-
China Braces for New Era as Biden Makes Last Stand With Xi - 6 mins ago
-
Maroons find groove and send Tamaraws packing - 8 mins ago
-
How to Watch UFC 309, Jones vs Miocic, Live Stream UFC, Fight Card, Time - 20 mins ago
-
For Retirees in Their 60s, the Move That Adds Years to a Nest Egg - 21 mins ago
-
Qualification thrills on the opening day - 22 mins ago
-
Padres’ $14 Million Shortstop Predicted to Bolt for Rival Dodgers - 34 mins ago
-
BSNL’s New National Wi-Fi Roaming Lets FTTH Consumers Connect to Hotspots Outside Their Homes - 36 mins ago
-
Van Nistelrooy Applies For Vacant Coventry Coaching Job - 38 mins ago
-
Why Sunday is still sacred on Lewis and Harris - 41 mins ago
-
Westside lawyer who represented many inmates hit with state bar charges - 50 mins ago
Devon school head banned after he replaced pupil’s exam
By Chloe Parkman, BBC News, South West
A primary school head has been banned from teaching indefinitely after he replaced a pupil’s exam with a photocopy of another student’s work.
Christopher Wright, 52, former head of Clawton Primary School in Devon, was prohibited following a Teaching Regulation Agency (TRA) panel on 14 May.
Mr Wright officially left the school in August 2018 but was referred to the TRA in November of the same year.
The panel found several failings concerning safeguarding, reasonable adjustments for SEND children and permitting pupils to amend exam answers after the allocated time.
Conduct fell ‘significantly short’
The TRA said the incidents related to the academic year 2017 and 2018.
It said Mr Wright was employed as headteacher in 2003 before Ofsted received complaints in 2018, which led to an investigation.
Devon County Council (DCC) scheduled a visit to the school in July which revealed further education and safeguarding failures.
“That same day, a pupil disclosed to a member of staff that Mr Wright had swapped their work with another child for the purposes of external Statutory Attainment Tests (“SATs”),” the panel document said.
Mr Wright admitted the allegations and did not ensure time limits were strictly followed during some exams.
‘Acted dishonestly’
The panel found the conduct of Mr Wright fell significantly short of the standards expected of the profession.
The panel said: “The range of failings, the impact and potential impact of his actions on pupils and the fact that he acted dishonestly in the context of public assessments were significant factors in forming that opinion.”
The TRA decision, made by David Oatley, said the prohibition meant Mr Wright would be unable to teach in any school, sixth form college or relevant youth accommodation or children’s home in England.
He may apply for the prohibition order to be set aside, but not until 21 May 2027 at the earliest.
Source link