Friday 29 February 2008

Primary schools 'have got worse'

A narrowing of the curriculum has led to a decrease in the quality of English primary schooling, says a report.
"High stakes" testing of pupils has led to a system "focused on literacy and numeracy at the expense of the broader curriculum", it suggests.


This is a warning that when you use targets and measurement you may distort the system by forgetting what is outside the measurement system. We must certainly not allow the schools to forget the wider objectives of encouraging learning in general and ensuring they are motivated.

I agree that literacy and numeracy are key objectives but we should find a third measure of general knowledge that could be simply tested. The tests should not be too time-consuming or control the curriculum. The results must show that the child has the necessary skills to benefit from secondary school. The schools should be measured on an overall attainment score combined with the percentage of children that fail.

Tuesday 26 February 2008

Choice in education (4)

As many as 100,000 children are expected to miss out on their first choice of secondary school this year, according to analysis of official figures by the Conservative Party.

That means that nearly 20% of parents will not be sending their child to the school of their first choice. What a way to motivate a child to learn!

Should we have smaller classes?

The big question in the debate on class sizes is not whether smaller classes produce better academic results - the answer to that is, “of course they do” - a more pertinent question is, “by how much?”

The deputy director of education at the Institute of Education in London concludes that better teaching methods will give a better return simply because we cannot recruit enough teachers of suitable quality.

So perhaps we should recruit as many good teachers as possible, weed out those who don't perform, and then support them in every way possible.

Monday 25 February 2008

Death to the Middle Classes?!

The extreme Left Wing want to abolish private education to prevent the 'unfair' social advantages it brings. What will they do now that the latest research shows that those same Middle Classes, when they actually make a positive choice in favour of their local comprehensive, still come out on top?

Those of us motivated to encourage our children to reach the highest standards will quite naturally take an active interest in the school to ensure the best results. Every parent can potentially be a school governor but a full 57% of this study group had one parent who was or had been a governor. That is a real time commitment and proof of motivation that must influence the child.

The prime factor in personal success on any measure is the degree of motivation involved. The saddest aspect of many state schools is the way that motivation is killed. The dead hand of the state can never stimulate individual motivation while at the same time imposing prescriptive solutions from above.

Wednesday 20 February 2008

Minimum aims of Education

Getting agreement on measurable aims of education may be difficult. But deciding on a minimum level to be achieved by all should be easier. We know when the 'education system' or the individual child has failed.

As a democracy we need every individual to be able to take part in active discussion, understand the main issues and make a choice. As a social economy, we need them to be self-supporting economically and work and live in a community without causing disruption.

Therefore, by the age of 16 every child should:

1) Be able to communicate in English in speech and writing, personally and via IT
2) Be numerate so as to understand finance and basic concepts of engineering and society
3) Understand the structure of UK society with background knowledge of how we arrived at the present position
4) Understand where the UK fits into global society and its issues.
5) Behave lawfully and be able to prove an ability to work with others successfully

Measuring the results on these 5 scales should be the essential requirement for GCSEs. The exams should be more than pass or fail because clearly there is great scope for achieving more than the minimum level agreed. The main measure for the pupil should be the decile ranking he achieves. That way there can be no grade inflation and the top 10% are rated above the next 10%. The main measure for the schools though should be the number of their pupils failing to attain a pre-agreed minimum level.

The structure of the exams would have to change to be able to discriminate successfully between the different levels. Pupils would be motivated by a competitive result that they could use for selection for further training and employment. Schools would be motivated first to minimise the failures so likely to lead to future problems for society. At the same time they would have to raise their standards for the more able pupils to achieve results in a national competition.

Friday 15 February 2008

Providing Equal Opportunities in Education

Some children start with a range of disadvantages for which they are not themselves responsible.

One of the generally accepted aims of education has been to enable any student to achieve his maximum potential. The obvious justification for this is one of simple justice. In addition any society has a long term interest in ensuring that no minority group feels frustrated and cut off by the rest of the population.

Present concerns focus on the extremes. At the bottom of society are those with minimum communication skills. The illiterate cannot participate effectively in modern society. At the top end are potentially highly intelligent individuals who cannot access the best institutions or jobs because they have not been given the necessary tools or guidance.

The main task is to remove the barriers to performance. Basic communication skills are essential and need to be learned as early as possible and then continually honed. Reading, Writing and Arithmetic are no longer enough. Those three exclude the most widely used communication medium of all - speech - and the most recently developed - IT.

Too often we ignore the need for active improvement in the use of English. Even those born into an English-speaking family need to learn how to communicate in formal and group environments. A teenager who cannot explain a complex idea verbally will not be offered the best jobs and will be unable to participate in a democratic society. Street slang and dense dialects may be fine with friends but are a barrier to communication with wider society.

