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The British experience.


IT HAS BEEN 16 years since Britain's Conservative government under Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher Noun 1. Margaret Thatcher - British stateswoman; first woman to serve as Prime Minister (born in 1925)
Baroness Thatcher of Kesteven, Iron Lady, Margaret Hilda Thatcher, Thatcher
 introduced the Education Reform Act. The law created a national curriculum for all state-supported schools as well as a national system of student testing and school inspections. The act was a determined attempt to diminish the power of local education authorities (which are similar to America's school districts) and to devolve devolve v. when property is automatically transferred from one party to another by operation of law, without any act required of either past or present owner. The most common example is passing of title to the natural heir of a person upon his death.  resources and responsibility for meeting national standards to individual schools. And it has been seven years since the Labor Party and its prime minister, Tony Blair Noun 1. Tony Blair - British statesman who became prime minister in 1997 (born in 1953)
Anthony Charles Lynton Blair, Blair
, came to power, pledging to raise standards with a blitz of initiatives and reforms. Labor's proposals included introducing national literacy and numeracy numeracy Mathematical literacy Neurology The ability to understand mathematical concepts, perform calculations and interpret and use statistical information. Cf Acalculia.  strategies in order to improve the learning of basic skills; establishing Education Action Zones that would encourage local businesses to work with schools; funding after-school homework groups; creating courses in citizenship; revising the national curriculum; and setting up a task force of leading educators to advise on new reforms.

What has this flurry of reform achieved? And what lessons, if any, can be drawn from this huge investment of political energy and public funds See Fund, 3.

See also: Public
?

The answer to the first question is "not enough." A quarter of British 11-year-olds still leave primary school unable to read well enough to deal with the demands of the secondary-school curriculum. Results from the General Certificate of Secondary Education Noun 1. General Certificate of Secondary Education - the basic level of a subject taken in school
GCSE, O level

England - a division of the United Kingdom
 exam that students take at age 16 show improvement each year, but there is a general recognition that grade inflation makes the progress illusory. Only 43 percent of 16-year-olds pass the General Certificate exams in the core subjects of English, mathematics, and science. Thousands leave secondary school with no meaningful qualifications at all.

The lesson of this failure is simple: the top-down imposition of politically inspired education reforms does not work.

In the early 1990s, when I became chief executive of the Schools Curriculum and Assessment Authority, the body responsible for introducing the national curriculum into English schools and administering the tests in English, mathematics, and science that children were to take at ages 7, 11, and 14, I thought differently. I supported the idea of a national curriculum that defined core bodies of knowledge in English, mathematics, science, history, geography, art, music, physical education, information technology, design technology, and, in secondary schools, a modern foreign language. Such a curriculum would, I thought, challenge the child-centered orthodoxies and raise academic expectations.

National testing would give us crucial information on how individual students and schools were performing. At the time, in England, as in America, too many parents expected too little. They had no point of reference, no data on how their child's school was performing compared with other schools. More often than not, mediocrity me·di·oc·ri·ty  
n. pl. me·di·oc·ri·ties
1. The state or quality of being mediocre.

2. Mediocre ability, achievement, or performance.

3. One that displays mediocre qualities.
 went unchallenged. With testing, successful schools could be rewarded and the unsuccessful helped to improve. Failing that, they could be closed.

I also supported, and still do, what were known as "grant-maintained" schools. Grant-maintained schools, which are similar to charter schools in the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area. , were established by the 1988 reforms. They are funded directly by the government and run independently of local education authorities. The thinking here was that the school should be responsible for its own destiny. Resources should not be wasted on local and national bureaucracies. It is the principal who makes the difference, not the distant bureaucrat. So let principals decide how the curriculum is to be organized and pupils taught. Give them the resources to do the job and hold them responsible for their school's performance. However, one of the very first things First Things is a monthly ecumenical journal concerned with the creation of a "religiously informed public philosophy for the ordering of society" (First Things website).  the Labor government did on coming to power in 1997 was to abolish grant-maintained schools. The policy was termed elitist e·lit·ism or é·lit·ism  
n.
1. The belief that certain persons or members of certain classes or groups deserve favored treatment by virtue of their perceived superiority, as in intellect, social status, or financial resources.
 and divisive because only a minority of schools, usually successful ones, had applied for and been given grant-maintained status. It therefore had to go.

