At most secondary schools, teachers have little time to really get to know their pupils. But at this state academy, pupils are divided into small tutor groups of 12 or 13, known as a “Crew”
In their first week, Crews go on an adventure training course in Wales with their team-mates and bond over mountain hikes, abseiling and kayaking
Back in Doncaster, they meet each other and their Crew leader every day to discuss their emotional wellbeing and educational progress
Poncia, for example, has been with her class since they joined XP five years ago
She knows all their families and has helped them through psychological traumas, academic challenges and behavioural problems
There are no uniforms at the school and pupils do not have to stay in their classrooms throughout their lessons. When they are doing their own research, they can work on laptops in the open-plan common room rather than in rows at desks
Most radically, the traditional curriculum has been torn up
There are no history, geography, chemistry, physics, biology, English or maths classes
Students instead learn through academically rigorous interdisciplinary “expeditions”, based on real-life issues
They pick up all the knowledge they need to meet the requirements of the national curriculum and take their exams, but the education is delivered through a prism that makes it seem relevant to their lives
It seems to work
🧑🤝🧑 The school is 11 times oversubscribed, with 550 applications for every 50 places
👨🎓 In 2018, Ofsted judged XP to be outstanding in all categories.
🙋♀️Attendance is way above the national average and so are exam result
Caiden, (second left) whose father works in maintenance for a hotel, says the school has shown him the point of education
“Instead of trying to build you all into the same person, they try to build you how you want to learn”
The students the Times met are all articulate, engaged and animated by their studies
Summer has just recorded a TEDx Talk about the pressures on young people and is putting the finishing touches to her first novel, which the school is helping her to publish
XP was founded by Gwyn ap Harri and Andy Sprakes, two teachers from Doncaster, after researching similar successful models in the United States
“We thought, how could we go back and carry on doing what we were doing when we’ve seen what’s possible for our kids?”
Creativity and curiosity should not be the preserve of the middle classes or private schools, they insist
“Some people want working-class kids to conform. We want them to be able to express who they are and have the same chances as everybody else” thetimes.co.uk/article/no-uni…
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🔺 EXCLUSIVE: A Liberal Democrat MP has been refused entry to Hong Kong to visit her newborn grandson
Wera Hobhouse, 65, flew to the Chinese region — a British territory until 1997 — on Thursday but was held at airport security, questioned and put on the first flight home five hours later
She had her passport confiscated, was asked about her job and purpose of her trip, had her luggage searched and swabbed, and was then escorted to the boarding gate by four immigration officers
Russia attacked Ukraine with 145 drones and six long-range missiles overnight, including attacks on energy infrastructure, despite President Putin claiming he had ordered an end to strikes on the Ukrainian power grid
Ukraine has an undeniable right to defend itself on its own and supported by partners, President Stubb of Finland said today after meeting with President Zelensky in Helsinki
📸KIMMO BRANDT/EPA
Zelensky said he will talk to Trump today, the first time they have spoken directly since the bust-up between the two in the Oval Office last month.
Zelensky said he expects to hear details from the US president regarding his two-hour phone call with Putin yesterday
Lucy Powell, the Leader of the Commons, said that an Elections Bill — which would include lowering the voting age — could come in the next parliamentary session
In its manifesto Labour committed to giving “16 and 17-year-olds the right to vote in all elections”, but the pledge was not included in the government’s first King’s speech, setting out its priorities for its first parliamentary session
On the eve of election day, the polls had predicted the closest race in modern times. Instead, it was a rout
With Donald Trump poised to sweep Kamala Harris in all seven swing states, the pollsters — despite spending an estimated half a billion dollars on surveying the nation — underestimated the president-elect’s support for the third election in a row
🔺EXCLUSIVE: King Charles and his eldest son make millions from feudal levies on schools, hospitals, homeowners and the very charities they represent, a joint investigation by The Sunday Times and @C4Dispatches reveals today thetimes.com/uk/royal-famil…
@C4Dispatches The ancient property empires that fund the King and the Prince of Wales have remained a closely guarded secret within the royal family and its small circle of advisers for centuries.
Even parliament has been denied access to the list of landholdings held by the royals
@C4Dispatches We used the royal addresses to uncover how the Duchies of Lancaster and Cornwall are making millions of pounds by charging government departments, councils, businesses and the general public via a series of rents and feudal levies on land largely seized by medieval monarchs