Source: (consider it)
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Thread: Purgatory: Welfarism
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Angloid
Shipmate
# 159
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Posted
Originally posted by mdijon quote: I think it depends what is meant by "removing their body armour". If one means ensuring that government resource is supplied equally to all, where previously the government favoured one group, then I'm all for it. If it means banning independent schools to ensure the teaching resources are more widely distributed then that's not so great.
I think we would have to wait many years before they developed a strain of pigs with strong enough wings. Abolishing private schools ain't going to happen. But two things at least could happen (not under this government though): [1] private schools should lose their charitable status unless those that were founded 'to educate the poor' (a large majority, I would guess) are actually fulfilling the intentions of their founders. [2] comprehensive schools should revert to being simply that (not gimmicky 'specialist academies'), and to take a cross-section of abilities. That might entail 'bussing in' low-achieving working-class pupils into middle class areas, and middle-class kids into working-class areas*. Not an ideal solution but better than an intake weighted towards one section of the community.
[*I'm not in the least suggesting that working-class= low ability, or the reverse. But it's generally accepted that schools with a socially balanced intake do better. Even or especially those in middle-class areas: many such schools often coast and fail to achieve their potential.] [ 18. November 2010, 16:06: Message edited by: Angloid ]
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mdijon
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# 8520
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Posted
The difficulty is that some of these things are circular. It's difficult to make the schools in poor areas as good as the rich when the former have 20% speaking English as a 2nd language, more special needs, more children heading for exclusions, more children being taken out of school during term time or moving into/out of the area etc.
The poor bring their problems with them, and the rich area schools are sometimes helped by not having to deal with them.
-------------------- mdijon nojidm uoɿıqɯ ɯqıɿou ɯqıɿou uoɿıqɯ nojidm mdijon
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ianjmatt
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# 5683
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Posted
quote: Originally posted by Angloid: [1] private schools should lose their charitable status unless those that were founded 'to educate the poor' (a large majority, I would guess) are actually fulfilling the intentions of their founders.
I guess I have no problem with that. Except that charitable status is about fulfilling the charitable aims as they stand now in the trust deed or constitution. If the charitable aim is fulfilled (e.g. by providing teaching facilities, scholarships, access to playing fields etc) then it would be a mighty court battle to get that removed. To tighten up charity law will result in a lot of very good charities that are not schools also being excluded.
quote: [2] comprehensive schools should revert to being simply that (not gimmicky 'specialist academies'), and to take a cross-section of abilities. That might entail 'bussing in' low-achieving working-class pupils into middle class areas, and middle-class kids into working-class areas*. Not an ideal solution but better than an intake weighted towards one section of the community.
So we tell parents that they may not send their kids to their local schools, that they MUST put them on buses and send them to schools miles away, with the obvious restriction on freedom, pollution, congestions and added problems in getting to kids in emergencies? All for the sake of social engineering. You will find a middle-class flight as more parents look to what will become a growing market in co-op independent schools (assuming free schools are got rid of as well).
quote: Originally posted by mdijon
The difficulty is that some of these things are circular. It's difficult to make the schools in poor areas as good as the rich when the former have 20% speaking English as a 2nd language, more special needs, more children heading for exclusions, more children being taken out of school during term time or moving into/out of the area etc.
The poor bring their problems with them, and the rich area schools are sometimes helped by not having to deal with them.
So are you suggesting is that we spread the problem around so that all schools middle out somewhere? Or should it be accepted that some schools have more challenges because of the demographic and the best resources possible be allocated to try and alleviate that.
If so, don't blame the good schools, who don't generally receive any more funding. [ 18. November 2010, 17:48: Message edited by: ianjmatt ]
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mdijon
Shipmate
# 8520
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Posted
quote: Originally posted by ianjmatt: So are you suggesting is that we spread the problem around so that all schools middle out somewhere? Or should it be accepted.... If so, don't blame the good schools, who don't generally receive any more funding.
No, I'm not suggesting that particular solution, and neither am I blaming the good schools. Why assume that I am?
