Community make plans to keep Monkseaton High School open

Parents rally to save Monkseaton High School from potential closure

Author: Ellie KumarPublished 24th Sep 2024

Scores of parents are pledging to save Monkseaton high school - after the announcement it could close by 2026.

Parents, carers, and concerned citizens packed out the Cullercoats Crescent Club to consider their next steps in keeping the school alive. The news was broken to parents on September 17 that the school faced significant challenges, including low birth rates, parental choice and a predicted £7m deficit.

Now, the council has opened a public consultation asking for feasible ideas to keep the school going after ruling out several options, from academisation to grouping the school with another under one governing body. In response, the Monkseaton High School Parents Action Group has called on the local community to come together with their expertise and lobby to help keep hope for the school alive.

Speaker and parent Sophie O’Neill said: ” I appreciate that everyone in this room has different needs but it is clear the common ground is we need a clear pathway for our kids and some accountability as to how we got to this point. We would like to see a commitment to the Government’s promise to break down the barriers to opportunity, expanding high-quality education and equal opportunities for all children.”

Sophie went on to say: “It the consultation is not only for the parents, it for the community, local businesses, local councillors everyone.”

The gathering was also an opportunity for parents to raise questions and concerns over the council’s consultation on the future of Monkseaton High School and its 511 children. Questions which have been put to the council range from potential extensions to the six-week consultation to what happens to the school’s financial deficit.

Several parents also requested a more detailed breakdown of the school’s deficit as well as whether any impact assessment can be made available. In total around 57 questions and comments were handed to the local authority.

Carl Angell Moir, head of year nine at Monkseaton High, thanked parents and the community for their support.

He said: “I just want to say from my point of view it is absolutely incredible to know that you have got the backing of parents and students, we are not here to hear about what we are like as staff or a school, although it is lovely to hear that.

“The fact of the matter has given us a bit of a boost knowing that we have got the support of a community we want to stick by and make this work. So I’ve come down here, I’m not going to talk on behalf of anyone else, because I want to say thank you for doing what you are doing. I was shocked when I walked into the room and saw how many people were here.”

Mustaque Rahman, a former independent parliamentary candidate for Tynemouth, who was also present, said: ” My starting point tonight is the school doesn’t close, this consultation means nothing regarding the school closing. The school has to stay open and this consultation we are doing is in order to make sure it is run well.

“This defeatism talk that we’ve got about ‘where do our children go’? Our children go to Monkseaton High.”

A North Tyneside Council spokesperson said: “The consultation is centred around finding alternative proposals for the future of the school. We are regularly updating the Frequently Asked Questions on our consultation website as common questions emerge, to help with alternative proposals. We will keep updating the FAQs throughout the consultation period.

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