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Report reveals UK youth abandoned by education system
By Liz Smith
25 June 2007
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The Bow Group, a Conservative Party think tank, published a
report on May 25 entitled Invisible Children. Using the
governments own statistics, albeit selectively, it paints
a devastating picture of a whole generation of young people being
abandoned by the current educational system.
The report states that up to 100,000 children and young people
are losing out on an education. It indicts the Labour government
for failing some of the poorest and most deprived young people
in the country.
The benchmark that schools in England and Wales use
to measure success is how many pupils pass five GCSEs (General
Certificate of Secondary Education) with grades A to C. In 2006,
59 percent obtained five good GCSEs, 14 percent more than in 1997.
The report states that this has been achieved at the expense of
less-able students. Almost a quarter (129,700) of all pupils taking
GCSEs do not gain any grade above a C.
Whilst the number of pupils not gaining GCSEs has declined
from 45,000 in 1996-1967 to 29,800 in 2006, this is misleading
since many pupils are being kept out of the no qualifications
statistics by achieving a single grade. The reports then add to
this the number of those who do not turn up for exams, which is
estimated at 70,000.
A closer look at this phenomenon, it continues, reveals that
43 percent of pupils do not reach the expected level in
reading, writing and mathematics when they leave primary school.
The knock-on effect is that pupils are permanently playing catch-up.
* Between Key Stage 2 (age 7-11) and Key Stage 3 (age 11-14),
84,100 pupils make no progress or fall backwards in English38,100
in math and 145,000 in science.
* Almost a fifth of 14-year-old boys have the reading age of
a seven-year-old.
This is in spite of various initiatives and strategies such
as the literacy and numeracy hours in both primary and secondary
schools, and numerous initiatives spent to combat truancy. The
number of unauthorised absences has risen by 189,749 since 1997.
These include persistent truants, which make up 60.9 percent of
all truancies.
A substantial number of those who have disappeared
from school are those who have been permanently excluded and who
are not accounted for in the alternative education provision of
a Pupil Referral Unit (PRU). The numbers of those attending PRUs
have dramatically increased from 3,860 in 1997 to 7,080
in 2006. Of these, only 56 percent are entered for a GCSE.
Britain ranks 37th out of 40 in a league table of major industrial
nations of 17-year-olds staying in full-time education. But of
particular concern to the Bow group are the numbers of pupils
not in education, employment or training (NEET) at 16, which is
currently one in six. A large proportion of these engage in crime
or use of illegal drugs.
The figures produced are indeed an indictment of the Blair
governments education policy. But the Bow Groups use
of them is cynical. Its aim in focusing on the plight of vulnerable
young people under Labour is to advance alternative proposals
for education and training that will only worsen the situation.
The strongest condemnation within the report focuses on the
money wastede.g., on areas such as PRUs (currently
£263.3 million)and the fact that young people are
dropping out because they are uninspired by what they see
as an overly academic curriculum, or a curriculum that does not
engage with what they want to do, or the way they want to learn.
The authors of the report claim that the primary aim of the
research is the setting up of a national database to track what
happens to young people of school age. This has been planned by
the current government since 2002. However, their proposals to
address the massive underachievement that exists is the implementation
of a weeding-out process, through streaming and settingby
ability(which already takes place at 40 percent of secondary
schools) at an earlier age so that those children can be identified
for vocational courses and hands-on learning.
Current practice allows young people from 14 to opt for a vocational
route of which three days are spent in school studying core subjects
and two days on placement.
The main thrust of the report is to raise the status
and quality of practical learning in schools. This is to
be achieved not by giving schools more money to build the facilities
necessary to carry this out, but by creating in every local authority
Enterprise Portals run by small businessesin
return for an exemption on business rates.
One would normally expect a strong rebuttal of such a report
by the Labour Party. Yet, even as a departing Prime Minister Blair
boasts that education is one of the success stories of his administration,
no reply has been made.
This is because the drive by the Tories for greater selection,
channeling those deemed unsuitable for academic courses through
setting and streaming and encouraging private investment, are
policies Labour is in full agreement with and does not want to
publicly reject.
The government is currently encouraging all schools to either
become privately run academies (run by industrial or Christian
organisations), or trusts, or to move to foundation status, which
takes the school out of local authority control. Some of these
will be able to establish their own admission policies; some will
use selection.
Labours silence on the Bow report also suggests that,
as so often in the past, it is already planning to adopt policies
initially pioneered by the Tories. This time, what is at stake
is the final reestablishment of a two-tier system, similar in
all essentials to the old grammar schools and secondary moderns
where, from at least the age of 14, academic education would be
denied to millions of children.
See Also:
Britain: Funding crisis in
higher education
[24 May 2007]
End the occupation of Iraq!
No to war against Iran! For an international socialist movement
against war!
[4 April 2007]
Britain: Poorer student
numbers fall as tuition fees are hiked up
[27 December 2006]
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