Michael Gove MP: Why traditional education is a work of social justice – one that I'm striving to deliver
Michael Gove is the Secretary of State for Education. This is the second of two extracts from an article which originally appeared in Standpoint magazine. You can read part one here.
At the moment, access to the best that has been thought and said is restricted to a fortunate few. Because of the dumbing-down of both our exams and school curricula under Labour, children can go through school never having read a novel written before the 20th century, never having read or seen an entire Shakespeare play, never having learned a poem by heart, never having had the chance to appreciate, or play, classical music, never having the chance to learn about the achievements of the greatest scientists and engineers, never having had the chance to play in the competitive sports in which England has long excelled, never being encouraged to engage with anything which is not immediately “relevant” to their lives.
But if all children are told about is what they already know, how will they ever - like Rita - learn better songs to sing?
There is no doubt that most parents have aspirations for their children which are far higher than many of the professionals who condescend to them. The Millennium Cohort Study of 19,000 children born in the UK in 2000-01 recently interviewed mothers about their ambitions for their seven-year-old children. An astonishing 97 per cent of mothers wanted their child to go to university. Whether or not a student decides that university is right for them, the evidence is clear that a proper academic education to the age of 16 is the best way of maximising any child’s chances of success in the future.
The virtues which so many who declare themselves opponents of traditional education wish to foster curiosity, a desire on the part of learners to pursue their own learning, creativity and critical thinking - can only really effectively come from immersion in a rigorous, knowledge-rich curriculum with traditional subjects and teachers schooled in those subjects.
That these truths have been denied, mocked or sidelined for so long is proof enough of the need for change in our education system. That is why one of our most important reforms - and certainly the most controversial - has been our toughening of exams and the curriculum.
We have had to overhaul our national curriculum to get it into line with the best performing education jurisdictions - like Singapore, Hong Kong and Massachussets. We’ve had to reform GCSEs to get rid of modules, re-sits, formulaic questions, questionable coursework and dumbed-down papers designed to keep certain students’aspirations low. We’ve also had to reform A-levels to ensure they are once more proper two-year courses - with room for in-depth study—and the sort of rigorous questions which are appropriate preparation for university study.
But while these changes have been controversial, the most supportive voices have been those of teachers. Teachers like Tom Bennett, Andrew Old, Daisy Christodoulou and Standpoint’s Matthew Hunter have taken to the web and Twitter to support the changes we have been making - in defiance of their unions - and have won massive followings. Indeed, the most encouraging trend of the moment in education is that the people pressing for change most determinedly are not politicians, but teachers. And that’s as it should be - because our policies are designed to enhance the prestige of the profession, restore the lustre attached to academic study and give teachers the chance to lead change in education.
Perhaps the most powerful demonstration of that is the Free School programme - which allows idealistic teachers to set up their own state schools in communities that have been poorly served by existing schools. Teachers - like former Standpoint columnist Katharine Birbalsingh, or Mark Lehain at Bedford Free School, or the team behind Greenwich Free School - are in the vanguard of change.
Free schools provide parents with choice they’ve been denied by local bureaucratic monopolies, challenge existing schools to raise their game, and they provide an opportunity for idealistic teachersto bring the sort of education the rich have always been able to buy for their children to communities which have been shortchanged in the past. Already the first 24 free schools are out-performing other state schools and are massively oversubscribed.
Free schools are a dramatic demonstration of the growing determination among more and more teachers to set higher expectations for students. But they’re not the only evidence of a new culture of greater ambition for all children.
Alongside the growth in free schools there has also been a big increase in the number of academies. As the name suggests, academies are schools freed from bureaucratic control to concentrate on becoming successful academic institutions. As Tony Blair explained in his memoirs, an academy “belongs not to some remote bureaucracy, not to the rulers of government, local or national, but to itself, for itself. The school is in charge of its own destiny. This gives it pride and purpose. And most of all, freed from the extraordinarily debilitating and often, in the worst sense, political correct interference from state or municipality, Academies have just one thing in mind, something shaped not by political prejudice but by common sense: what will make the school excellent.” There are now 3,000 academies - and many of them are passionately engaged in improving underperforming schools by taking them under their wing - “sponsoring” them. Some have achieved amazing transformations.
