Celebrity singer-songwriter, filmmaker and comedian Graham Fellows – who is best known for his comic creation John Shuttleworth – has thrown his weight behind the campaign to save King Edward VII School from forced academisation.
Graham, who attended King Edward VII School from 1970 to 1977, is now one of the 3,100+ signatories added to the petition calling for an end to forced academisation, which he signed with the following words:
“I used to attend the school and know how great it is – as it is!”.
In an article published in the Sheffield Star, Graham shared his own fond memories of teachers that inspired him at King Edward’s and said he didn’t like academies, recalling his son George’s experience of when Cordeaux School in Louth became Cordeaux Academy.
“The academy system is based on private enterprise and profit before education, and it is wrong. I don’t like money being put before education. I don’t like academies. For a start it’s an American word and it feels American.
“How can a school get better by becoming an academy? Most of the time the people running academies aren’t even teachers but businesspeople. I absolutely endorse the campaign to prevent it happening to KES.”
Read the full story here.

