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28/03/25

Thank you so much to a generous member of the public who donated two drum kits to our very appreciative drummers this week. pic.twitter.com/THZzozfghO

27/03/25

Our upcoming Initial Teacher Training (ITT) webinar covers everything you need to know about the National Institute of Teaching and our ITT programme. 📍Online 📅 Wednesday 2nd April ⌚ 6pm - 6.45pm Register - https://t.co/m8dXHEvtbn pic.twitter.com/qJcRHmOCX4

26/03/25

Year 7 & 8 had an amazing trip to Wembley Stadium to watch England vs Latvia in a World Cup qualifier! The students were inspired seeing their idols play. Kiran even said, 'It feels like I am in a dream.' England's 3-0 victory made it even better! pic.twitter.com/HYvu49Z1Kh

25/03/25

It was wonderful to welcome author Frida Rivero to Harris Academy Peckham. Her insights inspired us all. https://t.co/2qeIdtSi5C pic.twitter.com/JrOtQKroG5

25/03/25

It was wonderful to welcome author Frida Rivero to Harris Academy Peckham. Her insights and stories inspired us all.https://t.co/HDbCJ59GHL pic.twitter.com/wmswci9d4x

25/03/25

If your child is between 4 and 16 and gets benefits-related free school meals they can join one of our many Food and Fun holiday clubs this Easter (from 7 to 17 April) The weekday clubs run fun activities and provide healthy and free foodhttps://t.co/McQHXcAPNy pic.twitter.com/5WcRdHmpD6

24/03/25

Our Year 8 students were thrilled to take part in an exciting UK Space Agency workshop, on space exploration and the wonders of the universe, hosted by Harris Academy Peckham pic.twitter.com/m2q6rySyul

24/03/25

Exciting news! Our Principal and 4 of our students were featured on Sky News, engaging in a thoughtful discussion on whether mobile phones should be banned in schools pic.twitter.com/S8LlcQKnYg

24/03/25

Exciting news! Our Principal and 4 of our students were featured on Sky News, engaging in a thoughtful discussion on whether mobile phones be banned in schools pic.twitter.com/yVBsfAsNiT

24/03/25

We're heading to the South London Jobs Fair this Wednesday! If you're looking for your next opportunity in education, come and meet the Harris Federation team, we'd love to chat about the roles available across our academies.#HarrisFederation pic.twitter.com/lLyiwCEOad

21/03/25

A huge thank you to the incredible companies from healthcare, construction, architecture, insurance and beyond that joined us for our Careers Fair. pic.twitter.com/RxbOU2hrs8

21/03/25

What a fantastic turnout at our careers fair! Your insights and opportunities inspired so many future professionals! pic.twitter.com/RcJqPRDCX8

20/03/25

Brilliant photos! It was a pleasure to have you. https://t.co/anME92Tnv8

20/03/25

Thank you so much! https://t.co/Qj6R5BfDV0

20/03/25

We are recruiting for an experienced Administrator to join our regional ITE team! If you are an administration expert with an interest in teaching, we want to hear from you. ⌚ 26 March 2025 📍 Within commuting distance of our campus in Peckham, London. 💰 £33,291 per annum,… pic.twitter.com/IRJHUfSpdc

20/03/25

Year 5 students from visited the HAP library for a fun-filled World Book Day celebration, featuring a challenging treasure hunt, a book raffle, and delicious snacks. A huge thank you to our student librarians who participated in making it such a success!

20/03/25

🚀 We were thrilled to welcome the UK Space Agency to Harris Academy Peckham! 🌌 Students had an out-of-this-world experience, learning about space exploration and the wonders of the universe. ✨ pic.twitter.com/GAi4naYTx0

20/03/25

🚨 New Opportunity! Harris Institute is launching a Level 5 Specialist Teaching Assistant Apprenticeship! 🎯 Open to experienced TAs in primary & secondary academies. Starts July 2025. Fully funded (£12K) + HLTA accreditation! 👉 Register here: https://t.co/hGa6kjRbzt pic.twitter.com/lgRt9Z4HNJ

20/03/25

Our children had the best time! Thank you all for making Science exciting.

