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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:
rabbitstew · 24/09/2012 11:18

Having innovative, clever people in education and trusting them is crucial to education.

rabbitstew · 24/09/2012 11:20

It may come as a surprise to some, but state education has not always been entirely bereft of innovative, clever people....

TheOriginalSteamingNit · 24/09/2012 11:20

Who is innovative in the private sector - are we thinking Anthony Seldon?

rabbitstew · 24/09/2012 11:21

Mind you, I think some people think innovation and cleverness are wasted on the poor and would rather pay for their healthy, happy, advantaged children to get the greatest benefit from it, because they think that they would make the most out of it...

Bonsoir · 24/09/2012 11:22

I live in a country (France) with nationalised education and the lack of innovation is startling.

rabbitstew · 24/09/2012 11:22

I think the private sector is massively inventive - it is always finding new ways of wringing more money out of parents, to the point that hardly anyone can afford it.

MrsGuyOfGisbourne · 24/09/2012 11:23

Bonsoir, I agree that the key is better teaching.
If fee paying schools were abolished, what inventive would teh teaching unions have to maintain even the standards they defend today?
Re Finland, just hoe doverese is tehri population - would jhave thought it pretty homogeneous, what is the rate of non- native speakers/newly arrived asylum sekers etc to be educated there?
Interestingly today I read that the father adopting the baby that was found by Polish soldiers in Afghanistan said he and his wife would love and cherish her and makes sure she has the 'best education, shelter and love they could provide'.
I wonder how many UK families would prioritise education in that way for their baby daughter.

rabbitstew · 24/09/2012 11:24

French education is extremely rigid, I agree, Bonsoir. It bears very little resemblance to English state education, though.

moonbells · 24/09/2012 11:39

We have been discussing this at work, and the consensus seems to be that even in a fully-set class of equal raw ability and a large social background mix, the non-learners will tend to refuse to learn no matter what, the teacher will always have to spend time sorting them out and the willing learners will lose out because the teacher's not teaching (and will quite possibly be picked on for wanting to learn, too).

Until the whole class wants to sit and learn, the teacher could be of such high quality they had a Nobel prize and it would be useless as they'd never get a chance to teach to those high standards. Then it becomes a problem of how (and when) precisely do you get that learning desire in a child? Educate the families? Parenting classes? Preschools? More jobs?

Then you have the other problem. Even if you have a swathe of interesting jobs for all, you still have the group of people who don't want to work, either. How do you get them into work (and stop them passing the lack of drive on to their kids)?

wordfactory · 24/09/2012 12:03

I don't think state schools with low levels of FSM is an exception.

Due to the choice in education brought in fifteen years ago, state schools have become hugely more polarised.
The middle classes have circled their wagons around the good schools and houses in catchment have subsequently jumped so high that poorer families have no chance of living close enough.

This is not unusual in the UK.

TalkinPeace2 · 24/09/2012 12:13

wordfactory
amusingly though, with the uplift on the Pupil Premium, my kids school wrote to ALL parents asking if they would like to claim FSM - even if they were borderline financially and never normally claimed benefits, as the financial bonus for the school (£800 per pupil per year) was so worth it!
If I reduced our dividend take for a year or so, I could make our kids fit the box.
How surreal is that !

Bonsoir
Are there private / boarding schools in France? What do those utterly hacked with the state system (who can afford it) do?

TheOriginalSteamingNit · 24/09/2012 12:31

Yes, ours keep putting a bit on the newsletter reminding people to claim FSM if entitled, too.

I would imagine FSM will almost always be a lower proportion than not, and I am very clear that I think the choice thing is misguided and has lead to some polarization in some places. Still though, of the three outstanding comprehensives in this city, not one has an exclusively wealthy catchment, and two have very mixed ones. Of the OFSTED 'good' ones, all are mixed (I mean so mixed that despite their 'good' rating, people scorn them due to intake), so it really isn't the case that all schools considered to do good work and teach well are inaccessible to any but the wealthy.

rabbitstew · 24/09/2012 12:34

I don't think the "good schools" are all good schools, though, wordfactory, I think they are schools in "good catchments."
Whilst there will always be haves and have nots, the way the current system operates, it seems to me that there are far more have nots and have-to-make-dos than is entirely necessary. The majority of the population, surely, are not idle wasters???? Is it right to say that because a minority of people will always be disruptive, we should hive away a tiny minority who were already the least likely group ever to meet them and ensure that their lives are never disrupted by anything?

wordfactory · 24/09/2012 12:53

tosn I didn't say that schools with a mixed intake don't exist.

I was just challenging the assertion that schools without much of mix either don't exist or are a negligible exception.

Social polarisation is now rife. Schools simply reflect this.

Bonsoir · 24/09/2012 12:54

rabbitstew - French education is rigid and conformist because it is nationalised. French people who have never lived outside France have no concept of education that is not nationalised. The very existence of private, non-nationalised education gives the population at large something else with which to compare state education provision.

TalkinPeace2 - French parents with money are huge consumers of shadow education (tutors, top-ups, extra-curricular school). That is their only real option.

