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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 · 01/10/2012 20:06

You'd have to read all the research available to get a fair picture. Even then new research will come out and there will be more data to analyse.
That is science.

breadandbutterfly · 01/10/2012 20:23

The article I linked to is quoted here in full, quite interesting though not specific to Aspergers etc kids, I'm afraid, rabbitstew:

ronbarak.tumblr.com/post/22722767367/bilingual-brain-boost-two-tongues-two-minds-by

Silibilimili · 01/10/2012 21:08

bread., a very through article. Thank you for the link.

rabbitstew · 01/10/2012 21:12

It's a shame it's not specific to aspergers, given that people with aspergers often have impairment of executive function, lack of flexibility of thought and difficulty putting themselves in another person's position, three things apparently improved by growing up bilingual. It would be interesting to see whether these functions are also improved in the brain of someone with aspergers, or whether said person just freaks out more often!

rabbitstew · 01/10/2012 21:27

Ooh. I think I've just found a website talking about it... I may return...

Silibilimili · 01/10/2012 21:32

What to me is fascinating is the amount of kids being diagnosed with speech problems. Dyspraxia. Dyslexia, off the spectrum,ADHD etc.
In a class of 30, there are 2 or 3 kinds with speech problems at least that I know of, (keeping in mind schools have just started), I child with severe physical special needs.
Really whats going on. Are doctors very enthusiastic in the diagnoses/labelling?

Don't take me wrong. I think it's great. It gives the kids a fair change to develop. However, the shear number of them is scary. What's going on?! I do not recall so many when I was in primary school.

rabbitstew · 01/10/2012 21:35

Looks like children with aspergers and SLDs don't do any worse growing up bilingual than they do growing up monolingual - ie no difference in terms of length of delay in development of speech (except to the extent that if you need speech therapy for one language, you will also need speech therapy for the other!...).

rabbitstew · 01/10/2012 21:40

Well, if you believe the journalistic reporting of scientific research of recent years, severe maternal stress during pregnancy could be a factor in dyslexia, aspergers and dyspraxia in some cases...Hmm. You could combine that with all those stressed women going straight back to their stressful jobs after pregnancy rather than bonding properly with their stressed out babies.... Hmm. And you could also believe the argument that parents are strapping their babies into car seats too much, putting them on their backs too much rather than giving them tummy time and not enabling them to move around during the appropriate "window" for learning motor skills and thus exacerbating the problem.... Hmm. And then, of course, the mothers that do stay at home are just leaving their kids in front of the TV and not talking to them. Grin

rabbitstew · 01/10/2012 21:41

I blame the mothers. It is always the mother's fault. Just ask Katie Price.

rabbitstew · 01/10/2012 21:43

Or we could blame the men for making women's lives stressful?

rabbitstew · 01/10/2012 21:50

Oh, and full blown autism, too... and I think schizophrenia has been linked to maternal stress, too (increase in diagnosis of schizophrenia amongst Dutch people born during the 2nd world war). It's enough to make you have a stressful pregnancy, worrying about all the awful things your stress might be doing to your baby, along with all that toxoplasmosis and listeriosis and working making your baby smaller.

Silibilimili · 02/10/2012 06:03

rabbit, oh dear.

Another thing that grates me a little is the school timing. It was all good and well when mothers used to stay at home to have home time at 3.15, but now? It's not exactly conducive to letting women have careers is it? And all those holidays!

rabbitstew · 02/10/2012 07:52

Nothing is conducive to letting women have careers or letting them not have careers. You're damned if you do and damned if you don't, unless you don't give a hoot what anyone else thinks Grin.

amillionyears · 02/10/2012 08:21

Dont give a hoot.
So long as everyone is looked after properly.
The way I look at it is,we are all going to be dead in x number of years.
What does it really matter what others outside your own family think.

