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Statutory Instrument 2006 No. 128The Education (Admission of Looked After Children) (England) Regulations 2006(The document as of February, 2008. Arhiv.Online Library) STATUTORY INSTRUMENTS2006 No. 128EDUCATION, ENGLANDThe Education (Admission of Looked After Children) (England) Regulations 2006
The Secretary of State for Education and Skills makes the following Regulations in exercise of the powers conferred by sections 89(1A) and 138(7) of the School Standards and Framework Act 1998[1]: Citation, commencement and application 1.—(1) These Regulations may be cited as The Education (Admission of Looked After Children) (England) Regulations 2006 and shall come into force on 21st February 2006. (2) These Regulations apply only in relation to England. (3) These Regulations apply only in relation to admission arrangements under which pupils are to be admitted to maintained schools in England in the school year 2007/2008 and any subsequent school year. Interpretation 2.—(1) In these Regulations —
(2) Any reference in these Regulations to an admission authority for a school giving priority in its oversubscription criteria to a relevant looked after child is a reference to the authority giving priority to such a child when determining its admission arrangements before the beginning of each school year in accordance with section 89(1) of the 1998 Act.
(b) give higher priority to all relevant looked after children not of that faith than all other children not of that faith. Schools which have pre-existing arrangements for selection (This note is not part of the Regulations) These Regulations, which come into force on 21st February 2006, prescribe the actions to be taken and the circumstances in which an admission authority for a maintained school must give priority in their admission arrangements to a "relevant looked after child" (a child who is looked after by a local authority within the meaning of section 22 of the Children Act 1989 at the time of their application and who will still be so looked after at the time when he is admitted to school). Regulation 3 requires admission authorities to give priority in their oversubscription criteria to relevant looked after children, subject to the exceptions below. Regulation 4 specifies that only those grammar schools which select pupils who have reached a pre-set standard of the school need give priority in their oversubscription criteria to relevant looked after children. Grammar schools which select pupils on the basis of highest ranked results need not give priority to relevant looked after children. Regulation 5 allows admission authorities for schools designated as having a religious character to give first priority in their oversubscription criteria to all relevant looked after children, regardless of their faith. The regulation requires them, in any event, to give higher priority to relevant looked after children of the faith of the school, over other children of that faith, and to give higher priority to relevant looked after children not of that faith than other children not of that faith. Regulation 6 requires admission authorities for schools which have made provision in their admission arrangements for selection by ability or aptitude since the beginning of the 1997-1998 school year to give priority to relevant looked after children who have been selected by ability or aptitude over other children who have been selected by ability or aptitude. Relevant looked after children who have not been allocated a place on the basis of ability or aptitude must be given priority over other children who have not been allocated a place on that basis. Regulation 7 requires admission authorities for schools which make provision for selection by banding to give priority to relevant looked after children within each band. The Department considers that these Regulations will have no effect on the costs of businesses and accordingly a Regulatory Impact Assessment has not been prepared. Notes: [1] 1998 c.31; section 89(1A) was inserted by section 106 of the Education Act 2005 (c. 18). By virtue of the National Assembly for Wales (Transfer of Functions) Order 1999 (S.I. 1999/672) and section 119(1) of the Education Act 2005 the powers conferred by these provisions are exercisable by the Secretary of State only in relation to England.back [2] 1989 c.41.back ISBN 0 11 073940 X -- Back--
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