Contact Us

Use the form on the right to contact us.

You can edit the text in this area, and change where the contact form on the right submits to, by entering edit mode using the modes on the bottom right. 

Culcheth Lane, Newton Heath, Manchester, M40 1LS
England, M40 1LS
United Kingdom

0161 681 3455

Current News ๐Ÿ—ž

DfE Press Release - Details on phased wider opening of schools, colleges and nurseries

Guest User

Schools, colleges and nurseries to begin to prepare to open to more young people from 1 June at the earliest, with protective measures in place

Plans for schools, colleges and early years settings across England to potentially open to more children and young people have been set out today (11 May).

As the Prime Minister announced yesterday, by 1 June at the earliest primary schools in England may be able to welcome back children in key transition years โ€“ nursery, Reception, Year 1 and Year 6.

Secondary schools, sixth forms and colleges will also work towards the possibility of providing some face-to-face contact with young people in Year 10 and Year 12 to help them prepare for exams next year.

However, as the PM has said, progress will be monitored every day. If the virus stays on the downward slope, and the R remains below 1, then โ€“ and only then โ€“ will it become safe to go further, move to the second step and reopen schools.

Early years settings may also be able to open for all children. The aim is for other primary years to return later in June, but this will be kept under review, and there are currently no plans to reopen secondary schools for other year groups before the summer holidays.

Priority groups, including vulnerable children and children of critical workers who have been eligible to attend throughout school closures, will continue to be able to attend schools, colleges and early years settings as they are currently.

The transmission rate has decreased, and the aim is that by 1 June at the earliest it will be safe for a greater number of children and young people to return to education and childcare. As a result, the Government is asking schools and childcare providers to plan on this basis, ahead of confirmation of the scientific advice.

This will only happen when the five key tests set by Government justify the changes at the time, including the rate of infection decreasing and the enabling programmes set out in the Roadmap operating effectively.

Guidance to the sector, published today (11 May), sets out a range of protective measures to ensure education settings remain safe places, including:

  • reducing the size of classes and keeping children in small groups without mixing with others

  • staggered break and lunch times, as well as drop offs and pick ups

  • increasing the frequency of cleaning, reducing the used of shared items and utilising outdoor space

Preparation for the potential reopening of schools will be part of the second phase of modifications to social distancing measures which the Prime Minister set out yesterday โ€“ following more people returning to work in step one, and coming alongside the possible reopening of some non-essential retail in phase two.

The Government will continue to work closely with the sector in the build up to and following pupilsโ€™ return.

Education Secretary Gavin Williamson said:

I know how hard schools, colleges, early years settings and parents are working to make sure children and young people can continue to learn at home, and I cannot thank them enough for that.

But nothing can replace being in the classroom, which is why I want to get children back to school as soon as it is safe to do so. The latest scientific advice indicates it will be safe for more children to return to school from 1 June, but we will continue to limit the overall numbers in school and introduce protective measures to prevent transmission.

This marks the first step towards having all young people back where they belong โ€“ in nurseries, schools and colleges โ€“ but we will continue to be led by the scientific evidence and will only take further steps when the time is right.

Whilst there will be no penalty for families who do not send their children to school, families will be strongly encouraged to take up these places - unless the child or a family member is shielding or the child is particularly vulnerable due to an underlying condition.

The Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencies advising the Government has a high degree of confidence that the severity of the disease in children is lower than in adults and a moderately high degree of confidence that children aged up to 11 are less susceptible to it.

All staff are already eligible for testing, and staff in shielding and high-risk groups should remain at home.

From 1 June, all children and young people eligible to return to their settings will have access to testing, if they display symptoms, as will any symptomatic member(s) of their household.

This will enable children and staff to get back to school if they test negative, and if they test positive a test and trace approach can be taken. Where a setting has a positive case, Public Health England will advise on the appropriate course of action, and the relevant group of people with whom the individual has mixed closely, should be sent home and advised to self-isolate for 14 days.

Gavin WilliamsonSecretary of State for Education

Gavin Williamson

Secretary of State for Education

๐Ÿ“‹ Results of the Family Survey

Guest User

Screenshot 2020-05-11 at 11.56.13.png

Dear Parents / Carers

A week ago we sent out one text message link to each parent / guardian (which was around 350 messages) and so far we have received 36 completed feedback forms. Thank you very much for everyone who returned a form and it is still possible to complete one, so please fill one in to let us know how we can best support the children at this difficult time.

Below are the results so far and I wanted to update you all on how we intend to respond to the suggestions provided.