Silibilimili · 02/10/2012 08:29

It's not about caring what people think. More about the practical side of things. Who does pick up and drops? How do you manage holidays? How go you get time to help with homework ? How do you get time time to attend the numerous times the school expects you to attend?

amillionyears · 02/10/2012 08:51

For me personally it is about priorities.

rabbitstew · 02/10/2012 08:53

But from the practical side of things, do you think you could do your job properly and attend your children's assemblies, plays, concerts, parents' evenings etc, and help them with their homework? Or should the children do fewer concerts, homework, plays, assemblies, etc? Or should more people share your job, so you all work less, for less pay??? Would that actually work with your type of job, or would you feel you were missing out on doing it to the best of your abilities and putting your all into it, and failing to build up the relevant expertise before you reach retirement??? Or should children accept that parents don't get to see their plays live, but might be able to watch the specially recorded DVD, if the recording actually works and doesn't have a technical hitch????
Even if you share attendance at assemblies and plays with your other half (if you have one), so that you are both equally inconvenienced on the work side, you can't control the fact that children's plays etc are fixed in time, whereas work can suddenly ramp up at an inconvenient moment.

rabbitstew · 02/10/2012 08:57

And as for holidays.... from the children's point of view, what should we do with them? How much time do they need not being organised into activities in order to keep them busy and safe whilst their parents are out working? What should we be doing with our children?

rabbitstew · 02/10/2012 09:10

Should we take our children to work with us and, from the cradle, teach them how to be lawyers, accountants, bankers, nurses, chief executives, politicians? Grin

Xenia · 02/10/2012 11:22

Actually most professionals used to work from home - the doctor would have his surgeryo n the ground floor of his Edinburgh house etc. It is a lovely model and the children get to see at least in part what the parents do just as farming families see and saw it and saw mother spinning in the corner and just as they see all those of us who work for ourselves working at home.

Most parents with money and power book out school events in indelible red ink and get to them It is much easier to attend a school concert for your 7 year old if you are head of BP than if you are a teacher in a primary school. If you work for yourself it is even easier. The first thing I have done for the 23 years I have had a child at school when we get the next term dates is get those on all calendars and then ensure I book nothing work related when they are on. Obviously sometimes you share that out with the other spouse and indeed when we had chidlren at 3 schools there might be clashes so we divided ourselves up - one at one school and one at the other.

Most schools used by working parents know that parents need most events on after school so it tends to work out fine.

As for sharing collections it is them ost important issue a 20 something woman needs to discuss before moving to marriage conversations with a man - how will you Mr Man ensure you are free a few days a week to collect from nursery, or let the nanny go home at 6 or whatever the arrangements are.

We certainly found life was much easier and better for eveyone if we paid for care to about 6pm. Most fee paying schools have after school clubs where homework can be done and there is food and before school although we did not use those when they were little in our case. The main thing is these are not women's issues at all and you must never let that be the case in a relationship. Stamp out all sexism right away.

OP posts:
Bonsoir · 02/10/2012 11:31

Lots of HCPs (doctors, dentists etc) work from home in France still. It's a disaster. It is economically inefficient and prevents professional development through teamwork. It also means large parts of France are health-care deserts - doctors who have to set up in private practice just don't want to go to poor rural areas.

Xenia · 02/10/2012 11:45

On an individual basis though it can be quite nice as a lifestyle and most people who do do lots of group stuff too separately. It's particularly pleasant when the children are out... laughing as I type. I only started having a home based office when they were at school.

OP posts:
rabbitstew · 02/10/2012 11:56

So, to run a successful, world-class economy, we can't have lots of cottage industries and women can't work from home too much? I'm not sure if the head of BP, or the Prime Minister, would agree with Xenia on ability to go to ALL their children's school performances. I think a serious oil spill or crisis in the cabinet would definitely trump a school play. Presenteeism still affects those at the top of industry, since they expect it of their employees.

Xenia · 02/10/2012 12:05

The last head of BP is gay so it did not affect Lord Browne. However I do know very very senior people who put child things in diaries and they work around those, men and women. Mind you I would do anything always to get out of a school run so it's a question of degree - one school Christmas plty a year and a sports day plus a parents' evening on two nights a year and a few concerts is fine. If the burden were more one may simply not wish to go. Obviously you bear in mind the child's wish. I was told not to set one foot on school premises on Open Day last weekend and that is because said child is now teenage and I have done this 3 times before and that is just how they often are at that age. I don't think I am particularly more embarrassing than most parents.

I certainly agree that if women downgrade careers and earn less that is bad. But if you can run a Boden or White Company from your barn with workers off site I don't think that's a bad thing. It can enhance family life.

OP posts:
rabbitstew · 02/10/2012 12:36

Ah, so Lord Browne can indulge in presenteeism with a bit less guilt, then?
Starting up a company from home may result in huge success, it may not. For a while at least, if not in some cases forever, someone who has left highly lucrative employment is going to be downgrading financially if they wish to set up their own business.

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