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Perry Rush: Punishing schools won't make them pull up their socks
The draft national educational standards have arrived and yes,
it is possible to be 6 years old and a failure.
Faced with the reality of a Government bent on this policy it seems
clear that Anne Tolley will have the most significant impact on
schooling of any Education Minister this side of Tomorrow's Schools.
National has championed its education standards policy as being
the saviour of the long tail of underachievement and muddy reporting
to parents. This rationale seems convincing - both issues need improvement.
Except that there is scant evidence of national standards making
a difference for children's learning and voluminous evidence of
the damage that such policies cause.
Worryingly, national standards represents a shift away from a high-trust
environment between government, parents and teachers to one of low
trust fuelled by the drive for public accountability. There exists
in the schooling sector deep mistrust of the minister's intentions.
Flying under the radar but occasionally seen is evidence of the
Government's intent to author national standards as a public lever
to address poor school performance. Tolley's recent statement about
standards being "disinfectant" is telling.
As the formal (and very brief) official consultation round begins
it is important to remind ourselves that no child ever improved
their reading because they were sent to stand in the corridor.
Tolley's "disinfectant" is not an aspirational idea and
it has no place in our shared effort to eliminate the tail of underachievement
and improve reporting for parents.
Glaringly absent in the advocacy of national standards has been
the failure to explain how exactly they will improve student achievement.
What is the likely change in teaching that will come about as a
consequence of this policy? As the draft standards are identical
to expectations already held in schools the inference must be drawn
that it is not the standards that will make a difference but what
happens to the information generated by the standards.
This is not about learning in schools but rather control over schools
- an issue that should rightly concern parents on school boards
who currently hold schools accountable within the context of their
local communities.
We can easily predict that higher decile school communities, where
children arrive at school with impressive literacy and numeracy
skills, will shine against the common standard and those schools
who deal with children who start the day hungry and tired, or who
arrive at school having rarely picked up a book, will invariably
appear to be failing their children.
This sort of basic analysis will ghetto-ise some schools and further
promote others as being bastions of success.
If "plain English" is the lever to improve accountability
and address underachievement then it is fundamentally flawed. This
in itself creates the pre-conditions for misunderstanding between
teachers and parents.
The simple truth is that children's learning is not plain but complex
and divergent. Any attempt to boil achievement in reading, writing
and mathematics down to "above", "at" or "below"
a standard makes a mockery of parents' capacity to understand more
complex ideas about learning.
Plain English is the language of certainty and it creates a false
reality. It makes one feel good, it is reassuring and convincing.
But it is not truthful.
As a consequence of this it makes teachers' jobs harder, not easier.
Teachers will need to spend more time bridging the divide between
"plain English" and the reality of what students are achieving.
It does little to support the sort of partnership and trust that
each child requires between teachers and parents. In a thinking
economy we should not be reducing information about student achievement
to the lowest common denominator.
And therein lies the challenge. Teachers, schools and parents want
the very best for children. But national standards are deceptive.
They have been dressed up as a feel-good exercise for parents and
an effective tool for teachers when really it is a way of standing
schools in the corridor. The danger is that it meddles with the
very relationship that has been at the core of Tomorrow's Schools:
the trust, partnership and collaboration between schools and the
communities who govern them.
Parents and educators have a unique opportunity to comment on the
draft national standards. The consultation period ends on July 3.
It is an opportunity that should not be squandered. The consequence
of getting this policy wrong could be dire for our children, schools
and communities.
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