Screenshot 2020-05-11 at 10.51.48.png
Screenshot 2020-05-11 at 10.51.58.png
Screenshot 2020-05-11 at 10.52.08.png

How we are improving communication:

  • The teachers have received the results of this survey and can give further pointers to resources that are available on different types of devices.

  • All teachers are now checking their resources on phones to help make them easier to use.

  • The website is being continuously tidied up so that pages load quicker and use less data.

  • We are soon going to be making contact with those families in which we have seen less online activity to check whether they need further help with remote learning and digital communication.

  • We are constantly updating our databases in school to ensure that we have the correct email address for all parents.

  • Each page of the website has the Google Translate function and there is also this option in Google Docs etc within Google Classroom tasks (look in the file menu for โ€˜translateโ€™).

Screenshot 2020-05-11 at 10.52.20.png
Screenshot 2020-05-11 at 10.52.29.png
Screenshot 2020-05-11 at 10.52.36.png
  • We are very pleased to hear that the majority of families who responded are happy with communication with school.

  • We will be seeking to find the views of all families, as there are those who have technical difficulties who wonโ€™t have been able to access the form or these results.

Screenshot 2020-05-11 at 10.52.51.png
Screenshot 2020-05-11 at 10.52.58.png
Screenshot 2020-05-11 at 10.53.06.png

How we are improving remote learning:

  • The teachers are adding useful tips and video guides within their Google Classroom to provide more support on submitting work and other technical issues.

  • The staff will soon be having the second training webinar with our IT technical support company on how best to use Google Classroom and also on Google Meet, which will help us learn the best way to provide video input for the children. Union guidance is that teachers do not contact children from home because of safeguarding and privacy reasons. There are also other safeguarding and privacy issues with video conferencing and streaming. Recently there have been cases of people entering a group video call without invitation and, in extreme circumstances, displaying extreme, illegal and disturbing images. There is also the small chance that there might be accidental inappropriate language and behaviour occurring in the background of calls. We will update you all soon on how best we can provide pre-recorded and safe video content.

  • The work put into Google Classrooms was initially the same as the website as we knew that not many children were accessing it. Since we started using Google Classroom we have seen child engagement rise from 30% to 60% and rising. The teachers are regularly updating tasks which increasingly cater for different needs with extension tasks.

  • If your child finishes the work set in Google Classroom then please feel free to explore the Learning Zone page which has over 100 links you can explore with your child. The Hobby Zone has ideas for different interests that could be started, providing a good opportunity to learn with someone. The Relaxation Zone is also a good space for the whole family to take some time to calm, reflect and relax.

  • The teachers need to keep a balance between providing new content, marking work, updating Twitter and their own home lives so if you want your child to complete extra tasks then please use the other resources on the website. The teachers would love to see what extra things the children do but they wonโ€™t have time Iโ€™m afraid to check all the answers from other websites. Use the contact links on the class pages to get in touch and share from home.

  • Unfortunately staff will not have the time or access to contact every child, every week as some of them are being shielded at home and not coming into school. Members of staff who can come into school are making regular contact with some families to check they are ok and providing support where necessary. If you wish for the school to make contact with your child (it may not be your childโ€™s class teacher at the present time unfortunately) then please email enquiries@allsaintsnh-pri.manchester.sch.uk. As mentioned before, we are looking into ways of reassuring the children with more contact and also providing video content of the staff within Google Classrooms.

  • We are trying to make the work clearer and we are still learning ourselves on how best to produce tasks that can be written on etc. Any improvements will be communicated within your childโ€™s Google Classroom.

We are delighted to have received so many positive comments about communication, our caring staff, our hard work, protecting the children, supporting key workers and other families. As we move forward we will continue to improve remote learning and increasing contact with the children. As always, we welcome your feedback.

Thank you to all the children and families for your patience and support in this difficult time. It is greatly appreciated. I would also like to thank the staff again for working so hard, taking on new ideas and demonstrating their commitment and care for the children.

We will continue to keep you informed as clearly and as quickly as we can on any developments and please know that the safety and health of the children, families and staff is our first priority.

Sharp.jpg

Kind regards

Mr. Sharp - Deputy Head Teacher

PM address to the nation on coronavirus: 10 May 2020

Guest User

Follow us on: www.gov.uk/number10 www.twitter.com/10DowningStreet www.facebook.com/10DowningStreet https://www.instagram.com/10downingstreet/

It is now almost two months since the people of this country began to put up with restrictions on their freedom โ€“ your freedom โ€“ of a kind that we have never seen before in peace or war.

And you have shown the good sense to support those rules overwhelmingly.

You have put up with all the hardships of that programme of social distancing.