I was also enthusiastic about the new school inspection system, especially after I was appointed chief inspector This article or section deals primarily with the United Kingdom and does not represent a worldwide view of the subject.
Please [ improve this article] or discuss the issue on the talk page.
 of schools in 1994. The new policy required that every school be inspected every four years. The idea was that expert inspectors would comment on standards of pupil achievement, the strength of the principal's leadership, the use of school resources, and the quality of what we called, rather quaintly, "social, moral, spiritual and cultural education." A report was to be published immediately following the inspection, and the failure of underperforming schools was to be made public.

In other words Adv. 1. in other words - otherwise stated; "in other words, we are broke"
put differently
, from the beginning I supported nearly every change wrought by the Education Reform Act in 1988. That was before government officials and various education groups got into the act and diluted nearly every reform, rendering the changes impotent.

The National Curriculum

From day one, there was a battle over the content of the new national curriculum. Politicians felt that they had to involve the education "experts." Predictably, these experts fought strenuously for their pet theories, which were usually progressive. Skills were deemed more important than knowledge. Strenuous attempts were made to introduce "cross curricular themes" that, it was hoped, would undermine the focus on separate subject disciplines. In an open letter published in the London Times Higher Education higher education

Study beyond the level of secondary education. Institutions of higher education include not only colleges and universities but also professional schools in such fields as law, theology, medicine, business, music, and art.
 Supplement, 576 English professors and lecturers complained that the government's "doctrinaire doc·tri·naire  
n.
A person inflexibly attached to a practice or theory without regard to its practicality.

adj.
Of, relating to, or characteristic of a person inflexibly attached to a practice or theory. See Synonyms at dictatorial.
 preoccupation" with grammar and spelling "betrayed a disastrously reductive re·duc·tive  
adj.
1. Of or relating to reduction.

2. Relating to, being an instance of, or exhibiting reductionism.

3. Relating to or being an instance of reductivism.
, mechanistic mech·a·nis·tic
adj.
1. Mechanically determined.

2. Of or relating to the philosophy of mechanism, especially one that tends to explain phenomena only by reference to physical or biological causes.
 understanding of English studies English studies is an academic discipline that includes the study of literatures written in the English language (including literatures from the U.K., U.S., Ireland, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Hong Kong, the Philippines, India, South Africa, and the Middle East, among other ." They objected to making the study of Shakespeare compulsory in secondary schools and rejected as "dictatorial" a plan to "impose" a "canon of supposedly great works," including having all pupils read some Dickens and Wordsworth.

One of the results of all this lobbying has been the removal of the knowledge base from subjects like geography and history. The emphasis in geography is now on "sustainable development Sustainable development is a socio-ecological process characterized by the fulfilment of human needs while maintaining the quality of the natural environment indefinitely. The linkage between environment and development was globally recognized in 1980, when the International Union ," field-work techniques, and the teaching of general skills (such as how to "collect, record and analyze evidence"). In history, 7-year-olds are encouraged "to see the diversity of human experience, and understand more about themselves as individuals and members of society." The fact that many students leave school at the age of 16 knowing next to nothing about the history of their own country does not appear to matter.

By all indications, officials in the Blair government support the progressivist tilt in the curriculum. "We need," said Blair appointee APPOINTEE. A person who is appointed or selected for a particular purpose; as the appointee under a power, is the person who is to receive the benefit of the trust or power.  Estelle Morris Estelle Morris, Baroness Morris of Yardley, PC (born 17 June 1952) is a British Labour politician and member of the House of Lords. She was briefly a member of the Cabinet.

