
Inside the pupil referral unit helping 'rejected' children
As the number of permanent exclusions at Yorkshire schools continues to increase, more children are being taught at pupil referral units. The BBC has been given exclusive access to one unit where excluded students and those at risk of exclusion are being supported.
Sitting in an art class, engrossed in his work, Jayden tells me he was "kicked out" of his last school.He believes the teachers were not understanding of his needs."It was because my anger was bad but then at the same time they said they'd get me anger management, but they never did," he says.Jayden, who is 14, has been studying at Springwell in Harrogate for a few months and says he is happy to stay at the centre until his "next steps" are agreed."It's better than mainstream school. There are hardly any people and you can actually concentrate on your work."The BBC has been given access to Springwell Harrogate. A North Yorkshire County Council panel decides which children are eligible to attend the centre.The latest figures from the Department for Education show that 1,001 pupils were permanently excluded from schools in Yorkshire and the Humber in the 2022/23 academic year - a record high.There are fewer than 30 pupils at Springwell aged between 11 and 16, and many of them have additional needs."They feel rejected," says Tina Cavanagh, who is responsible for pastoral care."The act of being told they're not welcome anymore is a rejection to them, so what we're doing is building that sense of belonging and making sure that they feel wanted, that they're seen."Tina believes that if they can discover a child's strengths, staff can build trust with that student and help improve their self-esteem again after a difficult period.Today the sun is shining and Tina is in the centre's garden with one of the boys, helping him with weeding, watering and planting seeds."We know that children's mental health has always benefitted from being outside in nature, working with the greens and the blues," she tells me."They benefit emotionally. Doing that physical activity allows them some space to talk without being pressured at a desk or a counselling situation."
Inside one of the centre's classrooms, Kai, 12, is busy building a marble run during a break.He tells me that Springwell has been much better than he was expecting."Everyone is chill. You can't not be good here, you just can't," he says."It's helped a lot with my behaviour. It's just made me behave a lot better than I was behaving in my last school."I think I'm staying here for a while until a new school says, yes Kai, you can come."The head of the centre, Alex Bentley, tells me children usually come to Springwell for a placement of between six and 12 weeks, but it can be longer.Some students may be able to return to their old school but others will move to a new mainstream or specialist provider."It's very challenging," he admits."The needs of students and students not knowing those needs can be one of the more difficult puzzles for us to work on, but every single student meets at least one member of staff they really connect with."
The centre often feels quiet, as children are regularly out on visits to farms or climbing walls.Today pupils are visiting a local golf driving range.Alex tells me staff have worked hard to make Springwell a place children are happy to come to every day."We often have to fight against thoughts that parents might have about what we are as a centre. "There is a perception of a pupil referral unit as being prison-like, and we try to get away from that view as quickly as possible."In the reception area a mother is dropping off her son, who is 13.Sam tells me her son has an autism diagnosis and struggles in larger groups, but has thrived since attending Springwell."I would constantly get phone calls when he was in mainstream school to come and get him because he was struggling and having a meltdown," she says."He really loves it here, I suppose because it's smaller and he gets more one to one."For many of the children here, the next steps in their education journey might not be clear yet, but Tina tells me she is proud of the progress they are making."They come here and they want to come here," she says."For each individual student, success looks different but every one of them improves their self-esteem, their confidence and their attendance."
