Proposed Admission Arrangements for September 2020/2021
Feedback updated 4 Sep 2018
We asked
This consultation has now closed
You said
13 responses where received
We did
Contact admissionsconsultation@birmingham.gov.uk with any questions.
Overview
Birmingham City Council facilitates the consultation process on behalf of own admission authority schools and academies in Birmingham who have instructed the Council to carry out the consultation on their proposed admissions arrangements for the 2020/2021 academic year, which includes details of all the proposed admissions numbers for all Birmingham academies, free schools, foundation schools and voluntary aided schools.
Why your views matter
When admission authorities propose changes to their current admission arrangements, they must consult on those changes for a minimum of six weeks. This consultation period allows parents, other schools, religious authorities and the local community to raise any concerns about their proposed admission arrangements.
Admission authorities must consult with:
• parents of children between the ages of two and eighteen;
• other persons in the relevant area who in the opinion of the admission authority have an interest in the proposed admissions;
• all other admission authorities within the relevant area (except that primary schools need not consult secondary schools);
• whichever of the governing body and the local authority who are not the admission authority;
• any adjoining neighbouring local authorities where the admission authority is the local authority; and
• in the case of schools designated with a religious character, the body or person representing the religion or religious denomination.
What happens next
Any objections or comments will be forwarded to the relevant admissions authority once the consultation period has elapsed.
Areas
- All Areas
Audiences
- Age All
- All residents
- Asylum Seekers and Refugees
- Businesses
- Carers
- Children
- Children in Care/looked after
- Community groups
- Council tenants
- Councillors/MPs/MEPs
- Cyclists
- Disabled people
- Faith groups
- Gay/Lesbian/Bisexual/Transgender people
- Gypsies/Travellers
- Homeless
- Internet users
- Local Residents
- Men
- Minority Ethnic people
- Motor Vehicle Drivers
- Newly arrived groups
- Offenders
- Older people
- Older people
- Parents/Carers/Guardians
- Patients
- Pedestrians
- People with Disabilities
- People with Learning Disabilities
- People’s panel
- Public Sector Bodies
- Service user groups
- Staff
- Students
- Victims of Crime
- Visitors/tourists
- Voluntary Organisations
- Women
- Young people
Interests
- Children & Young People
- Children’s Centres
- Communications
- Democracy and Participation
- Early Years
- Education
- Faith & Religion
Share
Share on Twitter Share on Facebook