- Sat Jan 01, 2022 3:43 pm
#17369
I've been looking for a long time to see what the government-in-waiting would propose for education, which is in the worst mess it has ever been in since state education began in 1870.
By 1997 the Blair administration had mature plans which they implemented, and were successful, increasing coherence, rewarding innovation and funding improvement.
Tim Brighouse has an important piece in the Guardian today which might give a hint as to the direction a Starmer government would take.
https://www.theguardian.com/politics/20 ... ns-schools
Key points:
By 1997 the Blair administration had mature plans which they implemented, and were successful, increasing coherence, rewarding innovation and funding improvement.
Tim Brighouse has an important piece in the Guardian today which might give a hint as to the direction a Starmer government would take.
https://www.theguardian.com/politics/20 ... ns-schools
Key points:
Written with the curriculum expert Mick Waters, About Our Schools divides recent history into two eras: a postwar age of “hope and optimism”, in which teachers were pretty free to do what they liked, followed by a post-Thatcher age of “markets, centralisation and managerialism”, in which the influence of inspections and league tables became all-pervasive and individual ministers could decide how skills such as subtraction should be taught in every classroom in England.
This may explain why, amid all the “building back better” policy solutions that the book suggests, he instantly settles on a plan for the “open school”, a parallel version of the Open University, as his top priority.
The open school would build on the pandemic’s lessons about digital learning and create a national virtual school to help offset disadvantage, include children who are out of school, and provide enhanced opportunities for all.
It would wrap around a system guided by very different principles from the ones we see today: a new consensus on the purpose of schooling, a national cross-party commission to take a balanced 10-year view of education policy, schools being judged in groups rather than alone, with inclusion and wellbeing incentivised as well as exam results. Naturally there would be an enhanced role for the local authorities, which would be responsible for holding the new partnerships to account, in effect restraining central government power.
The moneychangers have fled from their high seats in the temple of our civilization. We now restore that temple to the ancient truths. The measure of the restoration lies in the extent to which we apply values more noble than mere monetary profit.