Parents angry after pupils forced to dump a GCSE

Parents of pupils at a school in Nottinghamshire have said they have been left âangry, mad and disappointedâ after it was announced children would have to drop a GCSE subject.
Year 10 pupils at The Brunts Academy in Mansfield currently study nine areas, five compulsory and four optional.
But the school has said it is cutting this to three options after Easter, saying this will allow âincreased time and supportâ for the remaining lessons.
But parents said the decision had been taken without proper consultation and it had been done to suit the school, not students.
âUnderhand and unfairâ
In February pupils were asked to fill out a questionnaire about their workload.
Last week the school sent out an email saying 75% of pupils had reported their workload was âchallengingâ and adjusting the curriculum â by dropping the weakest subject for each pupil â would âbuild greater learning confidenceâ.
Parent Neena Edwards said: âIâm angry, mad and disappointed.
âIt was underhand and unfair. It is taking away lots of opportunity for the children.
âThe way it was done â they were given this survey and like any 15-year-old, when asked if they had too much homework, they all said âYes!â.
âEach child should have been able to make their own decision and rather than a blanket policy it should have been done on a case-by-case.
âMy son is quite happy with what he has, he chose those options for a reason.
âThey have all of these childrenâs lives in their hands and they donât care, thatâs what it feels like.
âIâm about to do the secondary school application for my daughter and I wonât be sending her to Brunts.
âIt feels like they are running it like a business, not somewhere to teach kids.â

Parent Sally-Anne Branfield said pupils were not told what the questionnaire was for and nothing was mentioned to parents.
She said: âI see the benefit for the children that may be struggling with the additional option but I still think we should have got a choice in it all.
âMy child is happy and feels they are managing all the subjects really well and enjoys the subject she is being forced to drop.
âIâm a little bit in shock this has all been decided â quite a big decision â without consulting parents and to do it with what in my opinion was a covert questionnaire.
âIf they had asked a direct question to the kids of âDo you want to drop an option?â I can guarantee my daughter would have said no.
âI definitely think it is for the benefit of the school and not the children.â
âCover storyâ
Parent Alex Draper said: âThere was no warning, no consultation, there was simply a decision made by the school.
âIt seems odd to have studied a subject for the best part of a year and then to have it dropped.
âRegardless of which subject they are forced to drop, there was a lack of consultation.
âThey claim there was a consultation period listening to the student voice and teachers but that has not been our experience.
âI have lost a lot of respect for the school â it feels like a mess.
âIt feels like a cover for the fact they canât deliver the education our children need.â
A spokesperson for the academy said: âOur studentsâ education is our absolute priority, and we are committed to ensuring they have the best possible opportunities to learn.
âAs such, we continue to offer a well-balanced ambitious curriculum that provides students with the opportunity to be successful on their future pathways.
âWe are confident that by creating this additional learning time, all students will be empowered to fulfil their potential.â
âWhile this decision has been welcomed by many students and parents, we understand some families have questions about what this means and we are in the process of scheduling individual meetings to ensure the curriculum meets the individual needs of each child.â
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