St Mary’s University announces plans to open school of medicine
St Mary’s (pictured), one of four Catholic universities in England, has announced plans to open a new school of medicine on its Strawberry Hill campus in Twickenham.
The announcement comes after the General Medical Council (GMC) provided assurance that St Mary’s is currently on track and making good progress towards required standards for medical education. The university will initially be recruiting international students and plans to welcome its first cohort in September 2026.
Speaking of the news, St Mary’s University (SMU) Vice-Chancellor Professor Anthony McClaran said: “The launch of a school of medicine is a cornerstone of the university’s plan for strategic growth and is in keeping with our tradition of delivering a sustained, positive impact on society.
“The school will not only contribute to the workforce development demands in the UK for more doctors and medical professionals, but it will also train global professionals able to work anywhere in the world. Our approach to developing the whole person during students’ time at SMU will mean medics of the future will leave this university with the technical and personal skills they need to deliver truly holistic, compassionate, patient-centred care.”
Interim Founding Dean of the School of Medical Professor Michael Bewick added: "Complemented by the existing successful Allied Health and Sports Science provision, St Mary’s is the natural place to establish a forward-thinking centre of medical training. I am delighted we are making consistent steps forward in making this ambition a reality.”
In a further development, SMU has also signed a new curriculum partnership with the University of Central Lancashire. The partnership will see SMU use the University of Central Lancashire’s Bachelor Medicine Bachelor Surgery curriculum in the development of the School of Medicine and their commitment as SMU’s contingency partner throughout the GMC accreditation process.
Pro Vice-Chancellor (Health and Campus Development) Professor Cathy Jackson was the Founding Head of the University of Central Lancashire’s Medical School. She joined the institution in 2014 to set up the university’s medical school and led the team through to full accreditation of the programme by the GMC.
Professor Jackson said: “Opening a brand-new medical school will present St Mary’s University with the ability to teach the next generation of professionals in a modern way.
“When the University of Central Lancashire opened its new medical school, my team had the unique opportunity of writing a curriculum from scratch that would be fit for the long-term future.
“The University of Central Lancashire’s Medical School will now support St Mary’s new medical school as it’s contingent partner as it progresses through all the stages to full GMC accreditation, and I’m delighted they’ll now deliver the curriculum we created to their new cohort of students.”
St Mary's new school of medicine will benefit from the latest technology, new facilities, and advanced teaching practices, building on its proven history of teaching excellence and student satisfaction. SMU is currently placed in the Top 10 nationally for student experience and the Top 5 nationally for teaching quality in The Times and Sunday Times Good University Guide 2024.
The GMC oversees both undergraduate and postgraduate medical education and training in the UK. Any institution looking to establish a new medical school or training programme must demonstrate that it meets the GMC’s standards by being subject to an extensive period of quality assurance. SMU is pleased to have been granted permission to move to the next phase of its School of Medicine and the University will be submitting further evidence to GMC as it works towards the final timetable.
Once complete, SMU’s new medical school will operate alongside health and medical schools at England's three other Catholic universities: Birmingham Newman University, Leeds Trinity University and Liverpool Hope University.
Find out more about the School of Medicine
Watch Prof Anthony McClaran and Prof Michael Bewick discuss the St Mary's School of Medicine
Ways to increase primary school pupil numbers
The following are tried and tested methods discussed at a recent training session arranged by the Diocese of Westminster Education Service.
Warning signs could be falling rolls every year, and not being the first choice for increasing numbers of pupils.
Potential solutions:
- make contact with local pre-schools and nurseries, ensure school’s marketing materials displayed and available
- invite pre-schools and nurseries to use school’s resources and attend taster days
- arrange reading sessions for pre-school and nursery children with school’s Year 6 pupils
- Record in database contact details not just of every prospective parent emailing the school to enquire about places, but also those phoning up or visiting reception
- use database to invite prospective parents to open days, at which school choir sing
- write to thank prospective parents for attending open day, invite them to ask questions
- email Christmas messages to prospective parents – ie ensure regular contact
- plan a school tour route for prospective parents, choose and carefully train pupils in how to be guides
- without clear instructions pupils may spend the tour focusing on their favourite or least favourite parts of the school, which may not align with what a prospective parent needs to see
- headteachers could attend Mass in nearby churches and introduce the school, and be available to talk to prospective parents at the end
- spread these responsibilities across several staff members, make sure everyone aware of efforts to reverse falling school rolls
- don’t leave it all up to one already very busy staff member
The training was delivered by education marketing consultancy Grebot Donnelly Associates - for a free one-to-one meeting contact Aimee Monteith at Ця електронна адреса захищена від спам-ботів. Вам необхідно увімкнути JavaScript, щоб побачити її.
