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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:
Xenia · 24/09/2012 13:42

Definitely not more rife than ever. Consider England 1920 say (anyone who watches Downton Abbey (or reads history)). We are miles better than we ever were. Consider England at the time of the enclosures, time whe we had serfs, no vote for anyone excpet male houseowners over 30. Yes we are heaps better than in those days.

hg, that's why they shouldn't be coached to get in. My children never felt pressured. Obviously some individual chidlren are perfectionists and some parents put stupid pressure on chidlren probably more in state grammars than private selectives less worried about exam results than the wider person.

Also they don't all get As at private schools (cf Prince Harry and all those mediocre boarding school unlike Eton and mediocre day privates unlike say Manchester Grammar where many private children go and get Cs often).

OP posts:
Bonsoir · 24/09/2012 13:42

happygardening - I know about the competition in those schools. That's a different point to the one I am making (and, believe me, the competition is rife in less well-equipped establishments in other countries - worse, I think, because of the constant pressure of being chucked out if you don't make the grade).

TheOriginalSteamingNit · 24/09/2012 13:43

Talkin yes, but I was thinking of fact that Thatcher's was often cited as being a largely grammar-school educated parliament, whilst this one is more public-. Not suggesting they were especially salt of the earth either!

Happy - take your point, but a £30k+ boarding education is probably out of the reach of many who use private day schools as well, so that's an example from the extreme end of the scale.

happygardening · 24/09/2012 13:47

"believe me, the competition is rife in less well-equipped establishments in other countries - worse, I think, because of the constant pressure of being chucked out if you don't make the grade."
The independent sector is not exactly covering its self in glory on that front neither are state grammars and even so called comprehensives in many areas.

wordfactory · 24/09/2012 13:47

I think it's a fair point bonsoir makes.

I'm very aware how easy it is for my DC to achieve highly. Actually, easy is the wrong word...smoothly I think sums it up better.

Everyhting is very conducive to opportunity/achievemnet etc
Everyhting is very conveninetly available.

The antithisis to my own education where I had to battle for anyhting I wanted.

losingtrust · 24/09/2012 13:48

I agree Xenia with your suggestions. Working for a French company, my colleagues from there cannot believe how expensive the top performing schools are and the impact this has on politics, sport.

Things have changed dramatically over the last thirty years and for me the only way to stop this is to stream kids in all schools and cross mix independent and state schools with the bright. I would get rid of grammer schools and bring an ethos back to the top streams of comps which is what happened when I went to a comp. The state should pay for good sports people, academics and musicians to attend the best school (private or State).

The amount of admin teachers should do should be cut down and they should be encouraged to teach with passion and not with the tick box practice of previous years.

Bonsoir · 24/09/2012 14:11

I think it is quite easy for parents who are easily able to afford to do so to sweep aside as many hurdles as possible for their DCs. I'm just not entirely convinced that hurdles aren't a crucial part of education.

MrsGuyOfGisbourne · 24/09/2012 14:14

It wold be good if teachers themselves protested about the burden of paperwork - but you never hear of them striking for more face time with pupiles, just to protect their pensions and long hlidays Sad

Bonsoir · 24/09/2012 14:17

In theory, if you have better qualified, more autonomous teachers, you won't require a system that keeps endless tabs on them.

rabbitstew · 24/09/2012 15:17

Bonsoir - I wholeheartedly agree with the sentiment that public schools can give children a warped sense of their achievements. It is a different type of competition when you do not have to compete for peoples' time and resources and look around yourself for what is available out of a limited choice. If you have everything laid out for you on a plate, the competition required is all very simple. You already know you have the best money can buy, you just have to make the most you can out of the best, rather than try to work out what the best is, whether you can afford it, how you can get what you need out of an inferior product, what you can afford and whether that is good enough, how important it is, what sacrifices you will have to make to get it, etc.

Xenia · 24/09/2012 16:22

I suspect richer parents try not to give them everything on plate - those with any sense. It's why Bill Gates will not give his children much, Warren Buffett limits inheritance, most parents don't even give access to trust funds until 30 becasue you want them sensibly having to work rather than thinking they need do nothing. It's why private school children do physically challenging trips abroad and learn to cope in difficult circumstances (nad of course I know plenty of state school pupils do Duke of Edinburgh awards, extreme camping trips and the like). It's something sensible parents try to arrange for their chidlren.

Idon't think selective academic private schools insulate children from competition. I think they are one of the best introductions to the competition chidlren will face in life. Now there probably are posh private schools for the rather dim which are very different but not the schools msot of us choose.

