BBC Home
Explore the BBC
BBC News
Launch consoleBBC NEWS CHANNEL
Last Updated: Friday, 4 July, 2003, 10:07 GMT 11:07 UK
Parents' anger over science lessons
MP Keith Vaz
Keith Vaz says more communication is needed
Parents at a school in Leicester are upset by a decision to remove a science course from the curriculum.

Students at the City of Leicester School can now take a General National Vocational Qualification in the subject, but not a GCSE.

Teachers and governors at the school deny the more vocational course is a lesser qualification.

But Leicester East MP Keith Vaz says parents feel their children are getting a raw deal.

Letter-writing campaign

"There should have been better consultation between the school governors and the parents on this question.

"You can't have one school doing one set of qualifications and another school doing another and the students applying to the same university."

The head teacher has agreed to sit down with the parents and governors to resolve the situation.

Pupils at the school have started a letter-writing campaign, sending appeals to former students, including Alastair Campbell, the prime minister's chief spokesman, who attended the school.

The head teacher of the school, Mike Griffiths, said a meeting held to discuss the situation on Thursday evening was successful.

He says the school and parents have agreed to form a committee to help resolve the issue.




SEE ALSO:
Specialist schools do better at GCSE
01 Apr 03  |  Education
Science lessons 'tedious and dull'
11 Jul 02  |  Education
GCSEs under threat
12 Feb 02  |  Education


RELATED INTERNET LINKS:
The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites


PRODUCTS AND SERVICES

News Front Page | World | UK | England | Northern Ireland | Scotland | Wales | Politics
Business | Entertainment | Science/Nature | Technology | Health | Education
Have Your Say | Magazine | In Pictures | Week at a Glance | Country Profiles | In Depth | Programmes
Americas Africa Europe Middle East South Asia Asia Pacific