Education and Adoption Bill: Commons remaining stages
16 September 2015 (updated on 16 September 2015)
MPs debated the remaining stages of the Education and Adoption Bill in the House of Commons on Wednesday 16 September 2015.
The Education and Adoption Bill passed the Third Reading in the House of Commons. (Division No. 73: Ayes 300 votes, Noes 200 votes).
The Bill will now be considered by the House of Lords.
- Watch Parliament TV: Remaining stages of Education and Adoption Bill
- Read Commons Hansard: Remaining stages of Education and Adoption Bill
- Catch up on Commons news: Education and Adoption Bill: Commons Second reading
- Read current Parliamentary material in Topics: Schools
Related information
Summary of the Education and Adoption Bill
A Bill to make provision about schools in England that are causing concern, including provision about their conversion into Academies and about intervention powers; and to make provision about joint arrangements for carrying out local authority adoption functions in England.
Progress of the Bill
This Government Bill was introduced to the House of Commons on 3 June 2015. It had its second reading on 22 June 2015 and proceedings on the Bill in a Public Bill Committee concluded on 14 July 2015.
MPs will next consider the Bill at report stage and third reading on Wednesday 16 September 2015.
Keep up to date with all the proceedings and documentation, including amendment papers on the Education and Adoption Bill and find out how a Bill becomes an Act of Parliament.
House of Commons Library analysis
The House of Commons Library produces briefing papers to inform MPs of key issues. The papers contain factual information and a range of opinions on each subject, and aim to be politically impartial.
What happens next?
If the Bill passes all of its stages in the House of Commons it will pass to the House of Lords for consideration.
What is the report stage of a bill?
The Report stage gives MPs an opportunity, on the floor of the House, to consider any further amendments (proposals for change) to a Bill which has been examined in a Public Bill Committee or on the floor of the House. There is no set time period between the end of Committee stage and the start of the Report stage.
What happens at Report stage?
All MPs may speak and vote. For lengthy or complex Bills, the debates may be spread over several days. All MPs can suggest amendments to the Bill or new clauses (parts) that they think should be added.
What happens after Report stage?
Report stage is usually followed immediately by debate on the Bill's Third Reading.
What happens at Third Reading?
Debate on the Bill is usually short, and limited to what is actually in the Bill, rather than, as at Second Reading, what might have been included.
Amendments (proposals for change) cannot be made to a Bill at a Third Reading in the Commons. At the end of the debate, the House decides (votes on) whether to approve the Third Reading of the Bill.
What happens after Third Reading?
If the Bill started in the Commons it goes to the House of Lords for its First Reading.
If the Bill started in the Lords it returns to the House of Lords for consideration of any amendments the Commons has made.
Watching proceedings from the public gallery
UK residents and overseas visitors can watch proceedings in the House of Commons by visiting the public gallery.
This article was produced by the Commons Digital Outreach Team. Follow the @HouseofCommons on Twitter for updates on the UK House of Commons Chamber.