Because you understand that as things stand, and as the experience of every other country has shown, itโ€™s the only way to defeat the coronavirus - the most vicious threat this country has faced in my lifetime.

And though the death toll has been tragic, and the suffering immense.

And though we grieve for all those we have lost.

It is a fact that by adopting those measures we prevented this country from being engulfed by what could have been a catastrophe in which the reasonable worst case scenario was half a million fatalities.

And it is thanks to your effort and sacrifice in stopping the spread of this disease that the death rate is coming down and hospital admissions are coming down.

And thanks to you we have protected our NHS and saved many thousands of lives.

And so I know - you know - that it would be madness now to throw away that achievement by allowing a second spike.

We must stay alert.

We must continue to control the virus and save lives.

And yet we must also recognise that this campaign against the virus has come at colossal cost to our way of life.

We can see it all around us in the shuttered shops and abandoned businesses and darkened pubs and restaurants.

And there are millions of people who are both fearful of this terrible disease, and at the same time also fearful of what this long period of enforced inactivity will do to their livelihoods and their mental and physical wellbeing.

To their futures and the futures of their children.

So I want to provide tonight - for you - the shape of a plan to address both fears.

Both to beat the virus and provide the first sketch of a road map for reopening society.

A sense of the way ahead, and when and how and on what basis we will take the decisions to proceed.

I will be setting out more details in Parliament tomorrow and taking questions from the public in the evening.

I have consulted across the political spectrum, across all four nations of the UK.

And though different parts of the country are experiencing the pandemic at different rates.

And though it is right to be flexible in our response.

I believe that as Prime Minister of the United Kingdom โ€“ Scotland, England, Wales, Northern Ireland, there is a strong resolve to defeat this together.

And today a general consensus on what we could do.

And I stress could.

Because although we have a plan, it is a conditional plan.

And since our priority is to protect the public and save lives, we cannot move forward unless we satisfy the five tests.

We must protect our NHS.

We must see sustained falls in the death rate.

We must see sustained and considerable falls in the rate of infection.

We must sort out our challenges in getting enough PPE to the people who need it, and yes, it is a global problem but we must fix it.

And last, we must make sure that any measures we take do not force the reproduction rate of the disease - the R - back up over one, so that we have the kind of exponential growth we were facing a few weeks ago.

And to chart our progress and to avoid going back to square one, we are establishing a new Covid Alert System run by a new Joint Biosecurity Centre.

And that Covid Alert Level will be determined primarily by R and the number of coronavirus cases.

And in turn that Covid Alert Level will tell us how tough we have to be in our social distancing measures โ€“ the lower the level the fewer the measures.

The higher the level, the tougher and stricter we will have to be.

There will be five alert levels.

Level One means the disease is no longer present in the UK and Level Five is the most critical โ€“ the kind of situation we could have had if the NHS had been overwhelmed.

Over the period of the lockdown we have been in Level Four, and it is thanks to your sacrifice we are now in a position to begin to move in steps to Level Three.

And as we go everyone will have a role to play in keeping the R down.

By staying alert and following the rules.

And to keep pushing the number of infections down there are two more things we must do.

We must reverse rapidly the awful epidemics in care homes and in the NHS, and though the numbers are coming down sharply now, there is plainly much more to be done.

And if we are to control this virus, then we must have a world-beating system for testing potential victims, and for tracing their contacts.

So that โ€“ all told - we are testing literally hundreds of thousands of people every day.

We have made fast progress on testing โ€“ but there is so much more to do now, and we can.

When this began, we hadnโ€™t seen this disease before, and we didnโ€™t fully understand its effects.

With every day we are getting more and more data.

We are shining the light of science on this invisible killer, and we will pick it up where it strikes.

Because our new system will be able in time to detect local flare-ups โ€“ in your area โ€“ as well as giving us a national picture.

And yet when I look at where we are tonight, we have the R below one, between 0.5 and 0.9 โ€“ but potentially only just below one.

And though we have made progress in satisfying at least some of the conditions I have given.

We have by no means fulfilled all of them.

And so no, this is not the time simply to end the lockdown this week.

Instead we are taking the first careful steps to modify our measures.

And the first step is a change of emphasis that we hope that people will act on this week.

We said that you should work from home if you can, and only go to work if you must.

We now need to stress that anyone who canโ€™t work from home, for instance those in construction or manufacturing, should be actively encouraged to go to work.

And we want it to be safe for you to get to work. So you should avoid public transport if at all possible โ€“ because we must and will maintain social distancing, and capacity will therefore be limited.

So work from home if you can, but you should go to work if you canโ€™t work from home.

And to ensure you are safe at work we have been working to establish new guidance for employers to make workplaces COVID-secure.

