SAVE ROYSTON SCHOOL
PARENTS and pupils are stepping up their campaign to save Royston Primary from closure.
So far 1,700 people living in the Royston and Wardieburn community have pledged their support to save the school.Local businesses have also donated £800 to have hundreds of Save Royston School T-shirts printed up for all children in the school, as well as their parents.Campaigners say this support highlights the importance of the school to the local community.Education chiefs are proposing to close Royston, along with Burdiehouse, Drumbrae and Fort primaries, next summer.A public consultation will get under way next month and parents from all schools are building up as much support as possible. Grant Cunningham, chair of Royston's parent council, said: "We got £800 from five businesses so that every kid in school can have a T-shirt, as well as parents. This shows how much this is a community issue and not just a school issue."Closing the school would rip the heart out of the community."Fortunately nobody has panicked and taken their children out of the school, which is always a risk when a school is under threat of closure."The council says the school roll at Royston has dropped by 32 per cent over the past five years to just over 150 pupils, meaning it has a capacity rate of just 40 per cent.But campaigners argue that the school roll has improved considerably since the appointment of headteacher Andrew Hunter. Cammy Day, the Labour councillor for the Forth ward, said: "He was tasked to increase the roll and attainment and he has done that. The guy is ticking every box and he's done that in less than a year so this is a slap in the face to him, his teachers and his parent council."Obviously no-one can give cast-iron guarantees that the school is not going to face closure at some point but he was told these were the key priorities to address and he has fully achieved this."It wasn't even on the closure list the first time round so it doesn't make sense that it is on this time, given everything he has done."Mr Cunningham added: "The headteacher was given guarantees and assurances by (city education leader] Marilyne MacLaren that he would be given time to bring the roll up from 143."He put a school improvement plan in place, got the parent council active, introduced a pupil council and brought the numbers up to 156 in just a year."
So far 1,700 people living in the Royston and Wardieburn community have pledged their support to save the school.Local businesses have also donated £800 to have hundreds of Save Royston School T-shirts printed up for all children in the school, as well as their parents.Campaigners say this support highlights the importance of the school to the local community.Education chiefs are proposing to close Royston, along with Burdiehouse, Drumbrae and Fort primaries, next summer.A public consultation will get under way next month and parents from all schools are building up as much support as possible. Grant Cunningham, chair of Royston's parent council, said: "We got £800 from five businesses so that every kid in school can have a T-shirt, as well as parents. This shows how much this is a community issue and not just a school issue."Closing the school would rip the heart out of the community."Fortunately nobody has panicked and taken their children out of the school, which is always a risk when a school is under threat of closure."The council says the school roll at Royston has dropped by 32 per cent over the past five years to just over 150 pupils, meaning it has a capacity rate of just 40 per cent.But campaigners argue that the school roll has improved considerably since the appointment of headteacher Andrew Hunter. Cammy Day, the Labour councillor for the Forth ward, said: "He was tasked to increase the roll and attainment and he has done that. The guy is ticking every box and he's done that in less than a year so this is a slap in the face to him, his teachers and his parent council."Obviously no-one can give cast-iron guarantees that the school is not going to face closure at some point but he was told these were the key priorities to address and he has fully achieved this."It wasn't even on the closure list the first time round so it doesn't make sense that it is on this time, given everything he has done."Mr Cunningham added: "The headteacher was given guarantees and assurances by (city education leader] Marilyne MacLaren that he would be given time to bring the roll up from 143."He put a school improvement plan in place, got the parent council active, introduced a pupil council and brought the numbers up to 156 in just a year."