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Daily Mail
10 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Lord Nelson's fateful words written just three days before his death at the Battle of Trafalgar... revealed in unseen letter
A previously unpublished letter by Admiral Lord Nelson sent three days before the Battle of Trafalgar has emerged 220 years on. The British naval hero is primed for action as he writes from on board HMS Victory that he 'hopes for a good battle which God of his infinite mercy grant us very soon'. He adds that he 'hopes the result will be for the general benefit of Europe and little England in particular'. Nelson had his wish on October 21, 1805, masterminding his greatest triumph over the combined French and Spanish fleets. But it would be his last stand as he was fatally shot by a French sniper after urging his men to 'do their duty'. He died below deck on HMS Victory about three hours later having been told his fleet had been triumphant. The three-page letter, signed Nelson & Bronte, was penned to Admiral Sir Thomas Foley, one of his 'Band of Brothers', from Victory on October 18, 1805. It is one of the last letters he wrote as he put down his quill to get into battle-mode ahead of the epic sea confrontation. The letter has remained in the Foley family for over two centuries but is now tipped to sell for between £15,000 to £20,000 at London-based auctioneers Christie's. Thomas Venning, head of books and manuscripts at Christie's, said: 'The letter is apparently unpublished and according to our research is the latest letter by Nelson to have appeared at auction in recent decades. 'We know of one other letter he wrote on October 18 but from the day after he completely focused his attention on the upcoming battle. 'At the time he wrote it he would not have known he would be going into battle three days later, but the delightful weather he mentions is what encourages the French and Spanish fleets to leave Cadiz. 'The recipient was one of his 'Band of Brothers' and the content is extraordinary.' Just before he left Portsmouth for Cadiz on September 18, Nelson received correspondence from Foley and the letter now for sale was the naval commander's reply. Nelson wrote on October 18 off Cadiz: 'I see no prospect even with this Large fleet of getting thro' them with[ou]t a good battle which God of his infinite mercy grant us very soon and I hope that the result will be for the general benefit of Europe and little England in particular.' He adds that 'our weather is delightful' which was prescient as the favourable conditions enticed the Franco-Spanish fleet out of the safety of Cadiz, prompting the battle. He signs off by complimenting Sir Foley's wife and remarking 'I wish her Ladyship would produce you a Boy'. Sir Foley had led the British attack in HMS Goliath at the Battle of the Nile and was Nelson's flag captain on board HMS Elephant at the Battle of Copenhagen. The sale takes place on July 9. It comes as the Union Jack flag that was flown at the front of HMS Royal Sovereign during the Battle of Trafalgar goes on sale at a separate auction. Sovereign, commanded by Admiral Collingwood, was first into action against the French and Spanish fleets as Lord Nelson watched on admiringly from HMS Victory. The British naval hero reputedly said: 'See how that noble fellow Collingwood carries his ship into action.' The 100-gun first rate ship cut the enemy line and engaged the Spanish three decker Santa Ana in a titanic duel. Over the course of the battle 183ft-long Sovereign suffered huge damage, with most of her masts and rigging shot away. The 5ft by 9ft flag, which until it was restored still had wood splinters in it, was salvaged from the vessel when the fighting ended. It has been preserved for 220 years and is now being offered for sale by antique dealers Greens of Cheltenham. Battle of Trafalgar: Epic sea clash that laid foundations for Britain's global power - and claimed the life of Lord Admiral Nelson Fought on October 21, 1805, the Battle of Trafalgar is one of history's most epic sea clashes. Not only did it see Britain eliminate the most serious threat to security in 200 years, but it also saw the death of British naval hero Admiral Lord Nelson. This was not before his high-risk, but acutely brave strategy won arguably the most decisive victory in the Napoleonic wars. Nelson's triumph gave Britain control of the seas and laid the foundation for Britain's global power for more than a century. Despite signing a peace treaty in 1803, the two nations were at war and fought each other in seas around the world. After Spain allied with France in 1804, the newly-crowned French emperor Napoleon Bonaparte had enough ships to challenge Britain. In October 1805, French Admiral Pierre-Charles Villeneuve led a Combined French and Spanish fleet of 33 ships from the Spanish port of Cadiz to face Nelson and Vice Admiral Cuthbert Collingwood. Nelson, fresh from chasing Villeneuve in the Caribbean, led the 27-ship fleet charge in HMS Victory, while Vice Admiral Collingwood sailed in Royal Sovereign. Battles at sea had until then been mainly inconclusive, as to fire upon the opposing ship, each vessel had to pull up along side one another (broadside) which often resulted in equal damage. Nelson bucked this trend by attacking the Combined Fleet line head on - and sailed perpendicular towards the fleet, exposing the British to heavy fire. He attacked in two columns to split the Combined Fleet's line to target the flagship of Admiral Villneuve. 11. 