front

Site navigation

'Compassionate' city headteacher wins award

17:08 - 25-June-2008

THE head who steered a Plymouth primary school through the aftermath of a freak gas explosion which killed one of its pupils has been honoured at the South West Teacher of the Year awards.

Mark Lees, head of Southway Primary School, was one of five award-winners from in and around Plymouth in the profession’s equivalent of the Oscars.

Judges awarded him the prize for headteacher of the year in a primary school in the regional finals held in the Riviera Centre in Torquay.

He won the Plato, the glass trophy, partly for the way he handled the death of nine-year-old Stephanie Hammacott.

Mr Lees said: “Stephanie was in my thoughts at that moment the awards were announced, as she has been continually since January 8. But then again all the children have been in my thoughts. They are great kids.”

Steve Baker, principal at Lipson Community College, was also honoured as headteacher of the year in a secondary school just two weeks after the school was told to improve its exam results or face possible closure by the Government.

Judges said in their citation for Mr Lees: “Nobody could have prepared him, or his staff and pupils, for the sudden death of a pupil, who was killed in a gas explosion on her way to school earlier this year.

“Through these difficult times, Mark has led the school with commitment, sensitivity and compassion.”

He was also praised for the way that he has handled the school’s approaching closure and its amalgamation and federation with three other schools in Southway.

The citation said: “He has supported staff, many of whom had to reapply for their jobs under the school reorganisation, and provided a secure, comforting environment for pupils grieving for their friend.”

Mr Lees, who did not know whether he would have a long-term job when he took over a school earmarked for closure, said: “I am completely overwhelmed and very pleased. This is recognition for the whole team.”

Mr Baker, one of the longest-serving headteachers in the city at 13 years, said: “It is very humbling and I am very proud.”

The school’s woodwind orchestra happened to be playing at the ceremony, which made the occasion even more special.

He said that the award provided a tonic to the bad headlines the school had attracted when Lipson and five other schools were warned to improve GCSE results or face possible closure.

Lipson Community College was one of 638 identified by Education Secretary Ed Balls, leading to some headlines talking of ‘failing schools’.

Mr Baker said: “This award looks at every single aspect of the school, for example its achievements in sports and the arts. Politicians and journalists may be out for a cheap headline but there are thousands of different jigsaw pieces which make up a school.

“I am just proud to be the one who puts them together.”

Judges said that he had led the school to a host of accolades. It was one of the first in the city to gain specialist status.

James Gregory, 45, who has been at Devonport High School for Girls for 11 years, where he is head of English. He leaves in the summer to join a school in Torquay.

Judges said that he James ‘sprinkles magic dust and sparkles around the school’ with his inspirational teaching and committed support for his colleagues.

But the father-of-three said: “I work in a corridor where I am thoroughly scared by the brilliance of the people around me. Any one of them could have won this award.”

Governor of the year Andy Moir, an independent financial advisor, puts aside his stocks and shares to literally muck in at nearby Sir Robert Geffery’s Primary in Landrake.

He has waited up half the night for new piglets to arrive on the school farm and has completed a cross-country run with pupils through a muddy field.

Mr Moir, 42, joined the school nine years ago and helped it recover from what Ofsted called ‘serious weaknesses’. He has often dropped everything at short notice to attend a meeting or deal with a problem.

He said: “I am very honoured. Helping piglets is not normally a job you do as a governor but I live close by. I am always happy to do what I can.”

Upton Cross Primary School near Liskeard won the DCSF Award for Sustainable Schools in the South West.

The small school, with just 84 pupils has had a big impact on the environment.

It has installed a wind turbine supplying a third of its electricity and reducing CO2 emissions by six tonnes a year. Pupils saved more than 4,000 copies of the Yellow Pages from being dumped into landfills last year. The directories were shredded, recycled and turned into animal bedding instead. School meals are sourced locally, and all classes have access to drinking water.

Senior teacher Jackie Wray said: “It is quite exciting, it is brilliant. The wind turbines are a great symbol, but they are a small part of what we do. It is more about the way that the pupils think.”

The whole of Years 5 and 6 have been looking at climate change this term in their lessons.

All of the regional winners go forward to the national finals later in the year.

Several other teacher won distinctions: Lisa Lockwood of saltash.net community school in the best new teacher category; her colleague Philippa Wadsworth in the teaching enterprise award; the school’s chairman of governors Kate Waghorn as governor of the year.

Saltash.net Community School.

Sarah Rowe, of Weston Mill Primary School, and Francis Norman, of St Pauls RC Primary School, were both commended in the category of primary school teacher of the year.


Ads by Yahoo!

Buy Diy Conservatories

Free Delivery on orders over £45 Free Delivery on orders over £45.

Wickes.co.uk

Conservatory Prices

Request free prices for conservatory installation.

conservatory-estimates.co.uk

DIY Conservatory Sale

Budget conservatories sale is on now. Extend your home from just £1295 with a budget conservatory.

www.budget-conservatories.com


Cassie Patten wins Olympic bronze





Cornwood show




Tinside Pool After a multillion pound revamp Tinside Lido now costs thousands of pounds to run every year, while visitor numbers are at a record low


  Post your comments today


Have your say

Tinside Lido costs the city thousands of pounds to keep open every year. Is this money the council should spend?


   






Site navigation

Ancillary Navigation