Estelle Morris was born to a strongly political family.
 just before resigning in 2002 as secretary of state for education, "a shift in understanding away from the old model of teaching as transmission of facts and figures towards one which captures the teacher's role as expert practitioners in advanced pedagogy." David Hopkins, who Morris appointed to the key role of head of the Standards and Effectiveness Unit at the Department for Education and Skills The Department for Education and Skills (DfES) was a United Kingdom government department between 2001 and 2007. It was responsible for the education system and children's services in England. On 28 June 2007 the department was split in two by Gordon Brown. , believes that "when students begin to take ownership of the learning behavior, you see something quite transformational taking place inside the school, because then it is the students who actually control learning rather than the teacher."

The ideas about education and teaching that determine government policies and drive the spending of billions of pounds of public money are important. Yet the state relies on the "thought world" of the education establishment to define and implement its program of reform. The result is the waste of huge sums of money and the exhaustion and anger of teachers who want to get on with the job of teaching.

So how can a society establish a standards-based curriculum without having it hijacked by the education experts whose views are responsible for the mess we are trying to resolve? The key is a political will that remains resolute in the face of carefully orchestrated or·ches·trate  
tr.v. or·ches·trat·ed, or·ches·trat·ing, or·ches·trates
1. To compose or arrange (music) for performance by an orchestra.

2.
 resistance and has the confidence to challenge the arguments of the professional lobby groups.

Inflated Results

Then there are the tests and examinations that are meant to be a robust, objective measure of students' and schools' performance. The problem is the fact that the national government, which desires that the electorate view its reforms favorably, controls both the national curriculum tests that pupils take at the ages of 7, 11, and 14 and the public examinations that are taken at ages 16 (the General Certificate of Secondary Education exams meant to assess skills and knowledge in the traditional academic subjects) and 18 (the Advanced Level exams for students hoping to attend university). This control is denied, but the organization that holds direct responsibility for the administration of the tests and the maintenance of standards in public examinations (the Qualifications and Curriculum Authority, formerly the Schools Curriculum and Assessment Authority) has, as I know from my experience when I was its chief executive, a very fragile independence. Meetings with government officials are held regularly. Department of Education officials attend all board meetings. We knew exactly what the ministers wanted, and they knew exactly what we were doing.

Consequently, results from these tests and examinations appear to improve each year, but endemic grade inflation, maladministration mal·ad·min·is·ter  
tr.v. mal·ad·min·is·tered, mal·ad·min·is·ter·ing, mal·ad·min·is·ters
To administer or manage inefficiently or dishonestly.



mal
, and, in my view, political interference have undermined public and professional confidence in the entire examination system.

For instance, in 2002, the scores 11-year-olds needed to pass the national curriculum tests in English and mathematics were reduced by 4 percent and 5 percent, respectively. Was this done, as the Qualifications and Curriculum Authority argues, because 2002's test was significantly harder than the previous year's? I very much doubt it. In fact, the public examinations have been diluted across the board. David Burghes, a professor of mathematics in Exeter University's education department, recently wrote, "It has become obvious that a [General Certificate of Secondary Education] tells you nothing. You can get a grade C in Mathematics (the pass mark) without being able to do long division and multiplication or anything to do with decimal fractions without a calculator."

A biology question that was on the 1979 examination for 16-year-olds turned up 16 years later as an Advanced Level question for 18-year-olds. In 1989, the mark needed to achieve a grade C in one mathematics examination for the General Certificate of Secondary Education was 48 percent. In 2000 it was 18 percent. Students can get four-fifths of the answers wrong and still pass. Moreover, university admissions tutors report escalating worries about the knowledge base of applicants for their courses. Cambridge University Cambridge University, at Cambridge, England, one of the oldest English-language universities in the world. Originating in the early 12th cent. (legend places its origin even earlier than that of Oxford Univ.  has extended the term needed to earn a mathematics degree from three years to four because the tutors found that today's students were simply not able to make enough progress in the time previously allocated to the degree.

It is hard, given such evidence, to have much, if any, confidence in England's system of tests and examinations. A recent survey of ordinary classroom teachers found that they also think the examinations have become easier. But the government and the teacher unions remain in denial in denial Psychiatry To be in a state of denying the existence or effects of an ego defense mechanism. See Denial. . "We have every reason," a Qualifications and Curriculum Authority spokesman reassured the great British public last year, "to think improvements in grades are a consequence of hard work and better preparation of pupils and teachers."