OP posts:
Bonsoir · 24/09/2012 17:42

I'm not at all convinced that "challenge tourism" is a substitute for battling out real life, and it matters hugely because it is just plain wrong to have a governing élite that has no concept at all of the quite basic hurdles to getting ahead that much (most) of the population labour under.

happygardening · 24/09/2012 18:17

Many children in independent ed do battle with life because like their counterparts in the state sector sadly many go through the serious upset of their parents splitting up and divorcing and even more sadly a few experience death of a parent. I work with these children and however much money you have it doesn't cushion the trauma experienced by family breakdown/bereavment.

Bonsoir · 24/09/2012 18:25

Sure, happygardening, I don't think anyone is disputing that family tragedy can happen to anyone. But that is not the point being made.

wordfactory · 24/09/2012 19:11

It is definitely somehting I think about in respect of my own DC. And not just private school.

My DC's lives are absurdly advantaged. Right from the fact that both their parents are alive, well and happily married, through to living in relative wealth and comfort.

But I wouldn't think it wise to manufacture hurdles. Maybe I should Grin.

happygardening · 24/09/2012 19:37

It's easier to tell a child how privelleged he is when he's in one of the country's elite indpendent school and to explain to him that it's just circumstance and luck that got him there and that there will be other as clever if not more clever in our town who because of their circumstance and bad luck haven't been given that opportunity. But it's harder to say to child in a nice middle class high performing comp where all you mates go the same thing.
My DS at his comp has never had to battle real life (apart from being dyslexic) neither have his friends and I doubt any view themselves as particularly privalaged they just think their school experience is the norm.

Bonsoir · 24/09/2012 20:03

You don't have to manufacture hurdles, wordfactory. But you can ensure that you don't remove all of the hurdles your DCs might possibly encounter.

orangeberries · 24/09/2012 20:06

Happygardening, I find it really hard to believe that nobody at your son's comprehensive have had to battle real life.

My DD1 goes to a very middle class state primary and at only 7 years old her best friend has had her mum battle with cancer, another friend has had her mum diagnosed with terminal cancer, another 2 of her best friends have had parents go through an acrimonious divorce and my DD knows a lot of detail of all these stories and has supported her friends all the way through.

My DS1 is the same, with more than one child in his class battling with disability and illness. Isn't that part of life? Or maybe you were just referring stritcly to the school experience?

Bonsoir · 24/09/2012 20:10

Family tragedy is not the same thing as battling for opportunities.

orangeberries · 24/09/2012 20:35

No but it is still battling real life though isn't it? A child battling with illness or family issues will need the same inner strength to battling for an opportunity, I don't really see the difference...

happygardening · 24/09/2012 22:29

orangeberriesI think you misunderstood what I said; the assumption was made further up this thread that children in independent schools did not have real life battle because privilege was handed to them on a plate. I pointed out that the same life changing events /real life battles happen to them as children in state schools e.g. divorce death of a parent but the point was then made that apparently these were not the sort of ?real life battles? that those making this point were thinking of.
I then made a point about privilege I don?t think it easy for a child in a successful middle class comp to understand how privileged he/she is whereas it is perhaps easier for a child in an elite independent school to understand just how privileged he/she is.

rabbitstew · 24/09/2012 22:42

Well, we all want our children to avoid tragedy. It would be a very odd parent who deliberately tried to make their children unhappy... And I don't think having all the advantages money can buy automatically corrupts a person at all, but it quite obviously does affect a person, in positive and in negative ways. After all, would people pay lots of money for their child to have all those advantages just so that they could have a jolly good time, or do they actually expect them to make a difference to the way that person develops?

There is a danger in thinking that the difference made to the person goes more deep than it does in reality and makes them a better person in all sorts of subtle ways which a less educated and advantaged person would fail to understand and to conclude from this that you should take with a pinch of salt what others from a different educational background say to you if you do not agree with it, because their education was inferior to yours. In other words, there is a danger of over-valuing your education when dealing with others and failing to realise, except theoretically, quite how much you still have to learn that others may understand better than you by dint of the fact that they are, actually, less well polished and educated.

TheOriginalSteamingNit · 24/09/2012 22:45

Well, but isn't the child in the elite independent actually more privileged, certainly according to the parents who wanted him to be there? So obviously more easy to explain that he is!

happygardening · 24/09/2012 22:51

I meet lots from top indepednent schools few seem too fall into this catagory:
"over-valuing your education when dealing with others and failing to realise, except theoretically, quite how much you still have to learn that others may understand better than you by dint of the fact that they are, actually, less well polished and educated."
Most are aware that they've been very fortunate and had a very good education with a myriad of opportunites but most intelligent well educated people quickly realise that the more they know the more they realise they dont know.

happygardening · 24/09/2012 22:56

TOSN yes its easier for a child in an elite independent to understand how privileged he is but a child in a top performing comp may find it harder to understand that he too is lucky in comparison with many. This child may find it difficult to understand; the ?concept at all of the quite basic hurdles to getting ahead that much (most) of the population labour under.?

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