TheOriginalSteamingNit · 24/09/2012 12:58

I appreciate that I don't live in a) london b) a very posh village or c) anywhere really deprived, so obviously that influences the way I see it. Would still incline to the view that that's a wee bit overstated though!

Is social polarisation more rife than ever, do you think? And if that's the case, what do you see the role of private schools being to help with that? Or is it more that they're a sauve qui peut option for some?

rabbitstew · 24/09/2012 13:08

There are, actually, eg, Catholic schools in France which have a bit more freedom from the control of the state when it comes to syllabus and teaching methods, and for which parents (many of whom are not actually catholic) can pay a very low level of fees for the privilege. Parents of children with mild special needs often prefer these, as French state education seems to be particularly poor at dealing with such children.
French education is rigid and conformist because of French society. English education is chaotic and unpredictable, because of English society Grin.

Bonsoir · 24/09/2012 13:13

rabbitstew - Catholic schools in France have zero freedom when it comes to the curriculum and to teaching methods. Their only real freedom is in being able to select pupils (both at entry and at any point during a child's school career - ie children regularly get thrown out) and to employ non-qualified teachers.

Bonsoir · 24/09/2012 13:17

Catholic schools are also not the place for children with SEN. They have no means of dealing with SEN and classes in Catholic schools are on average quite a lot larger than in state catchment schools. Of course, discipline is better enforced and there are no stragglers, which means that it is easier to teach and learn in that environment.

wordfactory · 24/09/2012 13:17

Tosn I htink social polarisation has worsened.

I think this process began with the sale of social housing. I think it exacerbated under the Blair administration wherea small section of society becmae very wealthy indeed.

What part do private schools play in this? Well they don't help of course. But I think their impact is relatively minor as those DC if not orivately educated would gravitate to grammar schools, faith schools and schools with narrow intake.

I can't see that many of them (and they're not huge in number anyway) would poll up at their nearest comp with a poor reputation if private weren't an option.

TheOriginalSteamingNit · 24/09/2012 13:25

But it's perfectly possible, of course, that their nearest comprehensive doesn't have a poor reputation at all....

Hmm. It is different, isn't it.. when I was a child in the 80s, and a teenager in the 90s, the government were twats but they weren't overtly 'posh'. At the same time, I also don't remember anything remotely like Jeremy Kyle, or a word in common usage by teenagers which had a similar meaning to 'chav'. And yes, annoyingly, the gap between rich and poor did get bigger under Labour.

But l think truly comprehensive education would be the best way to mitigate some of that. In the absence of universally true comprehensives, and in a situation where a school inevitable represents the place it's in, and places aren't all the same.... I still think it's the better option.

Bonsoir · 24/09/2012 13:26

I do think that private education à l'anglaise, in its most superior forms (gorgeous green campuses of illustrious architecture, high-tech classrooms, Olympic-style sports facilities, professional standard theatre and music etc) gives some children a very warped view of their own achievements. Sure, they leave those places with strings of A* and an impressive CV of extra-curricular activities, but they achieved that breadth of education in large part because of the one-stop-shop school they attended that supported their learning with fantastic infrastructure and a huge culture of achievement.

In most countries, children are expected to battle more to achieve and that is considered a crucial part of the learning experience.

TalkinPeace2 · 24/09/2012 13:32

TOSN
the government were twats but they weren't overtly 'posh' - your memory is failing you.
Heseltine, Howe, Whitelaw, Douglas-Home, Longford : toffs to a man.

Xenia · 24/09/2012 13:35

Mrs G, I read the same quote about the abandoned baby. What was notable is because the father said it would be exducated. That is pretty rare. Many of them over there think it is the root of all evil to educate a girl at all and want her in her husband's house before the first period begins. Secondly he said his wife had not let the baby out of his sight - not him, not him at all - on other words yet another very sexist man with a lot to learn about fairness for women.

OP posts:
happygardening · 24/09/2012 13:38

Is social polarisation more rife than ever, do you think? And if that's the case, what do you see the role of private schools being to help with that?
On an individual basis I dont see private schools increasing social polarisation. I know of no other boarding school educated child in our town of about 4000. Im not saying they dont exist but this is a small community (think Hot Fuzz) and Ive not heard of others. Boarding is only open to the wealthy (bursaries aside) because few can afford £33 000 per child per year and most people have two if not three children. So it is likely that the lives that people with this kind of income lead means that they are more socially separated (there must be a better term than that) from your average man in the street. This is not got anything to do with schooling just wealth.

"I do think that private education à l'anglaise, in its most superior forms (gorgeous green campuses of illustrious architecture, high-tech classrooms, Olympic-style sports facilities, professional standard theatre and music etc) gives some children a very warped view of their own achievements. Sure, they leave those places with strings of A* and an impressive CV of extra-curricular activities, but they achieved that breadth of education in large part because of the one-stop-shop school they attended that supported their learning with fantastic infrastructure and a huge culture of achievement."
But in many of these schools the children are still "battling" these environments are often super competitive to get into and are super competitive once you there. I know from my professional experience that some children in independent ed are anxious and under lots of pressure from both the school and their parents to perform especially the parents. Independent ed is not a walk in the park for all OK they face different problems from children in state schools but they still have problems.

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