Tuesday, August 28, 2012

Numeracy, Literacy and Idiocy

This post has been re-blogged from the Sussex Sedition blogspot HERE, with permission of the blogger.



There are many decisions this idiot government has made that have affected the lives of the young. The housing benefit cap and the reduction in child tax credits have undermined the stability of children and families; the scrapping of the Building Schools for the Future programme and the sell-off of playing fields have reined in opportunities available to schoolchildren; and the raising of university tuition fees has restricted access to higher education. All of these have impacted on the start in life of countless young people; but the latest stupid move by the government has probably had the most immediate and pernicious effect of all.

This week’s GCSE results have revealed that the exam boards, under instruction from the regulator Ofqual, moved the grade boundaries for students sitting English between the January and May exams, without notifying schools. The result of this is that across the country, there are countless students who scored the same marks in May as their contemporaries did in January, but they have received a lower grade. The most marked effect of this has been on students who were expected to get a C grade and have now been awarded a D grade. Entry to sixth forms and colleges is dependent on at least a C grade in English and Maths. At the school in East Sussex where I teach English there are ten students who have been awarded a D grade when their marks were well within the grade boundary that would have secured a C grade in January. I understand that the position in some other schools across the county is a lot worse; this means that there are hundreds of young people in East Sussex whose immediate next steps in life have been severely affected at a stroke.

This has been done in the name of curbing grade inflation because it is widely accepted that GCSE students cannot continue to improve year after year. But why not? Why cannot success be extended to as many as possible? Because this is the nasty party and for people like Michael Gove equality of opportunity is anathema. And he can plead innocence as much as he likes but there has undoubtedly been government pressure brought to bear; I saw him on the news and he closed his eyes at the point he said he had not instructed Ofqual - sure sign of a lie. Years of improving state education and increasing numbers going to university have to be rolled back by the Tories. As Gore Vidal said, “it is not enough to succeed, others must fail”. Or, in other words, the lower orders must know their place.

The Sedonista

3 comments:

pete21 said...

With respect, the last tories government, under thatcher, stated that education was expensive, that britian plc, didn't need well educated workers, and that new jobs would be in the service sector. It would be a waste of money, and workers who had been given well educated, would feel bitter and anger, doing useless toil on low wages jobs. After 13 years of 'new labour' who didn't change policy, to talk of better exam results, based largely based on very low results, isn't saying much! education for what? YFS

Andrew Watson said...

Education for what? For knowledge, understanding and forming your own ideas; it can't just be about the job it leads to.

Anonymous said...

With equal respect, I believe Sedonista was clear in the blog post above about the points being raised, namely that this change was unannounced and therefore adversely affected the youngsters involved - a deliberate, nasty moving of the goalposts for ulterior motives. And secondly, these motives are not because either Tory or Labour have made a decent education system but that the Labour policies although heavily flawed had incidentally allowed a number of people from poorer backgrounds to 'succeed' within the limits of the current educational system. This is clearly not something the Tories want to see continued.

However, as Socialists we can see through the lot and understand that in the main education as it stands is essentially training to become good workers within the capitalist system. However, this is a sweeping generalisation that often misses the individual interactions between students and teachers, many of whom are socialists and also see through the system as it is. Education has many facets and really is worthy of a longer more in depth article.