approved school - meaning and definition. What is approved school
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What (who) is approved school - definition

TYPE OF YOUTH PRISON IN THE UNITED KINGDOM
Approved schools; Approved School
  • Accommodation blocks near [[Dobroyd Castle]], used when it was an approved school.
  • St. Peter's School in [[County Durham]], which was converted to an approved school after the Second World War.

approved school         
¦ noun Brit. historical a residential institution for young offenders.
approved school         
(approved schools)
In Britain in the past, an approved school was a boarding school where young people could be sent to stay if they had been found guilty of a crime.
N-COUNT
Approved school         
An approved school was a type of residential institution in the United Kingdom to which young people could be sent by a court, usually for committing offences but sometimes because they were deemed to be beyond parental control. They were modelled on ordinary boarding schools, from which it was relatively easy to leave without permission.

Wikipedia

Approved school

An approved school was a type of residential institution in the United Kingdom to which young people could be sent by a court, usually for committing offences but sometimes because they were deemed to be beyond parental control. They were modelled on ordinary boarding schools, from which it was relatively easy to leave without permission. This set approved schools apart from borstals, a tougher and more enclosed kind of youth prison.

The term came into general use in 1933 when approved schools were created out of the earlier "industrial" and earlier "reformatory" schools. Following the Children and Young Persons Act 1969, they were replaced by Community Homes, with responsibility devolved to local councils; in Singapore, which by then was no longer under British rule, the term approved schools continued to exist.

Examples of use of approved school
1. Her involvement with youngsters in trouble began when a party of hikers from a local approved school found her sculpting outdoors in the Lake District.
2. The network of less secure residential homes for juvenile offenders was yesterday dubbed a new generation of borstals, but they would not be the brutal regimes of the old approved school system.
3. Denbigh high school in Luton, Bedfordshire, is asking a panel of five judges to overturn the ruling that found that Shabina was unlawfully excluded when she was sent home to change out of her traditional jilbab into approved school uniform.
4. Brother James Carragher, principal of the former approved school and described by one detective as ‘the most evil of men‘ is currently serving a 14 year jail sentence for abusing boys in his care.