Matthew Hood

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Matthew Hood
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BornDec 1985
Lancashire
NationalityEnglish
CitizenshipEngland
Education
  • Politics
  • Philosophy
  • Economics
Alma materUniversity of York
OccupationCo-founder and Principal of Oak National Academy
Spouse(s)Josh MacAlister

Matthew Hood OBE (born Dec 1985) is co-founder and Principal of Oak National Academy, the national online classroom and teacher resource hub created during the COVID-19 pandemic. He was appointed OBE (Order of the British Empire) in 2020 for services to education.

Personal life

Born in the Lancashire seaside town of Morecambe and brought up between there and Blackpool as part of a "big, complicated, non-nuclear family". He was the youngest of five children. Despite describing his childhood as 'great', his family were not well off and he spent a "decent chunk" of his early childhood and late teens living in a caravan.[1]

He attended Great Wood Primary School[2] in Morecambe, St. Wilfrid's CofE Primary School[3] in Halton on Lune and Lancaster Royal Grammar School.[4] He went on to study Politics, Philosophy and Economics at the University of York.

He married Josh MacAlister, Founder of Frontline[5] in June 2019 . They live in Cumbria, England.

Career

Hood trained to be an economics teacher through Teach First in 2007, teaching in Edmonton, Tottenham. He went on to become a policy adviser at the Department for Education, then North East Regional Director at Teach First, before becoming assistant head at Morecambe's Heysham High School (now Bay Leadership Academy).

In 2015 he founded the Institute for Teaching, a charity focused on developing and improving teachers' expertise. In March 2018 the Institute for Teaching merged with Ambition School Leadership to become Ambition Institute,[6] an education charity tackling educational disadvantage through evidence-based professional development for teachers and school leaders.[7]

Hood is also Chair at Bay Leadership Academy[8] in Morecambe, Governor at Lancaster and Morecambe College[9] and an independent adviser to the Department for Education.[10]

Hood is a founding trustee at The Brilliant Club[11],a post he stepped down from in 2021. In 2015 he was awarded a Churchill Fellowship.[12]

Oak National Academy

Oak National Academy was launched in April 2020 in response to schools closing to most pupils at the start of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Hood co-founded Oak alongside David Thomas OBE (at the time , Principal at Jane Austen College).

They initially created and launched the online platform in less than two weeks. It provided high quality video lessons and resources for children from reception to year 10 in its first iteration, created by teachers volunteering their time over the Easter holidays.[13]

During the 2020/21 summer term, 5 million pupils took part in over 20 million lessons.[14]

Oak National Academy also hosted assemblies featuring the Duchess of Cambridge, the Archbishop of Canterbury, the Prime Minister and the cast of the Lion King.

In the summer of 2020 the Department for Education awarded Oak National Academy a £4.3 million grant to expand its offer and stay open for all of the 2020/21 academic year and create 10,000 online lessons, covering the national curriculum from age 4 to 16, as well as resources for pupils who would normally attend a specialist setting.[15] By October 2021, pupils had taken part in 130 million Oak lessons and had been used by over half of teachers in England.[16]

Campaigning on digital divide

During the COVID-19 pandemic Hood campaigned to ensure low income families could access online education, given the shift to remote learning.[17] He led a campaign to successfully persuade all the major mobile to zero-rate Oak National Academy, making it free of data charges for those accessing.[18]

References

  1. "Matt Hood - Director, Institute for Teaching | Profile". schoolsweek.co.uk. November 7, 2017.
  2. "Great Wood School". Great Wood School.
  3. "Halton St. Wilfrid's Primary School – Love God, Love Each Other, Love Learning".
  4. "Home - Lancaster Royal Grammar School".
  5. "Frontline". Frontline.
  6. "Ambition School Leadership and Institute for Teaching to merge into new charity". schoolsweek.co.uk. July 6, 2018.
  7. "Ambition Institute". Ambition Institute.
  8. "Bay Leadership Academy | Part of Star Academies". Bay Leadership Academy.
  9. "Lancaster & Morecambe College". www.lmc.ac.uk.
  10. https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/925511/NPQ_Leading_Teacher_Development.pdf
  11. "The Brilliant Club". The Brilliant Club. April 28, 2020.
  12. "The Churchill Fellowship". www.churchillfellowship.org.
  13. "How we set up a virtual school for 750,000 students in two weeks". inews.co.uk. April 23, 2020.
  14. "End Of Term Report: Summer 2020". Oak National Academy.
  15. "Oak National Academy to create 10,000 lessons with DfE cash". schoolsweek.co.uk. June 22, 2020.
  16. "What impact did Oak have in 2020/21?". Oak National Academy.
  17. Field, Matthew (January 5, 2021). "Mobile networks resist calls to give all children free access to home-learning websites" – via www.telegraph.co.uk.
  18. "Mobile networks to make Oak lessons site data-free". January 19, 2021 – via www.bbc.co.uk.

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