- A protest has been held outside the Department of Education in Londonderry.
- St Patrick’s Grammar, St Mary’s High, and De La Salle would be combined.
- A voluntary grammar school with 1,600 students would be the new institution.
A Downpatrick grammar school’s plan to merge with two other schools has prompted parents, educators, and students to hold a protest outside the Department of Education.
St. Patrick’s Grammar, St. Mary’s High, and De La Salle, two non-selective institutions, would be combined under the idea.
Michelle McIlveen, a former minister of education, gave it the go-ahead last year.
Both fervent support and resistance have been shown for the protracted idea.
106 out of 120 replies in a prior consultation by the Education Authority (EA) opposed the concept.
However, the merger has previously been defended by Donal McKeown, Bishop of Derry and Chair of the Council for Catholic Maintained Schools (CCMS).
A voluntary grammar school with 1,600 students would be the new institution.
Ross Douglas, a student at St Patricks Grammar School said the decision to merge the schools was “ill-thought” and “unjust”.
“I think to do this would be quite reckless for the children of Downpatrick,” he said.
The pupil expressed concern that the three schools would be on split sites and because of this there would be “no sense of community”.
Eighteen-year-old Louis Sheridan said the protest was “to show the strength of feeling not only in our school, but in the surrounding area”.
He added: “There is a massive cohort in my school who were not consulted and yet will be affected.”
Sheila Reynolds, a local parent who has a daughter in primary school said she was concerned over the size of the school with 1,600 pupils attending.
“There’s going to be no community, the teachers aren’t going to know the children, the children aren’t going to know the teachers,” she said.
“It needs to be smaller, smaller schools work better.”
Another parent said the new school would be on a split site.
“It doesn’t look like there’s going to be any funding available any time soon to bring the three school buildings together at any point in time,” she said.
“You’re going to have 1,600 children split all round the place, all round Downpatrick and it’s just not any sort of proper school environment.”
A Department of Education spokesperson said: “The decisions to approve these proposals were taken by former education minister, Michelle McIlveen, on 10 October 2022.
“Development proposals are subject to rigorous and extensive analysis of relevant data and decisions are taken in the educational interests of children.
“Once decisions are taken on development proposals they are required to be implemented. It is not within the power of the department or the permanent secretary to reverse decisions.”
[embedpost slug=”india-supreme-court-judges-conflict-on-wearing-hijab-in-schools/”]



