For further advice on increasing pupil numbers for schools, contact your diocesan education service or schools commission
Case study: Sacred Heart Catholic School - helping Camberwell through the cost of living crisis
Sacred Heart Catholic School is an oversubscribed mixed secondary in Camberwell, Southwark Archdiocese, of more than 850 pupils. For the last 20 years, it has been the, or one of the, top performing secondary schools in the borough of Southwark.
A third of pupils are eligible for Free School Meals and just under 50% receive the Pupil Premium. In the last academic year Sacred Heart Catholic School’s Progress 8 score put it in 11th place in the country.
Pupil Premium funding is focused partly on improving pupil-teacher ratio – a vital tool for ensuring individual pupils’ success. Pupil-teacher ratios range from 1:30 for more academic children to 1:15 for those pupils needing extra help and support.
The school’s sixth form is equally successful, sending pupils to Oxford, Cambridge, and Russell Group universities and to Ivy League universities in the USA. The school fundamentally believes that creating trust within the community and, in particular, with parents is vital to the overall success of the school.
Supporting the marginalised
Supporting charities and the marginalised, defenceless and poor in the community is part of the school’s Catholic ethos. The school emphasises how it is possible for all to improve the lives of those less fortunate and therefore encourages the pupils to appreciate more of what they have.
Pupils and staff engage in fundraising includes activities such as car washing, raffles, carol singing, penalty scoring, bake sales, and form group stalls during Charity Week. This culminates in the annual school Bridge Walk that includes up to 700 pupils and staff participating in a sponsored walk along the Thames and over London’s bridges. These activities generally raise more than £10,000 in the course of a year for the local community.
In addition, every form group produces Christmas hampers for isolated, elderly and housebound residents in the local area, with 150 hampers hand-delivered by pupils in the run-up to Christmas last year. They also fundraise to buy Christmas gifts for more than 100 children elsewhere in the parish who would not otherwise receive any due to the increasing cost of living in inner London. Form groups donate gloves, jumpers, socks and other essential winter items to a nearby charity for military veterans. The idea of charity as the main vehicle for children to live their faith is important to the fundamental values that the school holds.
“Through living our faith we help pupils understand that there’s always someone worse off than ourselves. Money’s always tight, but we’re a tight community as well.”
Serge Cefai, Headteacher 2005–2023
Breakfast club, homework space
Other strategies are put in place to ensure that, whenever possible, compensatory factors account for individual pupils’ circumstances. Examples are provision of a warm space from 7.30am when the school opens, with breakfast provided for pupils assessed as in need. Sacred Heart acts as a back-up facility for out of hours study when this is not possible at home due to circumstances. This includes extended opening times in the school library from 7.30am-5.30pm daily, as well as a supervised homework room.
The school prioritises building up trust through a strong emphasis on pastoral care. Pastoral teams meet very regularly and huge efforts are made to ensure that individual pupils’ circumstances are assessed. This enables intervention strategies to be implemented, for example for pupils without any basic stationery at home, wifi, or laptops, while sharing rooms with multiple siblings. The school supplies these items along with its supervised out of hours homework space on site.
Crisis support
In addition, families experiencing severe difficulties are supported. This might include issues such as housing, immigration, and carer responsibilities that the cost of living crisis has worsened, and which can negatively affect pupils’ wellbeing at home. The school employs an Attendance and Support Officer who supports the work of the school in addressing issues of school attendance and welfare and, when necessary, visits families in their homes. The officer identifies issues early and facilitates family meetings with agencies, sometimes advocating on their behalf, to prevent or minimise disruption to children’s education.
For households in crisis, several procedures are put in place including a dedicated staff member who among other things provides a school uniform mending service, along with second-hand uniforms and a stock of shoes. The pastoral team identifies when a child is in need of Free School Meals and encourages parents to apply. The school intervenes to provide meals in advance of local authority funding, in some extreme cases conducting a weekly shop at local supermarkets, replacing fire-damaged beds, and any other desperately needed items for families assessed as in extreme difficulty due to the economic climate.
