Education leaders in North Yorkshire have vowed no child will be left behind as a result of the coronavirus pandemic.
A national package of £1bn of support has been promised by the education secretary, Gavin Williamson, of which £650m will go to state primary and secondary schools, and the rest to help disadvantaged children to access high quality tuition.
Supported by North Yorkshire County Council, headteachers across the Harrogate district are now looking at the best ways to help students catch up on missed learning over the last three months. Stuart Carlton, corporate director of children and young people’s services at NYCC, said:
“School leaders and staff will be looking at how best to use the government’s funding for catch-up education.
“There will be a no one-size-fits-all approach to this; schools will be making their decisions based on the needs of their pupils, the availability of teaching staff and other considerations. It may be they run intervention programmes, bring in extra teaching capacity or “bolt-on” lessons at the end of the traditional school day.
“But the county council and North Yorkshire’s schools are all completely committed to making sure no child’s education loses out as a result of the pandemic and will be working very hard to make sure we get every pupil to where they need to be in their academic progress.”
Mr Carlton thanked pupils, parents and teachers for their hard work in challenging circumstances this year.
At present, Years 10 and 12 are being prioritised in secondary schools, with a quarter of these year groups in school at a time. The education secretary has announced he expects all pupils in both primary and secondary schools to return to full-time lessons in September, with more guidance to be published in the coming weeks.
Mr Carlton said NYCC and schools are keen to have that guidance soon in order to allow them to plan for a safe return. Independent holiday clubs and activities should also be resuming this summer, allowing children to be cared for while parents work.
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Meanwhile, an independent school near Harrogate has reopened to all pupils this morning, following changes in government guidance.
Belmont Grosvenor, a prep school based on the edge of Birstwith, has welcomed pupils from reception up to Year 6 thanks to small class sizes and extensive grounds.
The school had previously opened its Magic Tree Nursery, as well as Reception, Year 1 and Year 6 classes from June 1, in line with government advice. When that changed to allow schools to make their own decisions about which pupils could safely return, it welcomed back Year 5 from June 15, before opening to the rest of its year groups today.
Headmistress Sophia Ashworth Jones said:
“We are fortunate to be set in 20 acres of beautiful grounds, our average class size is 15 pupils, and we have plenty of both indoor and outdoor space to manage the social-distancing guidelines well.
“Even before the Covid-19 pandemic, our children, from nursery to Year 6, enjoyed outdoor learning daily, from taking part in Forest School lessons in our woodland, to performing in the school’s outside amphitheatre. Now our children are back in school, the outside space has taken on an even greater importance.”
While many parents have chosen to send their children back, the school is also continuing to offer remote learning for those who are staying at home. As well as daily lessons, the school has been offering online assemblies, show-and-tell meetings, book clubs and well-being sessions for pupils since lockdown began in March.
- How has home schooling been for you? Has your children’s school been supportive or do you feel teachers could have done more? Are you ready for lessons to resume? Tell us about your experience by getting in touch.
Woodfield Community Primary School in Harrogate reflects on its first week back after re-opening to limited year groups on Tuesday.
Woodfield Primary has remained open throughout the lockdown for the children of key workers. However, all pupils in nursery, reception, and year 1 are now also able to go back to school.
Jo Marwood, headteacher at the school, spoke to the Stray Ferret about how they have found the first week back:
It’s definitely not the normal… We have about 25% of our children back. We are focusing on the ‘bubble’ element. We have no more than 10 in each group and we keep the bubbles completely seperate. They have seperate start and finish times, break times and we have two metres between each desk in the classroms. We are staggering the return of pupils, so year 6 pupils will start to come back from next week.
There are government guidelines for schools to adhere too but there is no set “uniform” approach.” This means not all schools have re-opened, and the ones that are may all be taking a slightly different approach.
No school is the same… It depends on the size of the building, how many pupils you have and also how you interpret the guidelines. We are doing absolutely everything we can to ensure the safety of our pupils and staff. I dont think at the moment we could have all of the children back… We just don’t have the staff or the rooms.
Despite the gradual re-opening of schools within the borough, it is up to individual parents to decide if they feel it is safe to send their children back.

Only a third of North Yorkshire’s primary schools are following government guidance on reopening today as concerns remain over the safety of pupils and staff.
Children in reception, year one and year six could all be back in lessons from today – but not every primary school has chosen to follow the changing advice.
Just 111 schools across the county are planning to reopen to pupils in some or all of those year groups today, according to the county council, and 24 more are expecting to follow next week. Judith Kirk, NYCC’s assistant director for education and skills, said:
“Schools have drawn up a bespoke approach to reopening, appropriate to their circumstances, but we want to reassure parents that when children come into primary schools in North Yorkshire, the first focus will be children’s safety and wellbeing, settling them in and making them feel secure, before we begin teaching the curriculum.
“We are working with schools, headteachers and teaching unions to support each school and the decision made by head teachers and governing bodies.”
