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Education

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Class and Education - Lampl

805 replies

Xenia · 15/09/2012 21:41

In today's FT:

Break down the barriers in English education

By Sir Peter Lampl

English schools are undergoing another major shake-up as Michael Gove removes them from local authority oversight and introduces a broader range of providers. No wonder, then, that the first fortnight of the new school year has been a turbulent one. Many headteachers are angry that Ofqual, the exam regulator, regraded GCSE English papers downwards midyear. Teaching unions are threatening a work-to-rule protest over pay and pensions. And many more schools have become academies, with more control over funding, governance and the curriculum.

This is the battleground of English education. But another piece of news this week was even more significant. On Tuesday the OECD reported that our schools were the most socially segregated among advanced economies. This underlines the biggest problem facing England?s schools: the close relationship between family income and how good a school a child goes to. The result is that children from poorer backgrounds have fewer opportunities to move up the ladder.

English education has improved under successive governments. Standards of teaching, and especially school leadership, are better. There have been significant improvements in London schools, particularly for some ethnic communities. But this is not good enough. We have to outpace other economies, particularly in Asia, that have improved faster. The UK languishes in 25th place in the OECD?s league tables for reading and in 28th place for maths, where Shanghai is now the best in the world. This does not reflect the position of all our young people. Rather it is a stark reminder that levels of social mobility have worsened since the 1960s and remain very low, despite government investment and reform in education.

I believe one reason for this is that governments have focused on structural reform, such as creating academies or free schools, rather than on improving teaching. Yet it is good teaching that really matters. Teachers? salaries account for four-fifths of a school?s costs and this reflects the value they deliver. Research by McKinsey has shown that the world?s best-performing education systems are those with the best teaching. The OECD now rates leadership in English schools highly, but we still have much more to do to improve teaching.

First, we need to attract more of the best graduates to the classroom. Ten years ago I helped establish the Teach First programme in England, modelled on the successful Teach for America programme. Teach First is recruiting almost 1,000 graduates this year from top universities, including Oxford and Cambridge, to teach in inner-city schools for a minimum of two years. Approximately half then leave to pursue other careers.

It has been a great success. But with 36,000 teachers recruited each year, it is only a part of the solution. In Finland and South Korea there are 10 applicants for every teaching place. Here we regard it as a success if every place is filled.

Even more important will be to improve the quality of the existing 440,000-strong workforce. Sutton Trust research shows that English schools could move into the world?s top five education performers within a decade if the performance of the least effective 10th of teachers were brought up to the average.

While improving teaching is crucial, we also have to address inequality in our education system, which has a substantial cost to society and the economy, since it prevents many of the most able children from non-privileged backgrounds from achieving their potential.

The best schools in England are world-class. But they are also socially exclusive. Seven per cent of English pupils go to fee-paying independent schools, which are out of reach for the rest of the population. Another 4 per cent attend the remaining selective grammar schools, which draw just 2 per cent of their pupils from the poorest households. The top-performing comprehensives ? mainly faith schools and comprehensives in well-off areas ? take just 6 per cent of their pupils from the poorest households. This compares with a national average of 16 per cent.

We should address this inequality in three ways. First, we should use random ballots to determine admissions to our urban secondary schools, rather than basing admissions on how close you live to the school or how religious you are. This would ensure a good social mix. Second, grammar schools should select more fairly, attract able students from poorer backgrounds and provide them with the extra help that better-off pupils get in prep schools or from private tutors.

Third, we must open independent day schools to all. Their students are 55 times more likely to win an Oxbridge place and 22 times more likely to go to a top-ranked university than a state school student from a poor household. The absence of poorer students from these universities is a shocking waste of talent.

My independent day school was totally funded by the local authority. Indeed, seven out of 10 independent day schools were principally state funded until 1976 through the direct grant scheme and local schemes.

Between 2000 and 2007, I co-funded a pilot scheme at Belvedere, an independent girls? day school in Liverpool, replacing fees with admission based on academic ability. Parents paid according to means. As a result, a third of pupils paid no fees. Academic standards improved and it was a happy place for pupils of all backgrounds. Moreover, the cost per pupil was less than at the average state school.

More than 80 leading independent day schools would back such a state-funded scheme, which would benefit more than 30,000 able students, whose parents could not afford full fees. It would require selective admissions, which political parties oppose. Yet far from creating new selection, such a scheme would democratise existing selective schools and break down the barriers between the independent and state sectors.

