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Director of Children & Adult Learning

Director of Children & Adult Learning

London Borough of Bromley

Bromley

  • Expired
Salary:
up to £106,605
Job type:
Full Time, Permanent
Apply by:
27 March 2018

Job overview

Location: Bromley Civic Centre

Bromley is London’s largest borough and extends from South London to North Kent. It offers a mix of diverse communities, as you would expect, covering areas such as Crystal Palace, Beckenham, Orpington, Chislehurst, as well as Bromley itself.

We are seeking a Director of Children & Adult Learning. The Director will be responsible for three highly visible and important service areas, Learning and Achievement, Special Educational Needs and Disabilities, and Access and Admissions services. There are 95 schools in the borough, the majority of which have Academy status.

This is a demanding portfolio and we are looking for a strong strategic leader and manager with a proven track record in Education, with the interpersonal skills to engage with a wide range of stakeholders to further enhance our strong partnership approach. The ability to contribute to our corporate agenda will also be important.

Excellent service is our starting point; the future is yours to shape. If you share our vision and have the unique ability to lead our service, driving up our high standards of performance, we would be keen to hear from you.

To apply please visit - http://www.bromley.gov.uk/info/200058/jobs_with_bromley where you can download the full candidate brief.

For an informal discussion about this role please contact Gillian Palmer, Interim Director of Education on 020 8313 4500.

Closing date: 28 March 2018

About London Borough of Bromley

+44 208 464 3333

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About Bromley

Bromley is London’s largest borough, taking in Beckenham, Penge, Orpington, Biggin Hill and Chislehurst as well as Bromley itself. It prides itself as having made its own special contribution to creating and maintaining a pleasant environment for its 300,000 residents. 

Location 

It is well sited as the heart of London is only 20 minutes away by mainline train and 35 minutes by road. There are fast and frequent train services to Victoria, Charing Cross, London Bridge and Waterloo, as well as to Ashford, Tunbridge Wells, Maidstone, Canterbury, Dover and Hastings. London’s two main airports - Heathrow and Gatwick - are both easily accessible by road.

A strong feature of Bromley is the diversity of its area and its mix of communities. These embrace affluent communities as well as those in social exclusion.

From bustling high streets to tranquil rural villages; London's largest borough is full of contrasts and possibilities.
Bromley's history

The Romans are thought to have built a camp at Keston,where a natural spring known as Caesar’s Well is the source of the Ravensbourne. Some time after the Roman era, an Anglo-Saxon settlement developed around the location now occupied by the market square - the name Bromley (first recorded in 862 as Bromleag) means Anglo-Saxon “the place where broom grows”.

In the 10th century, Bromley was chosen by the Bishops of Rochester to be their base for visitors to London; the latest Bishop’s Palace, built in 1775, with its moat, now forms part of the extensive Bromley Civic Centre. The last bishop to be based in Bromley moved away in 1845. The granting of a royal charter to the town’s market by King John in 1205 gave a major boost to Bromley’s development and prosperity.

The growth of the railway system turned the northern half of the borough into a dormitory for London, although most of the southern half remains open countryside. Subsequently, the town has grown to become one of the most important commercial and shopping centres in South East England.

Several literary giants lived in Bromley including H.G. Wells and Richmal Crompton, author of the “Just William” books.

One of the saddest events in the history of this part of London was the destruction by fire in 1936 of the Crystal Palace, a huge steel-and-glass exhibition hall set in a park at Penge. The building had been relocated here in 1854 from its original site in Hyde Park for the Great Exhibition in 1851.

During the Second World War, Biggin Hill Aerodrome, at the south end of the borough, achieved immortality as a base for RAF Fighter Command. It has since become a civil airport, extensively used by private aircraft and for flying displays, as well as a major source of employment.
 

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Applications closed