30am Lord Nelson famously declared that 'England expects that every man will do his duty', in reference to the command that the ships were instructed to think for themselves. The captains had been briefed on the battle plan three weeks before, and were trusted to bravely act on their own initiative and adapt to changing circumstances - unlike their opponents who stuck to their command. Vice Admiral Cuthbert Collingwood led the first column and attacked the rear of the line, and broke through. Nelson sailed directly for the head of the Combined Fleet to dissuade them from doubling back to defend the rear. But before he reached them, he changed course to attack the middle of the line - and Villeneuve's flagship. Speeding toward the centre of the line, HMS Victory found no space to break through as Villeneuve's flagship was being tightly followed - forcing Nelson to ram through at close quarters. In the heat of battle, and surrounded on three sides, Nelson was fatally shot in the chest by a well-drilled French musketeer. The Combined Fleet's vanguard finally began to come to the aid of Admiral Villeneuve, but British ships launch a counter-attack. Admiral Villeneuve struck his colours along with many other ships in the Combined Fleet and surrendered. 4.14pm HMS Victory Captain Thomas Masterman Hardy dropped below deck to congratulate Nelson on his victory. 4.30pm With the knowledge he has secured victory, but before the battle had officially concluded, Lord Nelson died. 5.30pm French ship Achille blew up signalling the end of the battle - in all 17 Combined Fleet ships surrendered. ... so did Nelson really say 'Kiss me, Hardy' with his dying words? By RICHARD CREASY for the Daily Mail (in an article from 2007) It was Britain's greatest naval victory and for more than 200 years historians have analysed every detail. Now, amazingly, a new eye-witness account of the Battle of Trafalgar has emerged during a house clear-out. It gives not only a first-hand view of proceedings from the lower decks but also a different interpretation of one of history's most enduring arguments - Admiral Lord Nelson's dying words. Robert Hilton was a 21-year-old surgeon's mate on HMS Swiftsure, a 74-gun ship that played its part in the destruction of the French and Spanish fleets and of Napoleon's dream of invading England. It was 13 days later, after Swiftsure had made it through gales to Gibraltar for repairs that Hilton took up his pen and wrote a nine-page letter home on November 3, 1805. In it he says Nelson's last words, relayed to his ship's company from Nelson's flag captain, Captain Hardy, were: 'I have then lived long enough.' Many people believe Nelson said: 'Kiss me Hardy.'


The Guardian
22 minutes ago
- The Guardian
‘I saw people dying in front of my eyes': British survivor describes Air India crash
The British survivor of the Air India plane crash has described the horror of watching people 'dying in front of my eyes'. Vishwash Kumar Ramesh said he thought he was dead when the plane crashed into a building, before realising he was alive and escaping the wreckage. Speaking from his hospital bed, the 40-year-old told DD News the plane felt like it was 'stuck in the air' shortly after takeoff before lights began flickering green and white, adding: 'It suddenly slammed into a building and exploded.' The Boeing 787 Dreamliner struck a medical college as it crashed in a fireball on Thursday, killing the other 241 people onboard. It is one of the deadliest plane crashes in terms of the number of British nationals killed, and the first involving a 787. Ramesh said: 'I can't believe how I came out of it alive. For a moment, I felt like I was going to die too but when I opened my eyes and looked around, I realised I was alive. I still can't believe how I survived.' Ramesh told the broadcaster: 'When the flight took off, within five to 10 seconds it felt like it was stuck in the air. Suddenly, the lights started flickering – green and white. 'The aircraft wasn't gaining altitude and was just gliding before it suddenly slammed into a building and exploded. At first, I thought I was dead. Later, I realised I was still alive and saw an opening in the fuselage. 'I managed to unbuckle myself, used my leg to push through that opening, and crawled out. I don't know how I survived,' he said. 'I saw people dying in front of my eyes – the air hostesses, and two people I saw near me ... I walked out of the rubble.' The crash site was visited by the Indian prime minister, Narendra Modi, on Friday, with video footage showing him talking to Ramesh in hospital. At least five medical students were killed and about 50 injured. There are fears the number of people killed on the ground could rise. Investigations are continuing into the cause of the crash. British couple Fiongal and Jamie Greenlaw-Meek, who ran a spiritual wellness centre, were said to be among the dead. The Gloucester Muslim Community group offered 'sincere and deepest condolences' after Akeel Nanabawa, his wife, Hannaa, and their four-year-old daughter, Sara, were reported to be among the victims. Raj Mishra, the mayor of Wellingborough in Northamptonshire, called for people to come together as he announced the deaths of 'Raxa Modha, infant Rudra Modha, and Ms K Mistri' in his constituency. Aviation experts have speculated about the possible causes of the crash, from both engines failing – possibly due to a bird strike, as happened in the 'Miracle on the Hudson' in 2009 – to the flaps on the aircraft's wings not being set to the correct position for takeoff. The Air India chief executive, Campbell Wilson, visited the area, according to the BBC, but did not take questions from the media. The Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office said any British nationals requiring consular assistance, or who had concerns about family or friends, should call 020 7008 5000.