Taken together, I believe that these measures to improve teaching and reduce inequality would transform social mobility and unleash a wealth of talent to fuel our economy. And they would put England in the education premier league.

The writer is chair of the Sutton Trust and of the Education Endowment Foundation "

OP posts:
Silibilimili · 21/09/2012 19:57

Not sure what you refer to in your last post rabbit. Please can you expand further? IMO the not get going don't get anything. Therefore have to get going.

rabbitstew · 21/09/2012 19:59

Well, I don't see poor people leaving the US to look for opportunities elsewhere - nobody will let them in anywhere, so they are stuck in the US and the US is stuck with them.

rabbitstew · 21/09/2012 20:00

I suppose they could literally be starved and then other countries might let them in as refugees?

inkyfingers · 21/09/2012 20:16

Is there ANY way the present comprehensive system (since it's across the UK apart from Kent/Bucks etc) could be made to work properly?

Some comps are fantastic and oversubscribed. The main reason may be the middle-class have flocked there and pushed up house prices; but they probably offer great teaching, a strong culture of aspiration, good behaviour - all the reasons they're popular. The weaker comps have problems but the main one is lack of aspiration and a leadership that doesn't honestly see many of their pupils going to an RG university - instead claiming all manner of self-fulfilment including the 'fantastic' 5 A*-C grades they seem to think will open doors.

I'd want to the each comp have to be elitest for their top set - maybe with a differentiated curriculum, insistence on doing languages and triple science to GCSE, Latin/Greek (ie just like the grammars/indies). Big expectations on achievement, homework-load to make Gove smile. All pupils would be eligible to be in the top sets and reviewed each term. Poor grades AND poor behaviour and pupils move down. Yes, it might be stuffed with MC kids, but those in sets just below could be encouraged to work hard to get in.

Many comps have a different curriculum for the lowest achievers - a group often called a 'nurture' group or in one school 'accelerated learning' and part of their provision for all abilities. So why not a push for the other end of the academic scale.

Then comps would be TRULY comprehensive, and a place for the brightest to do well. The biggest problem would be the leadership of many schools wouldn't sign up to it.....

The ONLY reason many parents don't like most comps is that they believe the brightest kids don't do well, and they're right.

Silibilimili · 21/09/2012 20:43

inky the dumbing down culture that does not encourage competition will not let this happen. In some Asian countries, from the age of 5, there are yearly and half yearly exams where if the child fails, s/he has to redo the whole year. This guarantees childrrn are atleast literate at a basic level, the pass mark to move onto the next year being 40%. This is not good for non academic children but does ensure basic literacy.

seeker · 21/09/2012 20:47

But comprehensives do have top sets already. Even high schools in selective areas have top sets.

I do sometimes wonder whether people on threads like these have been inside a state school recently.

Silibilimili · 21/09/2012 20:47

rabbit, I still don't understand your post. Maybe it's me.

Silibilimili · 21/09/2012 20:52

seeker, is being in the top set of a poorly performing comprehensive enough? I studied in a inner London comprehensive. I was in the top set for science, English and Maths. I have achieved academically. However, would I have achieved more if the teacher focused on the top set and pushed further? Probably.

seeker · 21/09/2012 20:53

The top of the top set at my ds's high school get a*s. Can't ask for more than that.

Silibilimili · 21/09/2012 20:59

I see your point seeker.

inkyfingers · 21/09/2012 21:11

seeker the top sets in a lot of comprehensives are truly unspectacular/ average (as my post suggests). I have been in a lot of local schools and my DCs attend a good comp Grin

seeker · 21/09/2012 21:13

So no a*s or as, inky fingers?

inkyfingers · 21/09/2012 21:13

silib I agree. The dumbing down culture/lack of aspiration holds back schools.

rabbitstew · 21/09/2012 21:17

Silibilmili - have you achieved what you wanted to achieve in life? Or do you suspect you have low aspirations and ought to be doing more? What more would you like to have achieved? It's not just the school's job to give you aspirations - you could develop a few of your own?