20/03/25

Year 4 & 5 students from local primary schools are zooming into Harris Academy Peckham for a thrilling STEM go-karting activity as part of British Science Week! pic.twitter.com/CVb1iPc85C

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Latest News

Posted on November 24th 2020

Mr Tye, Teacher of History at HAP, on Why He Loves Teaching

Daniel Tye, Teacher of History at Harris Peckham, talks about his background in education. Mr Tye is currently on the Harris Diploma in Team Leadership apprenticeship. This article originally appeared on harriscareers.org.uk.


Daniel TyeStarting at the beginning, what would you say is your background in Education?

My background in education was that I stayed very local to home. I went to my local primary school, my local secondary school and my local university in the North East of England. I had always enjoyed school and since being a very young child was fascinated by the past – I was very lucky to have so much history around me in the North East, from Hadrian’s Wall to the mining heritage of my hometown. At school, I was labelled as Gifted and Talented, but I had to work incredibly hard to get the grades that I got at GCSE and A level. My biggest highlight in my education journey was when I received my First Class (Hons) Degree from the University of Sunderland. This was “reaching the summit” moment for me as there were many moments in my education that teachers doubted my abilities and thought I wouldn’t amount to much. Getting that First Class degree vindicated all of my hard work. The cherry on top of the education cake, per se, was when the History Department at the University of Sunderland decided to publish my dissertation into the scandal of “educationally subnormal” streaming of Afro-Caribbean students in the 1960s and 1970s and how the campaigning of the Afro-Caribbean community at the time helped shape the educational policy landscape for the better. It’s still something I have a passion and a moment in history that I would like to return to and explore further.

Since being young, I wanted to be a teacher. I flitted between wanting to teach Art, English and History. I finally landed on History as I loved the subject so much and learning about how the past shapes the world we live in today. And I wanted to cultivate that joy within the next generation of students, too. However, I became enticed by politics and spend 4 ½ years working in politics, most of it focused on education policy, working for a Shadow Minister as their Senior Parliamentary Researcher and then as Head of Public Affairs at the Holocaust Educational Trust. After what was a successful, and incredibly enjoyable, career in politics and public affairs, I wanted a new challenge and working for an educational charity which focused on a major historical moment, I really begun to reignite my love for History and rediscovered that passion and the desire to cultivate that joy and passion for the past in the future generations. That’s when I decided to make the jump from working in the corridors of power in Westminster to working in the corridors of inner-city London schools.


In starting his career in teaching, Daniel touches on his timeline with Harris as one from the ground up. Having started in Harris, he now resides in Harris Peckham where he had his placement.

DT: My very short career in teaching so far (I’m only in my third year) has been all with Harris. I started my training with the Federation via the Harris Schools Direct programme. My placement school was Harris Academy Peckham, where I am still to this day. At the end of my Schools Direct training year, I was appointed More Able Coordinator and am in my second year in this role now. Now that I am in my third year, I am also taking on more informal leadership around broadening the curriculum within History (most recently I developed our resources for Black History Month and will be engaging with external organisations, such as the Migration Museum) and being involved in more pastoral work with our Year 8 cohort, where I am a tutor. This all contributes to a more formal leadership training I am doing as part of the Level 3 Team Leader Apprenticeship. This apprenticeship allows me to receive a more formal training to build on my previous experiences in leadership roles outside of education and help inform my approaches to leadership in my future career path.

Working with the Federation for me is all about collaboration and sharing of ideas to provide high-quality education to the students who attend Harris academies. Despite coming from disadvantaged backgrounds, our students still receive a phenomenally high level of education that gives them the knowledge to hold their own amongst those who come from more privileged backgrounds who attended the top schools. There are many ways the Federation facilitates this for their teachers. From the October Conference, the February subject-specific INSET day to close working with the Federation’s Consultant teams. All these avenues have allowed me to develop and improve my teaching practice. I have been lucky to work with incredible consultants - both within the History consultant team and the English consultant team - who have all given me advice on my teaching practice, curriculum and my future ambitions as an educator. They’ve been an amazing resource to me in my time within the Federation.


What motivates you to keep doing the job you do?

For me, teaching can be quite a thankless and tough job. But what keeps me going is what I call the small wins. A “small win” for me is where you see the light bulb moment with a student who you have persevered with to understand a complex historical concept, a student who behaves well in your lesson after weeks of misbehaving or simply having a funny conversation with a student in the corridor about the latest Tik Tok craze. These are all what I call “my reasons to smile”. It allows me to keep perspective of teaching and why I do it, especially when you can’t see the wood for the trees. I used to tweet about them but stopped recently. I think I am going to have to bring them back especially during these challenge times with COVID-19.