Moral education
At Key Stage 3, bespoke life skills lessons are taught that cover and exceed the national curriculum, emphasizing the importance of budgeting, savings and basic economics.
Parental engagement is again a fundamental tool for overall success. Pupils’ performance at school is ranked in order of academic achievement and behavioural criteria, so parents can see at a glance how their child is doing. Inspired by football league tables, and published on noticeboards outside classrooms, this approach has motivated pupils both to national educational success and to embody the school’s Catholic ethos. Truth and transparency leading to trust is, again, fundamental to the successful running of this high achieving school.
“As well as outstanding academic outcomes, Sacred Heart prides itself on educating the whole child. Academic results will only go so far, and we insist on a comprehensive programme of moral education, teaching good manners and respect. We are determined to show our pupils that Gospel values are to be lived by, especially when it comes to looking after and caring for those less fortunate.”
Richard Lansiquot, Headteacher, 2023-present
Find out more about the ethos of Sacred Heart Catholic School
‘A force for good and public benefit’: Professor Jackie Dunne, Vice-Chancellor of Birmingham Newman University, on Catholic higher education
Professor Jackie Dunne (pictured) is Vice-Chancellor of Birmingham Newman University, one of four Catholic universities in England.
She started her academic career lecturing in Spanish at Coventry University, and her next move was to the University of Leicester where she later became Director of Lifelong Learning. At the University of Wolverhampton she was appointed Deputy Vice-Chancellor, before taking over as Vice-Chancellor at what was then Newman University, in 2020. Jackie is a Professor in Lifelong Learning and Skills.
“The thread that's run through my career in all of the roles I've had has been around widening participation and lifelong learning,” Professor Dunne said. “I've always been working to try and open up universities to non-traditional students in one way or another.”
Birmingham Newman is ranked first in England for social inclusion by the Times and Sunday Times Good University Guide 2024, has climbed the highest number of places of any institution in both the Times Good University Guide 2025 and the Guardian University Guide 2025, and has topped recent National Student Satisfaction surveys.
Proud of the diversity of its student body, the University has a very high proportion of students with a disability, mature students, carers, those from disadvantaged backgrounds, and students who are the first in their family to go university. Nearly half of the students are from a black, Asian or minority ethnic background.
Heritage of service
What is now Birmingham Newman was established in 1968 by the CES and the Archdiocese of Birmingham as a teacher training college, to provide teachers for Catholic schools in the West Midlands. It was named after Saint John Henry Newman, who had founded the Birmingham Oratory. Since then the curriculum has significantly grown and in 2013 the college was granted university status.
Further expansion a decade later saw the opening of a School of Nursing and Allied Health, offering nursing, physiotherapy, paramedic science and a range of other healthcare courses.
Professor Dunne said: “If you take our teacher education as the starting point, and the Catholic values that we are founded on it's not surprising when that leads to a focus and commitment on public service, the public sector, and the professions, and we've seen that focus on teaching expand out into health, policing and other curriculum areas.”
Sense of place
Nine in ten students at Birmingham Newman do not live on campus, commuting in from the city and beyond, very often living and working in the region. The Faculty of Education works with the Archdiocese of Birmingham Education Service, placing trainee teachers in local schools both Catholic and secular, with many staying on after being offered jobs.
Professor Dunne said: “Our recent name change from Newman University to Birmingham Newman University was very much about recognising the importance of the institution in this place. And place is really important for us — it's that civic role and that notion of the university as a force for good and public benefit.”
Being the smallest of five universities within Britain’s second biggest city comes with challenges in a competitive field, however, particularly during national upheaval such as the pandemic and fast-rising inflation, but Birmingham Newman is currently growing student numbers and raising its profile in the region and beyond.
The cost of living crisis has affected not only students but also staff, and Covid-era initiatives like a community pantry, subsidised meals and other support measures continue to be well used by employees and the student population.
Going global
Being part of a wider family is also an important aspect for Catholic education. Birmingham Newman supports the English and Welsh Catholic sector including as a higher education provider through the Formatio partnership of dioceses, Catholic multi-academy trusts and schools. In addition, Professor Dunne is Chair of the Cathedrals Group of 14 Church-founded universities.
The University has partnerships worldwide, for instance in Wichita, Kansas, in the United States there is also a Newman University, with which Birmingham’s namesake has had a long-standing relationship for international exchanges. Similarly, the University participates in the government’s Turing Scheme for enabling study abroad.
