Independent Schools Council

Independent Schools Council
Abbreviation ISC
Type Non-profit organisation
Headquarters 27 Queen Anne's Gate
London
SW1H 9BU
Region served
Mainly United Kingdom
Chairman
Barnaby Lenon
Website www.isc.co.uk

The Independent Schools Council (ISC) is a non-profit organisation that represents over 1,200 schools in the United Kingdom's independent education sector.[1] The organisation comprises eight independent school associations and promotes the common interests of its member schools in the political arena, which includes the Department for Education.

History

The ISC was first established (then as the Independent Schools Joint Council) in 1974 by the leaders of the associations that make up the independent schools. In 1998, it reconstituted as the Independent Schools Council.

Schools that are members of the associations that constitute ISC are inspected by the Independent Schools Inspectorate (ISI). Since December 2003, ISI has been the body approved by the Secretary of State for Education and Skills for the inspection of ISC schools and reports to the DfE under the 2002 Education Act. ISI was part of ISC until, in late 2007, the ISI became its own limited company, thereby separating itself from ISC.[2]

The current chairman of ISC is Barnaby Lenon. ISC is run by the General Secretary, Julie Robinson.

Operation

ISC has five strategic objectives:

Current priorities include the following activities:

Judicial review of the Charity Commission

In 2011, the ISC challenged the Charity Commission in relation to the latter's statutory guidance on public benefit. The Upper Tribunal heard the judicial review, which was combined with an Attorney General's reference, over five days in May 2011 and reserved judgment until October 2011. The lengthy ruling upheld ISC's main ground of complaint, which was that the guidance did not reflect the true state of charity law on public benefit and charities which charge fees.[4] A subsequent hearing and ruling in December 2011 ordered that the Commission withdraw large parts of its guidance or face a quashing order. The disputed guidance was withdrawn shortly before Christmas 2011, and replacement guidance was put out to consultation in 2012.

Constituent associations

References

  1. "About Us". Independent Schools Council. Retrieved 5 September 2011.
  2. "About Us". Independent Schools Inspectorate. Retrieved 5 September 2011.
  3. Independent Schools Council | About Us | ISC’s Strategic Objectives. Isc.co.uk. Retrieved on 2013-08-13.
  4. http://www.judiciary.gov.uk/Resources/JCO/Documents/Judgments/independent-schools-council-charity-commission.pdf

External links

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