Telegraph
an hour ago
- Telegraph
The sewage battle that could scupper Labour's new homes plan
Sometimes, when there's heavy rain in Maids Moreton, Buckinghamshire, waste bursts from the drain below Ian and Lilian McDonald's garden with such force that it lifts the manhole and its heavy concrete base in the middle of the couple's immaculate lawn, spewing gallons of ankle-deep dark brown sewage for days. 'It blasts out. It makes a pool that rotates with bog roll and everything in it,' says Ian, 87, a retired RAF worker, pointing to his pond at the bottom of the garden where most ends up. 'It's ruined the watercress. It keeps going till the pressure drops.' Anglian Water, responsible for the water supply to the 350 houses in their tiny village, has no plan to improve its overburdened sewage system, which is not only wreaking havoc with drainage but also polluting the local river, the Great Ouse. Yet in 2022, Buckinghamshire Council granted developers permission to build a further 153 houses here, which would place it under ever more strain. 'It's ludicrous to add more into this system which isn't coping at the moment,' says Lilian, 83, a retired teacher. 'Crackers,' concurs Ian, staring at the manhole in disbelief. At first, a clause prohibited building before the sewage works – at capacity since 2015 – have been updated. But last year the developers, David Wilson Homes South Midlands, part of the UK's largest housebuilder Barratt Redrow, successfully fought for it to be amended – and once houses are built, water companies have a statutory duty to connect them to the sewage system, regardless of capacity. However, under the planning terms nobody is allowed to move into the houses until there is sewage capacity for them, creating an absurd situation reflective of a wider national crisis, in which beleaguered water companies operating sewage systems no longer fit for purpose appear – to put it kindly – incapable of working coherently with councils under pressure to accommodate Labour's plans to build new 1.5 million homes by 2029 and developers doggedly seeking profit. The Environment Agency found sewage spills more than doubled in 2023, from 1.75 million hours to 3.6 million hours, and last month Ofwat, the regulator for the water and sewerage sectors in England and Wales, fined Thames Water nearly £123 million for breaching rules relating to its wastewater operations. Sewage not only 'suffocates fish because it's taking the oxygen out of the water,' says Dr Justin Neal, solicitor for environmental charity Wildfish, which has secured a judicial review at the High Court later this year, challenging the Maids Moreton planning permission. 'It kills plant life and insects. It destroys the ecosystem the fish depend on. We want to make sure that if there is house building there is capacity in the sewage works.' Neal describes poor sewage systems as 'ubiquitous' in England and Wales. 'There's a lack of capacity.' Next door to the McDonald's home at the bottom of the hill Maids Moreton sits on, neighbour Bob Christopher, a retired insurance worker, shows me a memo from the council's environmental health officer to its planning department, declaring 'no objections' to the development 'from an Environmental Health point of view'. Yet, according to the Environment Agency, sewage pollution is one reason the Great Ouse is failing to achieve 'good ecological status'. Bob, 80, says: 'It makes me cross. If the council turns a blind eye, I think the situation could get very serious.' Wife Georgie, 79, adds: 'We're trying to look after the environment, not make it worse.' Anglian Water, too, seems keen to downplay the effects of the development. In an internal memo dated this March, released under the Freedom of Information Act and seen by The Telegraph, it says 'the additional foul flow generated by the proposed development would create an unacceptable risk of flooding to our existing customers and the environment.' Yet it's just a month later claims the exact opposite – that 'the additional foul flow from the proposed development would not create an unacceptable risk of flooding to our existing customers and the environment.' Anglian Water declined to explain its apparent U-turn. Neal believes Ofwat, which, together with the Environment Agency, decides where sewage infrastructure investment is made, should prosecute