Academies

E-ACT chief executive suspended

Staff have been told that Jane Millward, chief executive of the 28-school trust, is 'away from work'

Staff have been told that Jane Millward, chief executive of the 28-school trust, is 'away from work'

22 Nov 2021, 11:05

More from this author

Exclusive

The chief executive of the E-ACT academy trust has been suspended, Schools Week understands.

A message to staff at the academy trust, which runs 28 schools, states chief executive Jane Millward is “away from work”.

It is understood she has been suspended. The reason for suspension has not been disclosed.

In a statement, the trust said: “We can confirm that Jane Millward is currently away from work.

“In her absence, the day to day running of the trust will continue under the leadership of the executive leadership team.”

A message sent to staff by chair of trustees Lord Knight, a former Labour schools minister, said: “I want to give you my personal reassurance that the running of the trust continues unaffected and that you can continue to do your brilliant work as usual in our academies and elsewhere.”

Knight, who joined as a trustee earlier this year, added: “At E-ACT, we have always been committed to providing the very best opportunities to our children and staff, and with your support, will continue to do just that. 

“I take this opportunity to thank you on behalf of the board for everything you are doing for the trust.”

Millward was approached for comment via the trust.

E-ACT
Jane Millward

The trust’s disciplinary policy, published on its website, states suspension of a staff member is a “neutral act and should only be used to enable a matter to be investigated, or in the  interests of protecting children and/or staff while a matter is investigated pending any further action that may be necessary”.

It added: “Suspensions are a precautionary measure and should not be regarded as prejudging the matter.”

E-ACT is among 43 trusts that have more than 25 schools, as of this October.

Millward, a former Ofsted Her Majesty’s Inspector, succeeded David Moran who stepped down in 2019 after what trustees described as a “radical transformation”.

E-ACT was issued a financial notice to improve by the government in 2013 and banned from taking on new schools.

The finance warning was lifted in 2015, but only after the chain transferred 10 of its schools to other sponsors following a damning focused inspection in early 2014.

A second focused inspection in 2016 found too few of the trust’s pupils received a good enough education. At the time, Ofsted warned that more than half of the trust’s 23 schools were not providing a good standard of education.

The trust’s performance was rated as ‘average’ in the government’s multi-academy trust league tables in 2020 – the last time they were published before Covid.

Heartlands E-Act Academy, in Birmingham, won the TES Schools Awards secondary school of the year in 2020 after being ranked the number one sponsored academy in the country for its 1.46 progress 8 score.

Latest education roles from

Deputy Principal Finance & Facilities – HSDC

Deputy Principal Finance & Facilities – HSDC

FEA

Executive Principal

Executive Principal

Lift Rawlett

Head Teacher

Head Teacher

Green Meadow Primary School

Director of Admissions

Director of Admissions

Greene's College Oxford

Sponsored posts

Sponsored post

Equity and agency for a changing world – how six core skills are transforming inclusive education

There is a familiar thread running through current government policy, curriculum reviews and public debate about education. We are...

SWAdvertorial
Sponsored post

Equitas: ASDAN’s new digital platform putting skills at the heart of learning

As schools and colleges continue to navigate increasingly complex learning needs, the demand for flexible, skills-focused provision has never...

SWAdvertorial
Sponsored post

Bett UK 2026: Learning without limits

Education is humanity’s greatest promise and our most urgent mission.

SWAdvertorial
Sponsored post

Six tips for improving teaching and learning for vocabulary and maths

The more targeted the learning activity to a student’s ability level, the more impactful it will be.

SWAdvertorial

More from this theme

Academies

Best-paid academy boss earns £530k after £15k pay rise

Harris Federation CEO Sir Dan Moynihan received £15k wage hike last year, newly published accounts show

Jack Dyson
Academies

Suspensions tumble as trust embraces ‘emotional intelligence’ 

Influential turnaround trust criticised for high suspensions bidding to cut exclusions and 'keep children in school'

Jack Dyson
Academies

Call for ministers to settle debate over make-up of MATs

Debate comes as huge trust gives up two special schools and another says some are 'impossible' to take on

Jack Dyson
Academies

New powers to close academy trusts ‘must be used with caution’

Sector responds to news government is set to gain new intervention powers once MAT inspections start

Lydia Chantler-Hicks

Your thoughts

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

One comment

  1. Can’t really see what the story is here? So CEO is away from the business, no comment from the Trust confirming a suspension or an investigation so that lack of story has meant you’ve trawled through a whole load of old news to try and beef up your story! Typical journalism then! Yawn, yawn!