was named the North’s top state school by The Sunday Times for the sixth year running. Mr Fell, arguing that gap years can give students a chance to eval- uate their career options away from the pressures of school, adds that it can provide opportu- nity for work experience before they commit. Travel can broaden horizons and build confidence, he adds, while volunteer work can be im- mensely rewarding as well as in- stilling life-long skills. “It is very noticeable that young people joining university courses or employment aſter a gap year tend to be significantly more ma- ture and at ease with themselves than peers fresh from school,” he said. “The gap year allows you to reflect on what you want from life, and to establish a sense of purpose that is a great quality when undertaking study at the highest level, or to take the first steps upon a career. “The year aſter school is per- haps the one time in your adult life when you tend not to have considerations of family, career, health to tie you down. “This is the golden opportunity to undertake experiences and ad- ventures that you may never have chance to do again.” TERRY FELL: Head of sixth-form at Ripon Grammar School has praised benefits of gap year. YORK: A junior school in Acomb has been selected as the first to benefit from a funding scheme targeting youth projects. Carr Junior school has received £1,000 from the Persimmon Homes Building Futures initiative towards its schools swimming pool repair project. The school is looking to raise £11,000 to replace the lining of the pool. Headteacher Caroline Ryder said: “The pool is a huge asset to our school, community swimming groups as well as several other schools in the area.” Funding awarded for school pool ENVIRONMENT: Daily commutes in parts of Yorkshire are cut by six minutes during the school holidays when traffic from the school run eases. Admiral Car Insurance, analysing government data, found that 71 per cent of people believe too many parents drive to school, although two-thirds of parents argued they had no option. In the school holidays, it concluded, the average commute in Leeds fell by six minutes to 23, and by eight minutes to 31 in Sheffield. Time savings as school run ends Briefing BARNSLEY: A trio of media students have been nominated for an industry award for their work on online radio station The Vibe. Barnsley College students May Hugill, Kyle Walker and Karl Wellbelove are shortlisted for a Young Audio and Radio Industry Award for their weekly show Everything Football, which they run in addition to their studies. The awards ceremony will be held at the BBC Radio Theatre on May 17. Industry award for student hopefuls

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Page 1: YORKSHIREPOST MONDAY APRIL 22 2019 ......2019/04/22  · YORKSHIREPOST MONDAY APRIL 22 2019 08000319230 †Totalamountclaimedbackissubjecttofeesandtaxes.RegisteredinEngland:Unit1CRiparianWay,TheCrossingsBusiness

YORKSHIRE POST MONDAY APRIL 22 2019

08000319230†Total amount claimed back is subject to fees and taxes. Registered in England: Unit 1C Riparian Way, The Crossings BusinessPark, Cross Hills, West Yorkshire, BD20 7AA (Co Reg No: 07769324). PPI Claimback is a trading style of Investor Compensation (UK)Limited, regulated by the Claims Management Regulator in respect of regulated claims management activities; that registrationis recorded on the Claims Regulation website: www.gov.uk/moj/cmr (CRM28889).

Trust us to make your claim. We haveclaimed back over £400MILLION for ourcustomers since 2007.

DON’TMISSTHEPPICLAIM

DEADLINE

ACTNOWor you couldmiss out on

the chance toMr andMrs Irving, Glasgow£5,662 from Egg.

After 29th August 2019, you will lose your right to claim. Startingyour PPI check with PPI Claimback is simple just call us to getstarted and we’ll do the rest. If you don’t have PPI, you won’tpay a single penny!

CALLFREEFROMANYPHONE

DEADLINE

Aft er 29th August 2019, you will lose your right to claim. Starting

Theclock is really tickingto findout if youareowed£THOUSANDS

CLAIMUPTO£7,000†

“We are very grateful for whatyou’ve done, we would neverhave done this without you, weonly expected about £800, wedidn’t expect so much!”

Space scientist to speak at futures fairA SPACE scientist is to be guest ofhonour at a Yorkshire school’s ca-reers fair on Friday.

Queen Mary’s School’s femalefutures’ fair, open to girls and par-ents across the region, is aimed atinspiring a generation of womenin their careers. Dr Suzie Imber,winner of the BBC 2 series As-

tronauts: Do You Have What itTakes?, is to attend on Friday af-ternoon. Further guests includekeynote speaker Wendy LorettoBCon PhD, Dean of the Universityof Edinburgh Business School.

Carole Cameron, head ofQueen Mary’s School, said: “Weare extremely excited to be wel-

coming Suzie Imber and WendyLoretto alongside a whole host ofsuccessful women from a rangeof professional backgrounds.

“This event provides an oppor-tunity for the school to inspireand empower girls from acrossthe region to believe that they canachieve anything.”

Tributes to headmaster who ledschool through time of changesTRIBUTES HAVE been paid to aformer headmaster who led Har-rogate’s Ashville College througha period of significant change.

Michael Crosby, Ashville’s sev-enth headmaster, died on Thurs-day, April 11. He was 74.