Teaching unions told The Stray Ferret last month that they had serious reservations about their ability to keep everyone safe, and it seems those concerns remain. Some schools say they will follow full government guidance, while others say it would not be safe to reopen at all, other than for the children of key workers who have already been attending.
‘Not missing out’
Among those opening for some year groups today is Bilton Grange Primary School in Harrogate, which will welcome back pupils in its reception classes. However, the school has told parents it does not feel it can safely open to years one and six yet – something which has been welcomed by parent Jamie Haslam.
His daughter Erin is in year six at the school, but has been learning at home, alongside older sister Jessica who attends Harrogate High School, with support from teachers and their parents since the start of lockdown. Jamie said he was relieved not to have to make the decision himself about whether it was safe for Erin to return – though he does feel sad she’s missing the final weeks at primary school.
“I remember from last year when Jessica left, it was nice that last bit of primary school. I don’t feel she’s missing out on anything education-wise, she will just miss those nice experiences with her friends.”
Schools across the district will teach pupils taught in smaller groups than usual class sizes. Each small group is being kept apart from others, with measures such as staggered arrival times and breaks introduced, and additional ventilation, cleaning and other measures in place to minimise the risks of infection.
North Yorkshire county councillor Patrick Mulligan said:
“All schools have carried out risk assessments looking at social distancing, staffing and hygiene and those that can open safely will be doing on Monday. Not all schools will be open on June 1; we are a large rural county with a relatively high number of small rural schools – including traditional church schools based around small classrooms – where implementing social distancing simply isn’t possible.
“We would like to reassure parents who are sending their children to school that schools are working hard to ensure the safety and wellbeing of pupils.”
The county council is also working to deliver home-to-school transport for those pupils who already qualified for it. Parents in need of transport over the coming weeks have been asked to complete a survey on the council’s website.
Is your child’s school reopening today? How do you feel about sending them back? Contact us with your views.
Teachers’ union warns opening Harrogate schools will be a ‘nightmare’The NASUWT teachers’ union representative in Harrogate has warned that reopening schools will be a logistical nightmare.
Sharon Calvert, who has decades of experience in teaching, said the local teachers she represents are very worried about plans to welcome back some classes from June 1.
“These young children will not keep their social distancing, The first thing they will want to do is run inside and hug their teacher, it will be impossible to keep apart. The headteachers I know are mortified about these plans,” she told the Stray Ferret.
She believes that schools should not be given any deadline to reopen. Instead, she says that they should only open when it is clear that it is safe.
Sharon said the guidance from the government is as “clear as mud.”
“This is very serious, it is like we are being asked to send our children over the top. The children don’t seem to be affected quite as badly but the children could take that home to someone who is vulnerable. The teachers are just as worried about spreading it to their families.”
What are schools planning?
North Yorkshire County Council has said it will leave individual schools in the Harrogate district to decide whether it is safe for them to reopen, as previously reported.
Each school will need to take a risk assessment and the council has said it will give them support and advice.
That leaves it up to headteachers across the Harrogate district to decide when they will reopen and how teaching will work with social distancing.
One primary school, Saltergate, in Harrogate has said when it opens it will try to replicate the system in Denmark. The school sent a notice to parents to say they will keep groups of around seven children in “protective bubbles.”
They will also keep social distancing to the best of their ability, focus on regular handwashing, and introduce staggered start and finish times.
Harrogate district schools left to decide if it is safe to reopenIndividual schools in the Harrogate district will be left to decide whether it is safe for them to reopen next month.
North Yorkshire County Council said it will give schools their full support and bespoke advice. Each school will need to take a risk assessment.
It comes after the Government set out its road map which involved schools welcoming back some classes from June 1.
Some schools in the Harrogate district may be ready to reopen by then but the council thinks that many will stagger their openings.
There will not be any punishments for parents who decide against sending their children to schools.
More than 200 schools across North Yorkshire have stayed open to vulnerable children and the children of key workers during the coronavirus lockdown.
Stuart Carlton is the Corporate Director of Children and Young People’s Service at North Yorkshire County Council.
He said: “We are advising schools to prepare to be open from June 1 at the earliest, awaiting Government confirmation that they will.
“We are here supporting schools and headteachers as best we can to make the correct and safest decisions in line with Government advice.”
Some councils have taken a different view. Calderdale, Bury, Liverpool, and Hartlepool have all advised against a wider school reopening.
If you are a parent, teacher, or headteacher and have concerns about the schools reopening then please get in touch with the Stray Ferret by sending us an email.
Rainbows continue to appear on windows across the Harrogate district
The Stray Ferret has been capturing some of the creative rainbow displays, that continue to appear in peoples windows across the borough.
Thousands of children are being encouraged to make the pictures to ‘spread hope’ amid the ongoing coronavirus pandemic.
The idea is to give passers-by something to smile at, whilst also giving children the opportunity to get creative whilst staying at home.

