Molly Hattersley
Molly Hattersley is a British education consultant. Hattersley was previously a teacher and headteacher, noted for shaping education policy, having overseen experimental desegregation of the British school system in the 1970s under the Labour government. She married Labour Party minister Roy Hattersley in 1956.
Career
Hattersley was deputy headteacher of Myers Grove the first comprehensive school in Sheffield. As headteacher of Creighton School from 1974, Molly Hattersley oversaw the centrepiece of a Labour Party educational experiment. With Creighton situated in the middle-class, largely white suburb of Muswell Hill, it was decided to integrate a large number of Afro-Caribbean and other ethnic minority children into the school from distant parts of the borough in an attempt to maximise education choice and social interaction – a policy based heavily on the United States' then-current system of desegregation busing. In 1975, before this new intake had worked through the school, around one-third of the Sixth Form was either a first-generation immigrant, or had a surname of Cypriot or Asian origin.In the early 1980s, Hattersley appeared in Gender, a documentary on equality in the education system.
Since 1990, Hattersley has worked as an educational consultant, also serving as a visiting fellow at the Institute of Education, University of London. She has also worked at the London School of Economics and Political Science.