Leading the school from 1987to 2003, he oversaw radical devel-opments in its history, includingthe development of a new musicand drama centre, an expand-ed boarding house for girls and,above all, its sixth-form centre.

Pre Prep began in Mr Crosby’stime, initially as part of JuniorSchool, before its own buildingwas constructed.

Mr Crosby and his wife Dianne,along with their two childrenHelen and Peter were involvedwith all aspects of Ashville andthe Ashvillian community, theschool has said.

“He encouraged Ashville tolook outward, raising tens ofthousands of pounds for domes-

tic and overseas causes, espe-cially Open Arms Malawi. He en-couraged overseas tours to widenexperiences, even taking partin a Great War Battlefields Tourwhich involved him ploddingthrough muddy trenches nearYpres.

“Shortly into his retirementMichael was diagnosed with can-

cer which he faced with great dig-nity and courage.

“His broad Christianity was akey feature of his appreciation ofeveryone he met. Ashville oweshim deep respect and gratitude– without him, many aspects ofcurrent school life would be miss-ing.”

Headmaster Richard Marshallsaid that he was well aware of MrCrosby’s “fine standing” withinthe school community.

“He will be greatly missed, andwe extend our condolences to Di-anne, Helen and Peter and theirfamilies as they and we come toterms with their loss.”

Jamie Search, chair of gover-nors, said: “Michael worked withmy father, as then chair at Ash-ville, so I know first-hand theenormous dedication Michaelgave to the school.

“He always strived to makethings better for all at Ashville,pupils and staff alike.”

MICHAEL CROSBY: AshvilleCollege’s seventh headmaster, whohas died at the age of 74.

EducationonMonday6 Twitter @yorkshirepost YP TabletApps Visit your app store

Parents back calls for lessons onsame sex relationships in schoolPARENTS SHOULD not have theright to refuse lessons on same-sex relationships, according tothe results of a new poll, but thereare concerns about the age thatchildren are involved.

Researchers at Leeds Beck-ett University, polling 366 par-ents and teachers in the wake ofprotests in parts of the country,asked questions over opinionsonthe access and delivery of lessons.

There is overwhelming back-ing for schools to teach childrenabout LGBT identities, the pollhas found, with 94 per cent of re-

spondents agreeing it was impor-tant.

But a lower proportion, at 73per cent, agreed that lessons insame-sex marriage should bedelivered from the age of four,and just 50 per cent agreed thatchildren of this age should learnabout transgender identities.

Professor Jonathan Glazzardand Samuel Stones, from the uni-versity’s Carnegie School of Edu-cation, jointly carried out the re-search.

“It is possible that respondentsfeel that young children need tobe protected from learning aboutLGBT identities and relation-ships, either because they feelthat the content will cover sex or

because they believe that youngchildren are easily influenced,”they said.

“This raises some interestingissues. Firstly, some children atthe age of four have same-sex par-ents. They are aware of same-sexrelationships and they may havebrothers, sisters, aunties and un-cles in their family who identityas LGBT.

“If these identities are not vis-ible in the school curriculum theycan start to feel that their lives arenot reflected in the school.

“Secondly, it is interesting tonote that there is divided opin-ion on the teaching of same-sexmarriage, despite the fact thatin the early years children learn

about heterosexual relationshipsthrough topics on ‘family’ androle-plays of mock straight wed-dings.

“Why is it acceptable to teachchildren about heterosexual rela-tionships and not about LGBT re-lationships and identities?”

There has been much debateon the subject nationwide, withteaching union delegates last

week backing a motion for les-sons to be made compulsory inUK primary schools.

Earlier this month, the Educa-tion Secretary said that childrenshould learn about diversity inthe classroom, and not in theschool playground or from the in-ternet.

Damian Hinds, speaking in re-lation to a parent protests overthe issue in Birmingham, saidlearning about the diversity of so-ciety was an important lesson forchildren to grow up with.

The results of the new poll arereflective of this, with 88 per centof respondents feeling parentsshould not have a right to with-draw children from lessons.

The majority, 94 per cent, feltthat schools had a responsibilityto promote inclusion.

“The curriculum simply seeksto educate children that peo-ple and relationships are differ-ent but differences should berespected and celebrated,” re-searchers Mr Stones and ProfGlazzard concluded.

“Young children need to beaware of LGBT people and rela-tionships because the school cur-riculum should prepare childrenfor life in a socially inclusive so-ciety.

“The LGBT curriculum doesnot teach children about sex. Itteaches children about identitiesand relationships.”

RUBY KITCHENEDUCATION CORRESPONDENT■Email: [email protected]■Twitter: @ReporterRuby

The schoolcurriculum

should preparechildren for lifeProfessor Jonathan Glazzard,

Leeds Beckett University.

A LESSON in Victorian educationhas been delivered to primarypupils as they stepped back intime to when their school wasfirst built.

