SCHOOLS, parents and the wider community need to work together to provide young people with the skills they need to face an every changing world, according to a leading headteacher who has appointed to a national body.

Sue Hincks has been announced as the new incoming president of the Girls' Schools Association (GSA).

The headmistress of Bolton School girls' division will take on the position in January.

She said: "Schools have a complex job to do these days because of the rapidly changing and highly visible world in which we now live. More than ever, we all ­— schools, parents and the wider community­— need to work together to provide children with the skills and appropriate role models to enable them to grow up with the confidence, critical judgement and love of learning that will help them navigate the 21st century.”

She added public figures must remember that young people are watching them.

Miss Hincks said: "The theme for my presidency will be 20/20 vision because, as we reach the end of the second decade of the 21st century, it seems to me that clarity of vision and understanding has never been more important. There are all sorts of people and influences which seek to cloud our judgement. GSA headteachers are trusted by parents to ensure that their daughters are well-informed and have the analytical skills to process what they know and draw rational conclusions from their knowledge.

"Children are bombarded with a phenomenal amount of information via media of all kinds and, sadly, not all of it is correct and some of it is deliberately misleading.

"We need to help young people to think clearly, to exercise their critical judgement and to make decisions based on fact father than fake news. But we cannot do this alone. Public figures too – whether they like it or not – have a responsibility to remember that young people are watching everything they do."

She added: "“Like boys, girls need positive male and female role models. In particular, girls are quite rightly being encouraged to seek out positive female role models in the world around them and it’s important that we help them to make appropriate choices. In this day and age, women potentially benefit ­— in the media and in business ­— from being perceived as more authentic and holistic as they attempt to achieve a work-life balance. It is vital that we hold on to these strengths and ensure that we teach the young women we work with to act with integrity and not to tell convenient lies as they strive to further their careers."

Miss Hincks spoke about the strength of the Girls’ Schools Association, and independent schools generally, in providing young people with life skills and appropriate role models.

"GSA and independent schools generally have a long history of providing young people with essential life skills, such as confidence and resilience. We also support parents and invite friends and former pupils back to school to talk about their careers and life experiences. Being able to see and speak to adults who were once ‘like them’ can be hugely inspirational for children ­— as we saw recently when Michele Obama returned for a second visit to a London girls’ school ­—and inviting state school students to join us on these occasions is another way that independent schools can and do work in partnership with state schools."

Miss Hincks says she feels strongly about the role independent schools can play in social mobility.

She said: “Independent schools can make an impact on social mobility in many different ways. For my school, the principle of open access has always been a priority. Today, one in every five pupils at Bolton School receives financial support and it is our aim is to be able to fund one in three pupils, taking in the brightest children who apply, no matter what their financial means."