As for what I meant - every country, however aspirational, still has to deal with a rump of people who do not achieve and need support. They are less noticeable when you are, as a country, still not mature (ie not set in its ways) and geographically still have tonnes of space to fill with people and are thus still growing your population rapidly and bringing in new blood to deal with the weaklings cheaply for you while they work their way up, but once you've started getting to a point where the country has got comfortably full and have a history of WASPs being the dominant group (ie an established hierarchy and culture that has started to be threatened by, eg, Latinos) and people have begun to complain they feel overcrowded and don't want to keep letting people in, and the quality of life is not what it used to be when there was more space and opportunity is not as free, you start to wonder why inconvenient people who need lots of support have to live quite so long and clog the place up with their silly views and why you have to put up with people in the supposed land of the free complaining about loss of language and culture... ie you are a victim of your own established success, which some people have mistakenly started to believe was created by WASPs because they are actually superior to the other groups. ie you are about to end up in the same position as the old European powers.

inkyfingers · 21/09/2012 21:18

Yes, some A* & As, but maybe could be more. My experience in 2 schools was key stage 3 and I felt pupils were given very achievable work that I would be surprised if it was set in a more academic school (could be wrong!)

rabbitstew · 21/09/2012 21:23

Maybe it would be nice if more schools felt they ought to teach beyond the exam syllabus. The point about underachievement is, I think, that schools have been taught to focus on the exams and getting the best exam results, thus spending many precious hours practising for said exams as though they are the be all and end all of school and achievement, when brighter children could be doing something more interesting.

rabbitstew · 21/09/2012 21:27

Of course, we are all very interested in testing and measuring everything to prove it exists. Exams are a bit like all the red tape everyone so despises in their daily work - they get in the way of those who are good at what they do and slow things down.

rabbitstew · 21/09/2012 21:31

An A* in A-level maths doesn't prove I'm a genius, it doesn't prove I've worked desperately hard, it doesn't prove I've been well taught, it just proves I did well in an exam on the day.

rabbitstew · 21/09/2012 21:32

Exams seldom test your ability to be innovative, either. In fact, if you have a thick examiner, or a computer marking your paper, your originality may hold you back.

inkyfingers · 21/09/2012 21:40

it might not prove lots of things you mention, but many kids would be fantastically pleased to get A and universities would open their doors. That's what A/A do. You might not have worked hard, but you're in a very small ability range. At least Smile

rabbitstew · 21/09/2012 21:44

The brightest people maybe don't just need formal teaching, they benefit from the chance to discuss and share ideas with someone they can look up to or spar with, not a teacher who is, in fact, only one lesson ahead of them in the syllabus. Not all teachers are capable of that (and not all teachers capable of that are capable of giving a good, structured lesson for the more averagely intelligent).

TalkinPeace2 · 21/09/2012 21:44

rabbitstew
how many schools do you visit in an average term?

just wondering as you seem to have a view on all schools
my DH visits over 100 schools a year - of all types : I therefore base my opinions on his experience and notes thereon.

What is your source for accurate information?

rabbitstew · 21/09/2012 21:50

But children do get whole hosts of As from our local comprehensive, including in A-level physics, chemistry, maths, English, languages, etc. I personally think more children could get those grades in those subjects if they took them in the first place, but if some children are capable of getting those grades from that school and choose them and are given the option to choose them, is that a sign that the school is teaching well enough and those not getting those grades just aren't bright enough or haven't pulled their fingers out, that not enough children are being pushed to achieve more in the "right" subjects, that the teaching is not good enough but those passing are doing extra work behind the scenes or are just utter geniuses who could get an A in their sleep, or what???

TalkinPeace2 · 21/09/2012 21:51

WHAT makes you think that every child could or should get A grades in academic subjects?

rabbitstew · 21/09/2012 22:02

Have I implied I have any source of accurate information? I thought I was just posing lots of questions and stating what are quite clearly nothing more than assumptions/challenges/beliefs to be taken up by people who think they know and have proof of their knowledge. Like - does it take a different kind of teacher to challenge the brighter children? I know some people think it does and who will pay to get it. Do I have an unrealistic view of the local comprehensive and its ability to educate my children? Should I aim to get my children into a selective school instead? Should my only aim for secondary school be to get the best academic education I can for my children, or are there other attributes I would like them to develop which might result in my making other choices?

So, what source of accurate information were you planning on giving me? And if you visit lots of schools a year, how long are you spending in each school, watching what's going on and how do you assess how differently they would behave when you are not there?