Anglian Water as it did Thames Water, because the company is 'not in compliance'. Ofwat had already signed off on investment money for Anglian Water, he says, 'and it clearly hadn't been used for the sewage works.' An Ofwat spokesman says: 'Ofwat has an enforcement case against Anglian Water and its wastewater treatment which has not yet concluded. As such, the investigation is ongoing, and it is not appropriate for us to comment at this time.' Now, adds Neal, 'the pressure will be on the council not to put any red lights up. They're worried about legal action from developers.' Nobody I speak to believes the council, which is allowing the houses to be sold, will enforce its own rule of no occupation. 'How does a buyer even know that they might not be able to live in their house? We're all scratching our heads,' says Kate Pryce, 50, a former solicitor and married mother-of-three, the unofficial leader of the residents' campaign group fighting the development, and now an unexpected expert in sewage. 'Houses are being built all over the country where there's no capacity on the basis that there's a statutory duty to connect once houses have been built. It is mad.' We walk waist deep in nettles across a field to a storm discharge point in a nearby stream, from where untreated sewage that the local sewage plant, Buckingham Water Recycling Centre, has insufficient capacity for feeds into the Great Ouse. Kate points out murky shapes in the putrid water: 'This brown stuff is called sewage algae. That is your absolute evidence of sewage discharge.' Back in the village, Sheilagh Rawlins shows me the 22-acre site of the planned development from the upstairs bedroom of the four-bedroom terrace she shares with husband Peter, a retired engineer. The view beyond the roses and spiraea bushes in her garden is bucolic. A tractor silages the hay in fields bordered by a wooded area. 'All those trees will go. That will all be concrete,' she says. A second judicial review challenging the development on the basis of the council's incorrect biodiversity net gain calculation is also due to be heard this year. She asks: 'How can you justify that as a biodiversity gain?' Sheilagh, 62, a chemistry teacher, believes sought-after local grammar schools make the new houses a particularly lucrative prospect. 'It's people like us who've lived here 23 years that will end up with the mess,' she says, on the brink of tears. 'We are not Nimbys. This is about a council and a developer. It has been eye-wateringly painful to watch. What has to happen? Do we have to have an outbreak of dysentery and the village quarantined before somebody sits up and takes notice? It's so wrong. You would have thought regulations were in place to protect us.' A spokesman for David Wilson Homes South Midlands said its development would lead to 'at least a 10 per cent uplift in biodiversity,' and generate a £3.5 million investment in local infrastructure, 'and we will create new, publicly accessible green open spaces with play areas, as well as jobs for the local community.' They added: 'We will ensure a programme of any wastewater upgrades required to support the development has been agreed with Anglian Water. It is also vital that water companies invest in the country's water and sewerage infrastructure so that we can build the homes the country needs, generating new jobs and driving economic growth.' A spokesman for Anglian Water said: 'Although there is currently no dedicated scheme for upgrades at Buckingham Water Recycling Centre, we are currently reviewing and prioritising our growth portfolio for delivery over the next five years. This is a typical part of our planning process between investment cycles.' Peter Strachan, Buckinghamshire council's deputy leader and cabinet member for planning, said its council 'follows the planning process rigorously as determined by nationally set guidance and legislation' and that, as its decision is now subject to judicial review 'it is not appropriate for the Council to comment further'. After sewage spills on the McDonald's garden, Anglian Water staff are dispatched with soil, grass seed and disinfectant to clear the damage – a process that can take days but will likely seem small fry to the company in the event of a new development. If he does end up with 153 new neighbours, Ian predicts: 'They're in trouble.'