Self-Inspection

Would the system of school inspections make up for the problems with the national curriculum and testing? At first the inspection system showed real promise. Of the 24,000 state-supported schools in England The schools in England are organised into nine lists, one for each region of England.
  • List of schools in the East of England
  • List of schools in the East Midlands
  • List of schools in London
  • List of schools in the North East of England
, 1,500 have failed their inspection since the system of inspections began in 1992. Many of these schools had been failing for years, yet no one had bothered to do anything. With the establishment of inspections, however, the trauma of public humiliation Public humiliation was often used by local communities to punish minor and petty criminals before the age of large, modern prisons (imprisonment was long unusual as a punishment, rather a method of coercion). , coupled with a change in senior staff and some extra resources, led most failing schools to improve. Done well, the inspections provided school managers with invaluable information about how their school was performing. The inspections also provided politicians and their bureaucrats with the information they needed to formulate relevant policies and to target resources intelligently. More generally, the prospect of inspection concentrated a large number of minds that needed concentrating.

But of course the unions and the education establishment hated the whole thing. Why, they asked plaintively plain·tive  
adj.
Expressing sorrow; mournful or melancholy.



[Middle English plaintif, from Old French, aggrieved, lamenting, from plaint, complaint; see plaint.
, did the government want "to pillory PILLORY, punishment. wooden machine in which the neck of the culprit is inserted.
     2. This punishment has been superseded by the adoption of the penitentiary system in most of the states. Vide 1 Chit. Cr. Law, 797.
 and demoralize de·mor·al·ize  
tr.v. de·mor·al·ized, de·mor·al·iz·ing, de·mor·al·iz·es
1. To undermine the confidence or morale of; dishearten: an inconsistent policy that demoralized the staff.
" hard-working teachers? They compared school inspections to the Spanish Inquisition Spanish Inquisition

harsh tribunal established in 1478 to dispose of heretics, Protestants, and Jews. [Eur. Hist.: Collier’s, X, 259]

See : Persecution
. And in the end they won. During the past four years, the Years, The

the seven decades of Eleanor Pargiter’s life. [Br. Lit.: Benét, 1109]

See : Time
 inspection process has been softened gradually in response to teachers' criticism. Schools are now inspected less frequently, less extensively, and, some would say, less rigorously. In 2004 the idea is to make the inspections a check on the school's own self-evaluation, thus destroying the whole idea of an independent appraisal.

Good Money Chasing Bad Ideas

My sense, seven years after the Labor Party took control, is that the wheel has more or less come full circle. The old socialist belief that problems can be solved by throwing money at them has replaced a commitment to real change. The secretary of state for education insists that the decision to spend more on education is dependent on the willingness of the profession to "modernize," but the truth is that billions of pounds have been spent with precious little to show for it.

For instance, 230 million pounds were wasted on a policy known as Education Action Zones that was meant to encourage partnerships between business and schools in deprived areas. It had no discernible effect on standards and has now been abandoned. A National College of School Leadership has been established with a budget of 60 million pounds a year. Does it have to send groups of prospective principals to China for no apparent reason? Should it really be encouraging schools to believe that it is better to teach "emotional literacy" than reading and writing? The current secretary of state for education, Charles Clarke

For other people named Charles Clarke, see Charles Clarke (disambiguation).
Charles Rodway Clarke (born 21 September 1950) is a British Labour Party politician.
, wants every secondary school to become a "specialist" school focusing on a particular subject, such as science, technology, business, or foreign languages. The fact that the inspectorate has not been able to find any link between specialist school status and improved examination standards is, apparently, irrelevant.

Perhaps the best example of the waste of public money is the scheme to introduce a system of performance pay for teachers. In theory, this is a sensible idea. Good schools and successful teachers ought to be rewarded for their success. But in practice it has been a disaster. The absurdity is that once teachers have received their "bonus," they will be paid that extra money for the rest of their professional life. There is no annual setting of targets, no review of performance, and no possibility, therefore, of the enhanced motivation that additional pay is meant to encourage. The government pretends that it has overseen a "radical modernization of the teaching profession." Hogwash hog·wash  
n.
1. Worthless, false, or ridiculous speech or writing; nonsense.