Chapel Allerton PrimarySchool, in Leeds, was establishedin 1876, shortly after a decree waspassed that every child shouldattend education, and still has itsoriginal school hall.

To explore its history andheritage, staff and students

have held a Victorian day, withpupils invited to dress up for theoccasion.

Children were invited toline up and pay their penniesfor entry on the day, beforetraditional lessons weredelivered on slate boards.

The school, having asked itscommunity for information onthe school’s history, was also senta book outlining head teachers’recollections from the era, as

well as the hymns that wouldhave been sung in assembly.

“We ended up learning one,and singing it on the day,” saiddeputy head teacher BeccaPinder.

“This would be the first timeit had been heard in the hall for150 years.”

All the children were invitedto choose their own Victoriannames for the day, and therewere traditional activities

including life-drawing of peacockfeathers and making peg dolls.

“They spent the day in theway in which every Victorianchild would have done,” saidMrs Pinder. “We did a lot oftimes table practice, and they allloved the dunce’s hat. We eveninspected their hands to ensurethey’d all washed.

“It was really successful. Thechildren were so engaged – itwas incredibly relevant to them.

They were all thinking about thechildren, of a long time ago, butin the same place as them.”

Elements of the modernday curriculum were alsoincorporated into lessons, suchas times tables, handwriting, andlearning about the oceans andcontinents.

“The lesson content wasn’ttoo dissimilar,” adds Mrs Pinder.“It was maybe just delivered in avery different way.”

PAST TIMES: Deputy Head of Chapel Allerton Primary School Mrs Becca Pinder with, from left, Leo Dimbleby, Elizabeth Bailey and Amar Mohammed, all seven. PICTURE: GARY LONGBOTTOM

Lessons delivered in Victorian education

Sixth-formhead hails‘golden’benefits ofgap yearA GAP year can be a “golden op-portunity” at a critical time inyoung people’s lives, a sixth formleader has said, calling for stu-dents to consider all options.

Terry Fell, head of sixth format Ripon Grammar School, saysit can be tempting to “follow thecrowd” at an overwhelming timein those final months in school.But, speaking on the benefits of apause in education for those con-sidering a traditional route intouniversity, he said there are manybenefits to a gap year.

“More and more of our stu-dents are choosing to pause forbreath after completing theirA-Levels, and to build into theirplans a period away from formaleducation or training,” he said.

“As a school we, like most uni-versities, see immense potentialvalue in a gap year so long as itis used productively, and to en-hance the student’s experienceand skillset.”

Ripon Grammar School, thecounty’s only state boardingschool, was named the North’stop state school by The SundayTimes for the sixth year running.

Mr Fell, arguing that gap yearscan give students a chance to eval-uate their career options awayfrom the pressures of school,adds that it can provide opportu-nity for work experience beforethey commit.

Travel can broaden horizonsand build confidence, he adds,while volunteer work can be im-mensely rewarding as well as in-stilling life-long skills.

“It is very noticeable that youngpeople joining university coursesor employment after a gap yeartend to be significantly more ma-ture and at ease with themselvesthan peers fresh from school,”he said. “The gap year allows youto reflect on what you want fromlife, and to establish a sense ofpurpose that is a great qualitywhen undertaking study at thehighest level, or to take the firststeps upon a career.

“The year after school is per-haps the one time in your adultlife when you tend not to haveconsiderations of family, career,health to tie you down.

“This is the golden opportunityto undertake experiences and ad-ventures that you may never havechance to do again.”

TERRY FELL: Head of sixth-format Ripon Grammar School haspraised benefits of gap year.

YORK: A junior school in Acombhas been selected as the first tobenefit from a funding schemetargeting youth projects.

Carr Junior school hasreceived £1,000 from thePersimmon Homes BuildingFutures initiative towards itsschools swimming pool repairproject. The school is lookingto raise £11,000 to replace thelining of the pool. HeadteacherCaroline Ryder said: “The poolis a huge asset to our school,community swimming groups aswell as several other schools inthe area.”

Fundingawardedforschoolpool

ENVIRONMENT: Dailycommutes in parts of Yorkshireare cut by six minutes duringthe school holidays when trafficfrom the school run eases.

Admiral Car Insurance,analysing government data,found that 71 per cent of peoplebelieve too many parents driveto school, although two-thirdsof parents argued they had nooption. In the school holidays,it concluded, the averagecommute in Leeds fell by sixminutes to 23, and by eightminutes to 31 in Sheffield.

Timesavingsasschoolrunends

Briefing

BARNSLEY: A trio of mediastudents have been nominatedfor an industry award for theirwork on online radio station TheVibe.

Barnsley College studentsMatty Hugill, Kyle Walker andKarl Wellbelove are shortlistedfor a Young Audio and RadioIndustry Award for their weeklyshow Everything Football, whichthey run in addition to theirstudies. The awards ceremonywill be held at the BBC RadioTheatre on May 17.

Industryawardforstudenthopefuls