The Socialist

The Socialist 9 November 2006

NHS: Stop this market madness

NHS: stop this market madness

Doctor attacks Labour-backing Prentis

Health minister's 'scary' performance

The public-sector fat cats

Out of the horse's mouth


Students can defeat fees

Campaign to defeat top-up fees

Build a real alternative to BNP


Hanging Saddam won't end crisis in Iraq


Solidarity - Scotland's socialist movement

Reactionary Jewish and Arab groups in homophobic campaign


National action needed against performance pay

Devon teachers get organised

Education protests


When British imperialism hit the rocks

 
 
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Devon teachers get organised

EXETER SOCIALIST Students' public meeting on privatisation and marketisation of education attracted many trainee teachers angry at New Labour's destruction of comprehensive education. Martin Powell-Davies of Socialist Party Teachers explained what the government is doing, why and how we can stop them.

Jim Lowe, Exeter Socialist Party and Devon NUT

The government's academies programme replaces democratically accountable community schools with unaccountable academies controlled by big businessmen or religious organisations. The Education and Inspections Bill creates a new kind of school, a 'Pathfinder Trust' or Foundation School.

Any school can opt out of local authority (LA) control. So far 47 (six of them in Devon) have opted to do so. These schools can set their own admissions criteria (which will favour middle-class children further) and go into partnership with big businesses. There are suggestions that a Devon school will go into partnership with drugs giant AstraZeneca.

Martin said trust schools are part of New Labour's attempts to divide workers. They are eroding national pay bargaining. In future, we could see local pay bargaining everywhere, further strengthening the penny-pinching bosses' hand over teachers.

They also try to divide teachers by Performance Pay regimes (see also article page 11) and a two-tier pension system. To get a full pension, current teachers may retire at 60, but new teachers will have to work until 65.

Gross and widening inequalities in society are a major reason for low achievement and other problems in Britain's education system. Teachers simply cannot remedy these problems in the classroom.

Former Education Secretary Charles Clarke showed the motivation behind New Labour's education 'reforms'. "A significant chunk of them [middle-class parents] go private because they feel despairing about the quality of education. They are the people we are after."

This sums up New Labour's strategy - attacking hard-working public servants, wooing the well-off and ignoring the far greater needs of working-class parents and their children. We need a strategy to resist New Labour's Victorianisation agenda and to argue for what we should want in an education system.

Martin stressed the need to get active in a union, and in local and national campaigns. Only national industrial action on teachers' workload, Performance Pay and academies and trust schools (the privatisation and marketisation of education) can begin to turn the tide, he argued, alongside local campaigns to keep schools under local democratic control.

In a lively discussion Socialist Party members raised the importance of a political fightback (through the Campaign for a New Workers' Party), as well as an industrial fightback. They showed the link between education privatisation and cuts and the rotten capitalist system which also manifests itself in war, terror, poverty, oppression, and the destruction of the NHS.

Everyone left the meeting wanting to channel their anger into action. We look now to building Socialist Party Teachers in Devon.


In this issue

NHS: stop this market madness

Doctor attacks Labour-backing Prentis

Health minister's 'scary' performance

The public-sector fat cats

Out of the horse's mouth


Socialist Students

Students can defeat fees

Campaign to defeat top-up fees

Build a real alternative to BNP


War and terrorism

Hanging Saddam won't end crisis in Iraq


International socialist news and analysis

Solidarity - Scotland's socialist movement

Reactionary Jewish and Arab groups in homophobic campaign


Education

National action needed against performance pay

Devon teachers get organised

Education protests


Marxist analysis: history

When British imperialism hit the rocks


 

Home   |   The Socialist 9 November 2006   |   Join the Socialist Party

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Related links:

Devon:

triangleStop the NHS sell-off - National demo now!

triangleSave Devon youth service: "time for young people to stand up"

triangleDerriford hospital announces huge cuts

triangleTUSC shows alternative to Con-Dem and Labour cuts

triangleWhy I'm standing on 5 May

triangleDevon Bus Workers Fight Low Pay

Teachers:

triangle10 May sees united strike - but teacher unions shirk their responsibilities

triangleNUT Executive "shirks its responsibilites"

triangleMessage of support to the 10 May strikers

triangleBilborough College Nottingham strike Action over five-term years

Education:

triangleOur education under attack

triangleLincolnshire academies in crisis

triangleGood result for Socialist Students candidates in NUS elections