2. Garbage fed to hogs; swill.


hogwash
Noun

Informal nonsense

Noun 1.
. Of teachers who applied for the extra pay, 95 percent crossed the threshold. Our teachers are being paid more. End of story.

In the past few years, the belief that centralized cen·tral·ize  
v. cen·tral·ized, cen·tral·iz·ing, cen·tral·iz·es

v.tr.
1. To draw into or toward a center; consolidate.

2.
 initiatives coupled with massive new "investment" will solve the problems of state education has triumphed over the drive to open the performance of state schools to public scrutiny. The bureaucracies, local and national, have grown in size and power as the number of initiatives has multiplied. Many of the new initiatives are based on the educational ideas that created the problems in our schools, such as the drive to teach "thinking skills" in a knowledge vacuum.

What is the alternative? The way forward is to return to and extend the concept of the grant-maintained schools that Labor abolished in 1997. Principals should be allowed to run their schools according to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 their own professional judgment and the wishes and aspirations of parents. Teachers should not have to waste 25 percent of their working day on bureaucratic bu·reau·crat  
n.
1. An official of a bureaucracy.

2. An official who is rigidly devoted to the details of administrative procedure.



bu
 tasks that add nothing to their effectiveness in the classroom. Forty percent of every pound spent on state education should not be squandered squan·der  
tr.v. squan·dered, squan·der·ing, squan·ders
1. To spend wastefully or extravagantly; dissipate. See Synonyms at waste.

2.
 on the bureaucracies that are responsible for the miseducation of so many children.

It does not have to be like this. The state does not have to micromanage micromanage Administration A popular term for excess oversight of lower management by upper management  what happens in each of its schools. We could trust parents more and politicians and their bureaucrats less. But there is little sign that the current government really wants to involve the private sector in the running of state education or to find ways, through vouchers or tax credits, of genuinely empowering parents. Neither does our Conservative Party seem to have the courage of what ought to be its natural convictions. Sooner or later, however, because the present situation is untenable, change will come. Taxpayers will realize that they are paying more for public services Public services is a term usually used to mean services provided by government to its citizens, either directly (through the public sector) or by financing private provision of services.  that have not improved. Parents will grow more restive as they fail to secure a place for their children in a decent school. The government of the day will have to respond.
Public Education in the United Kingdom and the United States

UNITED KINGDOM                         UNITED STATES

Public School Enrollment
8.6 million                            47.7 million
(2001 school year)                     (2003 school year)

# of Public Schools (primary and secondary)
26,400*                                93,300

Public School Spending
4.6% of GDP                            3.5% of GDP
(FY 1999)                              (FY 2000)

# of Governing Bodies
150+ Local                             14,890 school boards
Education Authorities

% of High-School Graduates Entering College
43%                                    63%

Performance on International Math & Science Assessments in 1970 & 1995

Rank: 7th of 17 countries in 1970      Rank: 9th of 17 countries in 1970
17th of 38 countries in 1995           16th of 38 countries in 1995

* Includes independent (private) schools in Wales, Scotland, and
Northern Ireland

SOURCES: UK Department of Education and Skills; U.S. Department of
Education; OECD; U.S. Department of Labor; Eric Hanushek, "The
Importance of School Quality," in Paul Peterson, ed., Our Schools and
Our Future (Hoover, 2003)


--Christopher Woodhead is a professor of education at the University of Buckingham The University of Buckingham has come into prominence in recent years by being ranked first and then second in the National Student Survey, the league-table of student satisfaction. . He served as chief inspector of schools in Britain from 1994 to 2000.
COPYRIGHT 2004 Hoover Institution Press
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2004, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:Feature
Author:Woodhead, Christopher
Publication:Education Next
Geographic Code:4EUUK
Date:Jun 22, 2004
Words:2911
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