The Socialist

The Socialist 19 June 2013

Cuts can be beaten!

The Socialist issue 770

Cuts can be beaten!

Why we're going to the NSSN conference: Coventry communications workers

Fight the Tories for right to a decent education system

Student loans threat: Action needed on student debt mountain

Lowest living standards in a decade

Sir 'sell-out' Brendan

Them & Us


We can beat the bedroom tax - Supplement to the Socialist

Let's axe the bedroom tax


Turkey: Eyewitness to Erdogan's state terror


Southampton byelection: Labour vote halved

Fire cuts - public will support strike action

Stopping the BNP from meeting

Home care: Cuts and outsourcing equal abuse

Wales campaigners fight for NHS

Socialist Party news


Bin workers strike for seven days

NUT members strike to defend teaching assistant posts

Housing support workers say 'enough is enough'

Unison Local Government conference: Leadership faces delegates' anger

Support for socialist alternative to pro-cuts New Labour at GMB conference

Wales Shop Stewards' Network conference

Workplace news in brief


Budding trade unionists and passionate Chartists

BBC 'unbalanced' on Liverpool 47

 
 
 
 

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Fight the Tories for right to a decent education system

Fewer holidays for students, worse pay for teachers, Ofsted tyranny, forced academisation, Free School privatisation - it appears that Tory minister Michael Gove comes up with a new way of whacking the right to a decent education and a decent job every day. And the so-called opposition in Labour seem to be largely in agreement. Here Martin Powell-Davies, member of the national executive of the NUT teachers' union, looks at the motivation behind one of the latest attacks - on GCSEs.

Just when tens of thousands of 16 year olds sit their GCSE exams, Tory education wrecker Gove announced a further shake-up to the examination system. He was shamefully sending a signal that these students' achievements will be, in his mind, 'second-rate'. Nothing could be further from the truth.

Gove and the Con-Dem government can't accept that, through the hard work of students, teachers and schools, and under enormous pressure to achieve imposed targets, GCSE results have improved year-on-year. In the past, improved examination results would have been celebrated but widespread achievement no longer matches the needs and wishes of the government and big business.

Big business no longer requires a widely educated workforce. Now it's time for Gove and Co to draw up the ladder so that only a select few young people are able to succeed.

It would be wrong to idealise the GCSE system. Any exam regime is there, in the final analysis, to decide who is given the opportunity for certain careers and higher education, and who isn't. However, the introduction of GCSEs marked an acceptance that all students should have the chance to achieve a qualification of equal worth to their peers.

Gove has had to abandon his attempts to ditch GCSEs altogether but is insisting that exam boards revert to exams at the end of Year 11. The various changes to assessment methods, while significant, aren't the fundamental point. No, the key to Gove's agenda is to be found in the BBC's recent phrase: "the pass mark is to be pushed higher". Whatever happens, Gove wants to make sure that far fewer students succeed.

Coursework will be ditched under Gove's proposals even though it has allowed students to show skills that can't be so easily assessed in a brief final examination.

However, it also has to be said that, as schools came under increasing pressure to improve results, teachers have been expected to go to increasing lengths to coach and support students to complete the work required. Now the pressure will be on to cram students for the terminal exam.

Of course, if teachers, schools and students were consulted properly, it may well be that changes and improvements to the current system could be agreed upon. But as the economy crumbles, the post-war consensus in favour of high quality public services and comprehensive education for all is becoming a distant memory.

It is now the responsibility of trade unions to use their strength, backed up by students and their communities, to defend the gains of the past against those like Gove who are trying to steal them away from us.


"There has to be selection because we are beginning to create aspirations which increasingly society cannot match ... When young people cannot find work at all ... or work which meets their abilities or expectations ... then we are only creating frustrations with perhaps disturbing social consequences ... people must be educated once more to know their place."
Senior civil servant quoted in Caroline Benn and Clyde Chitty's book - Thirty Years On: Is Comprehensive Education Alive and Well, or Struggling to Survive? - rumoured to be a senior adviser to Sir Keith Joseph


In this issue


Socialist Party news and analysis

Cuts can be beaten!

Why we're going to the NSSN conference: Coventry communications workers

Fight the Tories for right to a decent education system

Student loans threat: Action needed on student debt mountain

Lowest living standards in a decade

Sir 'sell-out' Brendan

Them & Us


Fighting the bedroom tax

We can beat the bedroom tax - Supplement to the Socialist

Let's axe the bedroom tax


International socialist news and analysis

Turkey: Eyewitness to Erdogan's state terror


Socialist Party reports and campaigns

Southampton byelection: Labour vote halved

Fire cuts - public will support strike action

Stopping the BNP from meeting

Home care: Cuts and outsourcing equal abuse

Wales campaigners fight for NHS

Socialist Party news


Socialist Party workplace news

Bin workers strike for seven days

NUT members strike to defend teaching assistant posts

Housing support workers say 'enough is enough'

Unison Local Government conference: Leadership faces delegates' anger

Support for socialist alternative to pro-cuts New Labour at GMB conference

Wales Shop Stewards' Network conference

Workplace news in brief


Socialist Party reviews

Budding trade unionists and passionate Chartists

BBC 'unbalanced' on Liverpool 47


 

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