This academic year the University will begin to recruit undergraduate and postgraduate candidates from overseas, and offer its highly regarded student experience to a wider audience.
Professor Dunne said: “It's quite an exciting time for the University, and that is about growing our reach and providing a university opportunity for more people. We're fortunate here in that we're in a growth trajectory, we're managing to buck some trends and are in a good position.”
Growth and development
Birmingham Newman is embarking on an estates redevelopment programme to modernise parts of the campus. This involves the demolition of Edgbaston Halls, which was one of the original 1960s accommodation blocks, landscaping works for a new outdoor area, and a pedestrianised boulevard at the front to replace an existing car park.
Amid the success story of Birmingham Newman, and its continued growth and investment, what remains at the core of the university is its founding nature as a Catholic institution, with the Archbishop of Birmingham as a member of its governing council, carrying Catholic higher education into the future.
Professor Dunne said: “Our foundations have influenced our values. Nowadays they articulate themselves firstly through opportunity. We see our mission very much about providing a higher education opportunity to all those who can benefit and have the talent to benefit; it's not about what they did before or didn't have the opportunity to do.
“The second part is inclusivity, that's at the centre of what we do, the whole notion of social justice, the dignity of every individual, and we continually strive to create an environment that's welcoming and inclusive, where there's a place for everyone.
“Ultimately, we are ambitious for our students and want to make sure they are supported to reach their maximum potential, that they can achieve what they set out to — or what they thought they might not be able to do.”
Formatio: St Mary's University is researching Catholic multi-academy trusts
The role of Catholic multi-academy trusts (CMATs) within the Church’s mission is currently the subject of a university research project.
St Mary’s, in Twickenham (pictured), is one of four Catholic universities in England and will look into the effectiveness and distinctiveness of CMATs, their leadership formation, and how CMATs fit in with the Church’s structures.
The aim is to help inform the Church as it accompanies Catholic educational leaders in their vocational and spiritual formation. It promises to assist in the development of CMATs, and the structures for their support, to positively impact staff and students.
Funded in its first phase by the Sisters of the Holy Cross Charitable Incorporated Organisation, the research will be carried out with the support of the CES; Formatio partnership of dioceses, CMATs and universities; and the Catholic Academy Trust Training Collaborative (CATtColl).
Direct oversight of the research will be undertaken by Professor Stephen Parker, Director of the university’s Centre for Catholic Education, Research and Religious Literacy (CERRL), with the support of Dr Mary Mihovilović, and CMAT Research Fellow, Dr Jakub Kowalewski.
Professor Parker said: “St Mary's is responding to the call of CEOs themselves for knowledge which assists them in fulfilling their vocational roles in providing Catholic education which makes a difference to young lives in line with the Church's mission, at a point of significant change in Catholic education in England.”
Broadly, the research will investigate:
- the effectiveness and distinctiveness of CMATs
- the current experiences of CMAT leaders, their professional and spiritual formation and likely future need in a period of great organisational and educational change
- the current and future positioning of CMATs within the wider mission of the Church and its existing educational and ecclesial structures of support and governance
A new Chancellor for Leeds Trinity University
A prominent Catholic financier and philanthropist has been installed as the new Chancellor at Leeds Trinity, one of England’s four Catholic universities.
John Studzinski CBE is the founder and chairman of the Genesis Foundation, which supports and nurtures outstanding artists and creative professionals; Vice-Chair Emeritus of Human Rights Watch; and founding president of the Arise Foundation, which furthers anti-slavery work on four continents.
The US-born British citizen, who in 2017 was named by the Catholic Herald as Catholic Of The Year, has a career spanning four decades in investment management and asset management, including for HSBC, Morgan Stanley, Blackstone and most recently as Managing Director and Vice-Chairman of PIMCO.
His 1 October installation began with a Service of Thanksgiving in St Anne’s Cathedral, celebrated by the Rev Monsignor Paul Grogan, Episcopal Vicar for Education at the Diocese of Leeds.
Dr Ann Marie Mealey (pictured), the university’s Director of Catholic Mission, gave the opening address at the service. She said: “Our motto of Education for Hope should be a sign to everyone who works, studies, leads or interacts in any way with our university that we are seeking to provide excellence in all subject disciplines as well as the opportunity for students and staff to develop as people ready to engage in civic life as persons of goodwill.