Greenwood Dale sponsors the nottingham Girls’ Academy, which has around double the average number of pupils on free school meals. In its first year as an academy, the percentage of pupils achieving five good GCSEs, including English and maths, has jumped from 37 per cent in 2011 to 56 per cent in 2012.
Sir Joseph Williamson’s Mathematical School in Rochester, a grammar school and one of the first national Teaching Schools, became an academy and founded the Williamson Trust in April 2011.
The Trust now has four academies, including one which, having being in special measures, is now judged good by Ofsted and has seen results double since 2009. The secret of academies’ success is really no secret at all - it’s great teaching and high expectations.
Many of those making the biggest difference in academies and free schools are alumni of Teach First or members of its sister organisations Teaching Leaders and Future Leaders. All three are charities designed to recruit outstanding young people who are academically distinguished and who have also demonstrated real leadership ability into classrooms in our most challenging communities. They explicitly bypass the old teacher recruitment their report The Irreplaceables showed that great teachers in challenging schools—those who were irreplaceable figures routes and thus challenge the monopoly of the old teacher training colleges.
The evidence so far indicates that they are making a dramatic - and welcome - difference to every school in which they operate.
And these charities - by explicitly targeting students with the best degrees from top universities - have helped change the profile of teaching overall by leading a new generation of academically accomplished undergraduates into the profession. That’s why the coalition Government has increased their funding—to allow Teach First to quadruple in size and encourage Teaching Leaders and Future Leaders to work in more schools. And we’ve sought to apply those lessons more widely.
We’ve explicitly set out to recruit more academically inspiring young people by awarding scholarships to students with top degrees from good universities in subjects such as mathematics, physics, chemistry and computing.
We’ve deliberately ensured they can train in the best environment to learn about classroom management, discipline and effective teaching: schools. We’ve given the best heads the chance to recruit trainee teachers direct - so they can bypass the teacher training colleges and guarantee an attractive start for any idealistic graduate.
Already the evidence from Ofsted suggests that teacher training in schools is superior to the courses offered by the old colleges.
We want as many of those superb new teachers as possible to teach where they’re most needed - in the primary schools where a third or more of children still leave incapable of following a secondary curriculum and the secondaries where half or more still leave without five decent GCSEs. In order to make it easier to attract and keep them in those schools, we have dismantled the old pay and conditions arrangements, designed by the unions, which simply rewarded longevity of service, to bring in performance-related pay. So good teachers can now be paid more.
And because we’ve introduced a pupil premium - more money for schools with children from poorer backgrounds - challenging schools will now have both the money and the freedom to attract great teachers. In America, research by the new Teacher Project in poor children - were more likely to stay if their contribution could be recognised through performance pay. Nothing matters more in ensuring that our schools improve than recruiting the right people. That is why I am so fortunate to have been able to appoint outstanding people to the jobs that matter in our education system. And I am particularly lucky that they have so stoically withstood criticism from the enemies of promise, who have presided over failure in the past, in order to safeguard our children’s future.
Sir Michael Wilshaw, Her Majesty’s Chief Inspector of Schools, has set higher expectations for what all schools should achieve, and concentrated, with piercing moral clarity, on the failure to educate so many of our poor children adequately. Glenys Stacey, the chief executive of the exams regulator Ofqual, has reduced grade inflation, restored rigour to GCSEs, eliminated many of the dodges used to game the exam system and is making sure our A-levels are worldclass. Professor Alison Wolf, of King’s College London, has dramatically improved vocational education by making it easier to secure high-quality work experience, getting rid of Mickey Mouse courses and making vocational qualifications as rigorous - in their structure and marking - as academic qualifications. All three have had their decisions attacked by the teaching unions, but their bravery in fighting for higher standards in all our schools is an inspiration.
There is so much more to do to improve every child’s chances in this country - from raising the standard of nursery education to improving the number of genuinely high-quality apprenticeships, from ensuring more top academics join those like Fields medallist Tim Gowers in writing curriculum materials for our schools exploiting the potential of new technology to accelerate learning.
But we have, I hope, as a nation come far enough in the last six years to recognise that there can be no future in settling for mediocrity.
There is no excuse for a system where so many children leave without qualifications or prospects. When it comes to academies, free schools, a knowledge-rich curriculum, rigorous exams, the recruitment of academically distinguished teachers and freedom to pay good teachers more, there can be no turning back.
Comments