Discipline in schools is essential to prevent a minority hindering the learning of their classmates. That in turn requires better provision of support units for the disruptive child so that their problems can be assessed and rectified until they are ready to reintegrate with the standard class.

Our education system assumes that each year children progress to a new level of learning. However, there is no point in sending a child to a secondary school without the basic literacy skills to cope with the curriculum. That will be bad for the child and is likely to lead to disruption for the class. Instead, such a child should either repeat a year in primary school or, better, be given individual support to catch up.

The main risk for the gifted child is that he loses motivation. The problems may come from a variety of causes: peer pressure, standard curriculum, inadequate teaching etc. Again, these problems need identifying and solving as young as possible. So long as the motivation is there, such a child can cope with most of the other barriers to learning.

Thursday 14 February 2008

Nuffield Review 14 - 19 Education & Training

The Nuffield Review, whilst recognising these achievements, has also highlighted the
persistence of deep-seated problems concerning the structure of the system, its performance and the conduct of the policy process.


The specific problems mentioned are typical of those to be expected from a large top-down organisation trying to manage a diverse service at all levels. If the government wants to decide the details and methodology to be applied, there will always be problems of forecasting the changing needs of pupils, society, educational institutions and employers.

The solution must be found in a more student-centred, devolved approach that gives each child and its parents more real choice and control. Providers then can adapt to progressive change.

Tuesday 12 February 2008

The Children Left Behind

Last night's Channel 4 documentary suggests answers for several issues of class size and motivation.

Research carried out in Bristol by Wetz uncovered the fact that many of the children who left school with no qualifications were doing well in their education at the age of 10 or 11 - the turning point came as they joined their secondary schools. He asks if the giant new schools now being built all over Britain, in the biggest school building programme since Victorian times, are the best way to engage these disaffected pupils, to improve standards and reduce truancy and exclusion rates.

So if a 2000 pupil school were split into 4 smaller ones, the choice for parents would be greater, the schools more personal, and the resulting motivation for teachers, children and parents significantly higher.

Why then does the government seem so intent on building big schools? Presumably they think the cost per pupil comes down and the justification for extra facilities is easier. It is time these assumptions were seriously questioned. No supposed economic analysis should ignore completely factors such as the power of motivation which are potentially critical in achieving a quality result.

Monday 11 February 2008

Measurements, statistics, testing

Graham has commented:

The measurement system should:
1)monitor the proper and efficient running of the system
2)identify weaknesses for improvement
3)indicate to all the achievement of those within it against defined and accepted national and international standards
4)balance demand with supply
5)be as limited as possible and the only source of information and measurement.

I would agree - but the first problem is to find the "defined and accepted" standards.
Also, does point 5 really mean we should hide data that might confuse?

Wednesday 6 February 2008

Values, aims and purposes of the National Curriculum

The National Curriculum increases public understanding of, and confidence in, the work of schools and in the learning and achievements resulting from compulsory education. It provides a common basis for discussion of educational issues among lay and professional groups, including pupils, parents, teachers, governors and employers.

This quote comes at the end of page setting out the values, aims and purposes. It would be just what we need as a starting point for planning - if it had not been devised by bureaucrats and politicians. I bet it was never approved by the Plain English Campaign.

The aims have been so widely drawn that they avoid controversy by including every conceivable value and subject. Unfortunately the result is that there is no specific advice on the choices that must be faced, the order of priorities and an objective scale of measurement.

Monday 4 February 2008

Choice in Education (3)

Grammar schools should be abolished and a lottery admissions system introduced to make education in England fairer for all, says a government-funded report.

Basically this seems to say that because selection encourages differences, it should be abolished. That's a classic Stalinist approach. How about the alternative of providing extra support to those suffering from disadvantage?

Then you might level up instead of just levelling down.

Choice in Education (2)

Margaret says in her comment:

Choice has led to the break-up of good small schools, the loss of cohesion of communities, excessive large-car use and a reduction in children’s exercise as they no longer walk to school. The overall quality of education in this country does not appear to have improved as choice has widened.

I can agree that there are these negatives to the present system of choice. I wonder though if we could design a better system.

If you accept that individual children should ideally have their own education designed around them, no standardised approach can ever be right. One of the troubles though is that parents are given no incentive to do anything except fight for the 'best' school for their child. - At least before the child is committed to a given school, perhaps , after entry, they can influence outcomes in the school.

But if we moved to some sort of voucher system, the value of the voucher could reflect the local education authority's asssessment of the social value of the solution. So a child that went out of area might be offered a lower value voucher. Then the receiving school has a choice: to accept or demand a direct parental top-up contribution. That would make them think!