“Our hope is to humanise the world through teaching, scholarship, community engagement and projects that enhance the dignity of everyone, especially the most marginalised in our communities. We try to see everyone through the lens of hope and thereby open ourselves up the transformative power of education to develop the inherent potential in everyone – informed by faith.”
Symbolic items related to the university were presented during the service, including its first prospectus from 1966.
Following the service the assembled walked to Leeds Civic Hall. The procession was a symbol and reminder that the Church serves the world, and of the Catholic university’s mission to go out and act as a beacon of light for the transformation of lives for the betterment of self, society and the world at large - ‘encouraging real involvement on the part of each and all’ [Pope Francis, October 9, 2021].
The installation ceremony took place at the civic hall, attended by staff, students, alumni and dignitaries including the Lord Mayor of Leeds. It was presided over by Leeds Trinity’s Vice-Chancellor, Professor Charles Egbu, and the Vice Chair of the Board of Governors, Kevin O’Connor.
John Studzinski CBE said: “It’s an honour and a privilege to become Chancellor of Leeds Trinity University. I am excited by its blend of educational excellence along with its values-based approach, as it equips the young people of today to become the leaders of tomorrow.
“In all my activities, my goal is to nurture and sustain human dignity, and I see my new role with the university as compatible with that. I look forward to engaging with and working with Leeds Trinity and the Leeds community over my term of office.”
The role of Chancellor is ceremonial, acting as an ambassador for the university, with responsibilities including the conferment of degrees at graduation ceremonies.
The installation took place on the same day that the university launched its new Leeds City Campus at 1 Trevelyan Square.
Formatio: 'I took so many elements back into school' - reflecting on the NCLP
The National Catholic Leadership Programme (NCLP) has been established by the Formatio partnership to support the formation and recruitment of future and recently-appointed headteachers.
Founding member of Formatio, Mike Shorten, presented the concept of the NCLP, endorsed by the CES and Formatio, for each diocese to use a common framework to meet their own needs. The framework's writers come from Catholic teaching schools across the country, and at present the dioceses of Hexham and Newcastle, Leeds and Nottingham are at different stages of piloting the NCLP course.
Suzanne Lewis-Dale (pictured) is Acting Headteacher of St Joseph's Catholic Academy, which is part of Bishop Chadwick Catholic Education Trust, in the Diocese of Hexham and Newcastle.
Here, she reflects on her experience with the NCLP:
"I joined the course because I love learning, I love knowledge which challenges me to look at my practices through different lenses. This means that I’m on a continual journey of professional learning and better equipped to support the staff and students in my care. I thought that the course would give me time to reflect, share good practice and challenge me.
"It did all that and more. The opportunities to network and build up professional dialogues about key challenges within schools was incredibly valuable.
"The sessions I enjoyed were the sessions rooted in our purpose and our 'why' - Christ at the centre. It was really interesting to look at accountability, teaching and learning, and curriculum through the lens of Catholicism, faith present with you, reminds us of our purpose. It is really easy to get lost in the day-to-day business, in the numbers, data and processes.
"This strand of Christ and God through the key aspects of leadership was a real opportunity for reflection. Listening to the range of different speakers from different roles exploring themes and sharing practice was inspiring and I took so many elements back into school.
"The big impact on my daily practice were the ideas surrounding Christ at the centre. For many of our students we are their only encounter, we are the Church. We are all parts of a whole. This was very different to my NPQH and other leadership courses I have taken part in.
"I would highly recommend the course."
To find out more about the NCLP contact your diocesan education service or schools commission.
Catholic schools and special educational needs and disabilities (SEND)
Catholic schools have a long history of welcoming pupils with special educational needs and disabilities (SEND) and were among the first to be established for this purpose in the last century.
At the heart of every Catholic school sits the person of the Lord Jesus Christ and the teachings of the Catholic Church on the God-given dignity of each human life. Each and every person is to be valued as God’s creation. The Church’s vision is firmly rooted in the example of Jesus, who turned no-one away, but made himself available to all.
Across England and Wales there are overall 25 non-maintained Catholic SEND schools and independent Catholic schools approved for SEND provision.
Local councils frequently pay for non-Catholic pupils to attend these schools because the standard of SEND education is the best in the area.
