Just 34 children applied to start at St Andrew’s this September

GENE BRODIE, our education correspondent, on some gathering suspicions over the fate of St Andrew’s secondary school site

Declining school rolls and poor exam results have forced drastic measures on St Andrew’s

The decision to close St Andrew’s CofE High School in Croydon was taken after just 34 children applied to join the school in September.

The school would usually expect to welcome 150 11-year-olds into Year 7 each year.

In total, the school was reduced to just 143 pupils across Key Stage 3 in years 7, 8 and 9.

The parents of all those children have received a letter asking them to seek new schools for their children, giving them barely six weeks’ notice before the start of the new school year in the autumn.

According to a statement issued by Croydon Council, the decision to write to parents of Y7, 8 and 9 parents children was reached because St Andrew’s “are unable to continue offering pupils access to the full national curriculum”.

As reported by Inside Croydon, pupils at the school in Key Stage 4, in the GCSE years 10 and 11, will continue to attend St Andrew’s, under an interim headteacher and with some supervision from another, as yet unnanmed, school.

The school had suffered from a declining reputation over the past three or four years, since the closure of its sixth form, poor GCSE results and with a “requires improvement” report from its last Ofsted inspection. The church school’s chaplain, the vicar of St Andrew’s Church, left last year and has not been replaced by the diocese.

Meanwhile, a new head teacher, appointed in 2015, had attracted controversy over her handling of pupil misconduct and some of her decisions over the school budget. In March this year, Kerry Targett, the head, announced she is to leave the school.

The sudden closure of the school has prompted some speculation about the intentions for the site on Warrington Road, close to Duppas Hill Road, many suggesting that a property deal to transfer the land to the council or developers, possibly for housing.

However, sources have suggested that the council feels it needs to maintain a school in the area to fulfil the anticipated demand for places. This is despite the council’s own figures showing a surplus of 5,000 secondary school places in the borough already, while a £30million build of a new, part-selective secondary on Green Belt land within two miles of St Andrew’s, has been approved.

Croydon Council, as the local education authority with oversight of the school, has issued this statement: “The governing body for St Andrew’s Church of England School has taken the decision to suspend admissions, because they are unable to continue offering pupils access to the full national curriculum. St Andrew’s is a voluntary-aided school and the Diocese of Southwark, who oversee the governing body, have approved their decision.

“We recognise that this is a difficult decision for the school and the Diocese to make, and as we want all our young people to have access to a good education, it is one that we support in the circumstances. Our priority is to support all St Andrew’s pupils and their parents or carers through this transition and to ensure all of them have a school place for September.

“We will be supporting all those going into Key Stage 3 at St Andrew’s to find places at alternative schools, where they will have access to the full curriculum and the opportunities we would want them to have. There are places for all these pupils at nearby schools with a ‘good’ rating and we will offer them and their parents or carers individual support throughout the admissions process.

“We will also ensure that Key Stage 4 pupils remaining at St Andrew’s receive additional support from another ‘good’ school to ensure they have access to the full secondary school experience.”

Croydon Council has not said which “good school” will be brought in for that purpose.

A spokesperson for the Southwark Diocesan Board of Education said: “The Southwark Diocesan Board of Education (SDBE) and Croydon Council are working with St Andrew’s School to ensure that all students get the best possible education. The new interim head of St Andrew’s will make it their priority to work with the SDBE and council to ensure that the school can provide the appropriate educational opportunities for all its pupils.”


  • Inside Croydon is a member of the Independent Community News Network
  • Inside Croydon is the borough’s only independent news source, and still based in the heart of Croydon
  • 1.4 MILLION PAGE VIEWS IN 2017
  • “Monitored” by the council CEO since 2010
  • ROTTEN BOROUGH AWARDS 2017: Inside Croydon was source for two award-winning nominations in Private Eye magazine’s annual celebration of civic cock-ups
  • If you have a news story about life in or around Croydon, a residents’ or business association or a local event to publicise, please email us with full details at inside.croydon@btinternet.com

About insidecroydon

News, views and analysis about the people of Croydon, their lives and political times in the diverse and most-populated borough in London. Based in Croydon and edited by Steven Downes. To contact us, please email inside.croydon@btinternet.com
This entry was posted in Church and religions, Croydon Council, Education, Schools, St Andrew's and tagged , , , , . Bookmark the permalink.

6 Responses to Just 34 children applied to start at St Andrew’s this September

  1. derekthrower says:

    This is a complete travesty of how to run a school. Normally OFSTED and the Department of Education would be so heavy handed with such a rapidly declining school and taking the radical action to hangout the old management to dry and no doubt find it’s preferred academy to take over, It is funny how this faith school is being treated with such kid gloves when so many schools were kept in a headlock till they were forced to academise.

  2. Croydon’s ‘Overview of allocations 2018’ document stated that 97 offers were made by the school: 1 to ‘looked after children’; 34 to ‘faith’; 4 to ‘faith siblings’; and 58 using the catch-all distance criterion with a furthest distance of 4.229 miles.

    • I’m not disputing any figures in my other comment by the way, just adding to them. It should also be considered that the common application form allowed six schools to be named so it might be that none of those applications had the school as first choice, just as a school can be five times oversubscribed and not be a first choice for anyone.

      The real point is that National Offer Day was over four months ago and the number of applications was known months before that. How on earth has it been left this late? A decision taken by National Offer Day might have allowed the children concerned to be offered places in other schools on their application form.

Leave a Reply to Graham Johnson (@grunson)Cancel reply