News Review and Commentary

LET TEACHERS THINK FOR THEMSELVES; LETTERS

5/12/2008 6:58:00 AM

LET TEACHERS THINK FOR THEMSELVES

 

Letters; The Times 11 May

 Sir, When new teachers start work now, where is this intelligent flexibility (letter, May 7) to come from? At Homerton College 40 years ago we were taught to think about how the curriculum was constructed and how it might change, how new research might inform teaching methods, how the latest report on education (Plowden in our case) could be questioned and its underlying philosophy unpicked. But teachers in the current climate risk losing their jobs if they think too much. We “deliver” a prescribed curriculum, and we are criticised if we stray from rigid policies on everything from health education to citizenship. Teachers in schools “causing concern” are even told to use every noticeboard in their classroom in a prescribed way, and headteachers at conferences are slapped down publicly if they dare to question government policy. If we want to find good teachers in our schools, showing “independence of mind”, let us start with a national decision to train teachers to think for themselves, free qualified teachers to make their own professional decisions, and celebrate the diversity and freedom this produces.  

Barbara Curry Retired Headteacher, Winchcombe, Glos  

Sir, You report that there are about 10 per cent fewer applicants for teacher training than last year (May 9). This is hardly surprising; this is the last academic year that trainee teachers undertaking a PGCE course get their tuition fees paid by the Training and Development Agency for Schools or their LEA. From September 2008 students will have to pay their tuition fees — anything between £2,700 and £3,145 — out of their own pockets.  

Jane Daniels Long Ditton, Surrey  

General

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SAT EXAMS AND TABLES DISTORT TEACHING

SAT EXAMS AND TABLES DISTORT TEACHING

5/12/2008 7:28:00 AM

 

Daily Telegraph 12 May

 Ministers will come under pressure today to scrap tests for more than a million schoolchildren following further claims that they undermine education standards. Schools will admit that they are being forced to "teach to the test", cutting out subjects such as history, geography and art to inflate their position on national league tables.The Commons schools committee will also warn that standard attainment tests taken by pupils at 11 and 14 are causing "unseen" damage to pupils. The Labour education minister in Wales, where SATs have been scrapped, will say the tests fail to allow "teachers to be productive in the classroom".The comments, in an investigation by BBC's Panorama tonight, come as schoolchildren across England prepare to sit national curriculum tests in English, mathematics and science this week. These will herald the start of the examination season for millions of pupils as record numbers prepare to take GCSE and A-level papers.DT

Lead Story | Curriculum / Quality Assurance

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POOR RESULTS FORCE GOVERNMENT RETHINK ON PROGRESS TESTS

5/12/2008 6:57:00 AM

The Guardian 9 May

 New national level tests for primary and secondary pupils are to be changed after only one in 10 passed one exam. Schools involved in the pilot to test children "when ready", as decided by their teachers, and in "single levels", rather than at the end of the key stage, produced unexpectedly low results from the first set of exams taken in December. According to information obtained by the Times Education Supplement, the government is to alter the tests to give pupils more time to complete the higher level sections. Procedures will also be tightened to make sure the right students sit the tests. More than 400 schools are taking part in the two-year "Making Good Progress" pilot project. Ministers have said the tests will replace national curriculum tests - or Sats - from 2010. Fewer than 10% passed the level 6 reading test first trialled in December, with a slightly higher pass rate in writing and maths. The government postponed publication of the results in January because they were disappointing and a full evaluation is not expected until the Autumn. Letters from the National Assessment Agency (NAA) to the Department for Children, Schools and Families obtained by the TES confirm that agency officials believed some schools entered pupils for the tests incorrectly. In some cases, pupils were entered against teachers' advice.Guardian

Curriculum / Quality Assurance

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'SHORT SCHOOL LESSONS MORE EFFECTIVE'

5/12/2008 7:35:00 AM

 

Daily Telegraph 12 May

 Pupils are being taught in lessons lasting just eight minutes following claims children find it hard to concentrate for long periods.  One school in the north-east is believed to be among the first in the country to place pupils in short lessons. Classes at Monkseaton Community High in Tyne and Wear are interspersed with frequent word games or sport.  The technique is based on research which has found that memory develops most effectively with short bursts of learning repeated at regular intervals.  The move comes as schools are urged to tear up traditional timetables in favour of new methods, such as short sessions of mental arithmetic or spelling, and topic-based teaching lasting up to a week. Reforms to the school day may be made by some schools as part of a new curriculum for 11 to 14-year-olds being introduced from September this year. Paul Kelley, Monkseaton's head teacher, said the methods would be extended to all GCSE classes from this autumn after a successful pilot programme helped boost pupils' results by half a grade in some subjects. "It may seem bizarre to teach an eight-minute lesson, break for 10 minutes to dribble a basketball and then repeat the process, but it works," he said. DT

General | Curriculum / Quality Assurance

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