And when you do go to work, if possible do so by car or even better by walking or bicycle. But just as with workplaces, public transport operators will also be following COVID-secure standards.

And from this Wednesday, we want to encourage people to take more and even unlimited amounts of outdoor exercise.

You can sit in the sun in your local park, you can drive to other destinations, you can even play sports but only with members of your own household.

You must obey the rules on social distancing and to enforce those rules we will increase the fines for the small minority who break them.

And so every day, with ever increasing data, we will be monitoring the R and the number of new infections, and the progress we are making, and if we as a nation begin to fulfil the conditions I have set out, then in the next few weeks and months we may be able to go further.

In step two โ€“ at the earliest by June 1 โ€“ after half term โ€“ we believe we may be in a position to begin the phased reopening of shops and to get primary pupils back into schools, in stages, beginning with reception, Year 1 and Year 6.

Our ambition is that secondary pupils facing exams next year will get at least some time with their teachers before the holidays. And we will shortly be setting out detailed guidance on how to make it work in schools and shops and on transport.

And step three - at the earliest by July - and subject to all these conditions and further scientific advice; if and only if the numbers support it, we will hope to re-open at least some of the hospitality industry and other public places, provided they are safe and enforce social distancing.

Throughout this period of the next two months we will be driven not by mere hope or economic necessity. We are going to be driven by the science, the data and public health.

And I must stress again that all of this is conditional, it all depends on a series of big Ifs. It depends on all of us โ€“ the entire country โ€“ to follow the advice, to observe social distancing, and to keep that R down.

And to prevent re-infection from abroad, I am serving notice that it will soon be the time โ€“ with transmission significantly lower โ€“ to impose quarantine on people coming into this country by air.

And it is because of your efforts to get the R down and the number of infections down here, that this measure will now be effective.

And of course we will be monitoring our progress locally, regionally, and nationally and if there are outbreaks, if there are problems, we will not hesitate to put on the brakes.

We have been through the initial peak โ€“ but it is coming down the mountain that is often more dangerous.

We have a route, and we have a plan, and everyone in government has the all-consuming pressure and challenge to save lives, restore livelihoods and gradually restore the freedoms that we need.

But in the end this is a plan that everyone must make work.

And when I look at what you have done already.

The patience and common sense you have shown.

The fortitude of the elderly whose isolation we all want to end as fast as we can.

The incredible bravery and hard work of our NHS staff, our care workers.

The devotion and self-sacrifice of all those in every walk of life who are helping us to beat this disease.

Police, bus drivers, train drivers, pharmacists, supermarket workers, road hauliers, bin collectors, cleaners, security guards, postal workers, our teachers and a thousand more.

The scientists who are working round the clock to find a vaccine.

When I think of the millions of everyday acts of kindness and thoughtfulness that are being performed across this country.

And that have helped to get us through this first phase.

I know that we can use this plan to get us through the next.

And if we canโ€™t do it by those dates, and if the alert level wonโ€™t allow it, we will simply wait and go on until we have got it right.

We will come back from this devilish illness.

We will come back to health, and robust health.

And though the UK will be changed by this experience, I believe we can be stronger and better than ever before. More resilient, more innovative, more economically dynamic, but also more generous and more sharing.

But for now we must stay alert, control the virus and save lives.

Thank you very much.

๐Ÿ‡ฌ๐Ÿ‡ง VE Day Assembly from Father Andrew (and Father Edwards)

Guest User

A wonderful assembly from two Newton Heath rectors! You may wonder what that means. Take a look and reflect on the meaning of the momentous day 75 years ago when the war in Europe ended.

Many millions celebrated the end of the fighting against Germany whilst remembering that many of their loved ones would not come home and thousands were still fighting against Japan. The end of the second world war would come on the 15th August 1945 and is known as VJ Day (Victory over Japan Day).

Thank you Father Andrew for telling us about that day and also the lessons we can take from the examples set by our ancestors, some of whom are still here with us today.

A little bit of fun before some seriousness as we visit All Saints Rectory Breakfast Room on 8th May 1945 and the Reverend Osbert Edwards. VE Day prayer From...

โ›‘ Online Safeguarding Hub for Parents

Guest User

Screenshot 2020-05-07 at 14.36.26.png

With children likely spending more time online, now is a good time to remind parents of the risks certain websites, apps and social media can pose, so that they are aware of the steps they can take to protect their child.

New: Safeguarding hub for parents

The Key have created a safeguarding hub that allows your pupilsโ€™ parents to access interactive guidance on setting up parental controls on their childโ€™s devices, as well as guidance on apps like TikTok, YouTube and Instagram and more.