Catholic special schools are a small but important part of the Catholic education sector yet sadly they are often forgotten or overlooked in the national education arena.Some academic research even denies the existence of ‘faith’ special schools, which can distort conclusions about the number of students with SEND in Catholic schools.
Similarly, national statistics can also overlook local government placing and funding non-Catholic children with Education, Health and Care Plans (EHCPs) in independent and non-maintained Catholic SEND schools.
St Rose’s (pictured) is a non-maintained, all-through (combined primary and secondary) school founded by the Dominican Sisters of St Rose’s Convent, in Stroud, Clifton Diocese, in 1912. Rated as ‘outstanding’ in its latest Catholic Schools Inspectorate report, meeting students’ educational potential and enabling independence are key parts of the curriculum.
This involves teaching life skills such as nutrition, money management and time management, while wheelchair-accessible transport provides opportunities for trips to go shopping, ice skating, and more. Other activities students enjoy include horse riding, yoga, and swimming in the St Rose’s hydrotherapy pool.
The school grounds are also home to St Martin’s, a Catholic residential college for students with SEND aged 19-25, which delivers a work-related learning and careers programme, work experience placements, and mentoring.
Sheila Talwar is Principal of St Rose’s and St Martin’s. She said: “The thing for me is how important it is our students have the opportunities that mainstream children have. In the past, our young people have been able to go to university and have careers, such as qualifying as a social worker, or working for the BBC, and one student became a member of the Para Orchestra. These days our students have more complex needs, and our focus is on preparing them for their adult lives with as much independence as possible.”
Find out more about St Rose’s and St Martin’s – or read on for the extraordinary global success story of a Liverpool Catholic specialist school for visually-impaired children
Formatio: 'Priceless experience I will draw upon' - reflecting on the National Catholic Leadership Programme
The National Catholic Leadership Programme (NCLP) has been established by the Formatio partnership to support the formation and recruitment of future and recently-appointed headteachers.
Founding member of Formatio, Mike Shorten, presented the concept of the NCLP, endorsed by the CES and Formatio, for each diocese to use a common framework to meet their own needs. The framework's writers come from Catholic teaching schools across the country, and at present the dioceses of Hexham and Newcastle, Leeds and Nottingham are at different stages of piloting the NCLP course.
Anthony Kennedy (pictured) is Acting Head of School / Deputy Headteacher of English Martyrs' Catholic Primary School, which is part of Bishop Bewick Catholic Education Trust, in the Diocese of Hexham and Newcastle. Here he reflects on his experience with the NCLP:
"As a school leader, I have been fortunate to attend several leadership courses and have been able to access a range of personal development opportunities. Although each one has enabled me to grow as a leader, none of these have had the same impact on me as the NCLP.
"The facilitators of the course were exceptional, each bringing a wealth of experience and expertise in leadership within Catholic education. Rich discussion was encouraged, allowing us to share our own experiences while drawing on their extensive backgrounds.
"The cohort included a diverse group of leaders, each from different backgrounds and experiences but with a uniting belief in the Catholic faith. This diversity enriched our conversations and enabled us to learn not only from the facilitators but also from one another. Working with secondary colleagues within the cohort provided a different insight to leadership challenges outside of the primary phase. The relationships I built during this course have fostered a supportive network and friendships within our diocese, that I now regularly turn to for guidance and encouragement.
"What makes the NCLP different to any other professional development I have experienced, is that each aspect of leadership theory was rerouted to ensure the Catholic mission and ethos of our schools were embedded throughout each session.
"The course contains relevant and current issues in education, including inclusion, mental health and social justice. The project work allowed me to have a focus for development and put the theory into practice, applying learning to real-world challenges within my school.
"Additional opportunities within the course structure, such as the residential, provided priceless experience I will draw upon when going for future leadership positions. Working with experienced leaders across our Trusts and Diocese proved to be some of the best professional development I have experienced.
"Each session begins with time for prayer and reflection. As well as the theory and practical ideas taken from each session, it has also allowed me time for spiritual nourishment and time for myself away from the day-to-day role within school. It has served as a timely reminder of the vocation to Catholic leadership and puts Christ back at the centre of all we do.
"I am very grateful for the opportunity to have been part of the NCLP and I am sure that is has enhanced my leadership capabilities and deepened my understanding of what it means to lead within a Catholic school. I wholeheartedly recommend this program to my fellow Catholic leaders."
To find out more about the NCLP contact your diocesan education service or schools commission.