Jonathan Dimbleby brings together an authoritative panel before a studio audience of parents, teachers and pupils to debate the Government's controversial academies programme.
Though Tony Blair is no longer in power, his educational legacy lives on in the form of this most controversial policy. First launched in 2005, the academy programme aimed to replace 200 struggling secondary schools with privately sponsored academies.
But are academies the best way to bring much needed innovation into the education system or are they a dangerous dilution of the principle of state education?
Dimbleby discusses all the issues with panellists including anti-academies campaigner Fiona Millar, former Blair policy advisor Matthew Taylor - chief executive of the Royal Society of Arts, a body which itself sponsors and works with academies.