Talking through working and learning at Harris Peckham, Daniel tells us a bit about the working culture and environment he is a part of as the History department and wider academy..

I’ve mentioned it before as something that I enjoy within teaching, but within the History team at HAP we’re all about collaborating with each other. As a new team of young teachers, we’ve spent a lot of time co-planning lessons or schemes of work and sharing the load in what lessons need to be planned. For me, I am currently in charge of the Year 8 scheme of work looking at Reformation and will then re-plan our Schemes of Work and lessons around the Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade, Empire and Black Civil Rights – as these are my areas of specialism within history - and will be planning a series of intervention lessons for our Year 11 SEND students focused on knowledge retention. We’re all passionate historians who want to offer the best history curriculum we can. We all have lots of ideas that we share with each other to facilitate this. During lockdown, our department meetings incorporated CPD time where a member of the team would share their ideas from a reading they did or a podcast they listened to and shared these with the team. I did two which were focused on leadership during change and incorporating Black history into our curriculums more and how to keep teaching as simple as possible to address workload issues.


What does CPD look like at Peckham?

CPD at Peckham is relentless. The high expectations of the students are met by the high expectations of staff to understand the science and evidence behind the pedagogy, have a thorough understanding of how to implement new practices and continually reflecting on our practices to improve them for the future. Our LEAP (Leadership, Enquiry, Aspiration, Perseverance) ethos runs right through our CPD. This is also mirrored in my own approach to CPD where I am relentless to continually improve my practice and understanding of how best to teach the students in my classes. This was something I enjoyed having the space and time to focus on during lockdown and became very active in improving my CPD through attending the Schools History Project virtual conference and engaging with teachers across the country via social media. This CPD is encouraged by the school and bring back to share with others.


How did you hear about the Team Leader Level 3 apprenticeship?

It was a funny story, actually! I was sitting in my classroom co-planning a lesson with one of my colleagues, when a member of our Senior Leadership Team popped their head in and asked me to join another group of teachers he had gathered. I had no idea what it was about and why it was happening, until they explained that we had been selected to be our school’s cohort on the apprenticeship as potential future leaders. I was slightly taken a back, as it was not something I was expecting or thinking about at the time. To be selected to be on the apprenticeship by the Senior Leadership of the school was humbling. Being on the programme has so far helped me to consider my future career options, how to go about achieving them and how to prepare to be an effective leader within education when I get the chance to.


How far are you in your Team Leader Level 3 apprenticeship and how are you finding it?

We’ve currently finished the first half term of the course which has been focused around understanding different leadership styles and receiving our results from our CME analysis. The results were fascinating and helped me to reflect on myself and how I deal with various situations. Learning about the different leadership styles helped me to understand what kind of leader I was in my previous roles in politics and public affairs and how understanding different leadership styles now can help understand my previous experiences as a leader and what kind of leader I will be in the future. The knowledge I am acquiring on the apprenticeship and having the space to think and reflect on leadership will be invaluable to me going forward.


Advice for anyone looking to step into teaching

Simple: Do it! Don’t hesitate. It sounds cliched, but if you want to help mould the minds of the next generation, then go for it. It’s a tough job, but the small victories I mentioned earlier make it worth it. There are so many different pathways into teaching; research them all and weigh up their strengths and weaknesses in terms of your own personal circumstances. I’d also suggest engaging with teachers. A great way to do this is on social media – EduTwitter is one behemoth of a staffroom of supportive teachers who will take anyone under their wing, especially those dipping their toes into the teaching career. One thing I would strongly urge is focus on subject knowledge before entering the teaching world, forcing yourself to digest pedagogy when you have no experience to hang the pedagogy on to will be difficult. Before entering the classroom, you must rediscover your love for your subject. This is one thing I loved before entering teaching, rediscovering my passion for history. In usual circumstances, I’d also suggest shadowing teachers but with COVID-19 that is difficult. Think of some creative ways to get involved with schools would be a good way to navigate around that road block – there are lots of organisations that work with schools via virtual platforms that you could get involved with, tutoring in your subject area or even becoming a school governor.