When the
previous Labour Government tried to persuade us that equality and all that
could be acquired by flinging large dollops of money at the Education system
they also went in for some tinkering with the organisation and financing.
But neither
they nor the Coalition that followed realised that far more fundamental changes
might need to be made and in many respects they only delayed the coming
disaster.
The nature of the teacher crisis is a subject in the Huffington Post which
suggests that the recruitment of teachers is another "perfect storm"
to add to those about to hit the shores of government in the coming years. There are said to be more teachers but not
enough given the criteria for schools today and many leave for other jobs
instead of regarding it as a life calling.
Given that
teaching is afflicted with management ideology and has changed to meet those
rules it must impact on what they are expected to do and to produce. If the young are "clients" or
"customers" and if the product is delivering defined finished human
goods according to spec' then this is where you get to.
But given the
creation in recent years of sources of information, knowledge and such that are
immediately accessible, and facilities for access, contact and the rest to
experts and visual modes of instruction and advice, could the whole structure
of schools, years, examinations and the rest be now legacies or relics from the
past?
More to the point,
given the length of school days, I see them going in to start at 9 or after and
leaving at 2.30 or so, how much is spent not learning? Add the time out for holidays the education
system has now become an antique, grossly inefficient way of preparing and
educating the young. Then there are the
children themselves.
They cannot be
the same as the groups of children of the past living as they do in a very
different world. More to the point they
are far more varied. Quite simply, how
can a teacher manage to teach by either traditional or alleged
"modern" i.e. mid to late 20th Century methods given the children now
entering?
We are at the
point now where a root and branch change of what goes on in schools, how they
access instruction and information, how they provide skills and how they
organise the pupils could cover the essential ground in far less time and to
better effect. The social engineering
they are supposed to be doing is the kind of work which leaves a car without
wheels.
Where do we
begin?
Not so long ago we visited Grandson's classroom to see what the little mites are up to. What struck me more than anything else was the tiny class size.
ReplyDeleteIn the fifties I remember being in a class of 45 taught by one teacher. Now it seems to be half that number taught by a teacher plus a teaching assistant. So much for productivity.