-------------------- mdijon nojidm uoɿıqɯ ɯqıɿou ɯqıɿou uoɿıqɯ nojidm mdijon
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ianjmatt
Shipmate
# 5683
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Posted
quote: Originally posted by mdijon: quote: Originally posted by ianjmatt: So are you suggesting is that we spread the problem around so that all schools middle out somewhere? Or should it be accepted.... If so, don't blame the good schools, who don't generally receive any more funding.
No, I'm not suggesting that particular solution, and neither am I blaming the good schools. Why assume that I am?
I don't get it. You keep identifying what you see as problems, but don't seem to be offering any solutions. What is your point.
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mdijon
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# 8520
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Posted
Identifying the problems is a start isn't it? Why can't trying to identify the problem accurately be a reasonable part of a conversation without necessarily having a ready made solution?
-------------------- mdijon nojidm uoɿıqɯ ɯqıɿou ɯqıɿou uoɿıqɯ nojidm mdijon
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ianjmatt
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# 5683
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Posted
quote: Originally posted by mdijon: Identifying the problems is a start isn't it? Why can't trying to identify the problem accurately be a reasonable part of a conversation without necessarily having a ready made solution?
Partly. Although we're not talking read-made solutions, but possible ones. Do you have any of those?
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mousethief
 Ship's Thieving Rodent
# 953
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Posted
Yes, I've always hated that assumption. If you don't have a solution of your own, you have no right to find fault with our solution. Sorry, if your solution makes things worse, or violates basic rights or principles, lack of a better solution is no justification for it.
-------------------- This is the last sig I'll ever write for you...
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ianjmatt
Shipmate
# 5683
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Posted
quote: Originally posted by mousethief: Yes, I've always hated that assumption. If you don't have a solution of your own, you have no right to find fault with our solution. Sorry, if your solution makes things worse, or violates basic rights or principles, lack of a better solution is no justification for it.
But lack of a better solution is basically the status quo so nothing has changed.
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mdijon
Shipmate
# 8520
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Posted
quote: Originally posted by mdijon: Identifying the problems is a start isn't it? Why can't trying to identify the problem accurately be a reasonable part of a conversation without necessarily having a ready made solution?
quote: Originally posted by ianjmatt: Partly. Although we're not talking read-made solutions, but possible ones. Do you have any of those?
Not all the time, no. It's an odd dynamic, the idea that one can't present a problem in a discussion without presenting a potential solution in the next breath. I notice that you haven't agreed or disagreed with my statements, only challenged me on where the solutions might be. I think that it's probably better to talk through the problem first.
[ETA, I agree MT, that's another aspect of the same dynamic] [ 18. November 2010, 19:11: Message edited by: mdijon ]
-------------------- mdijon nojidm uoɿıqɯ ɯqıɿou ɯqıɿou uoɿıqɯ nojidm mdijon
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mdijon
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# 8520
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Posted
quote: Originally posted by ianjmatt: But lack of a better solution is basically the status quo so nothing has changed.
But what is the status quo? Do we both have the same view of it? You might argue that the demographic of schools in poor areas has nothing to do with the problem. I might disagree with your model of what motivates a student. Then we could launch into an argument about solutions not realising we're trying to fix different problems.
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ianjmatt
Shipmate
# 5683
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Posted
quote: Originally posted by mdijon: Not all the time, no. It's an odd dynamic, the idea that one can't present a problem in a discussion without presenting a potential solution in the next breath. I notice that you haven't agreed or disagreed with my statements, only challenged me on where the solutions might be. I think that it's probably better to talk through the problem first.
I think the agreed problem is the lack of equality of opportunity. What you are then identifying are possible causes of that. If you believe those to be causes of the problems, I was assuming you want those causes addressed.
To directly answer you - I think the problem is the lack of equality of opportunity. I'm not sure I agree that the causes you identify are fundamental.
However, if you can show that by removing these causes (i.e. a solution) that the problem is resolved then I might be convinced. That is why I asked for your solutions. [ 18. November 2010, 19:14: Message edited by: ianjmatt ]
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mdijon
Shipmate
# 8520
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Posted
quote: Originally posted by ianjmatt: If you believe those to be causes of the problems, I was assuming you want those causes addressed.
Of course I would, but that doesn't mean I necessarily know how, nor that it's not worthwhile discussing what the causes are in the absence of a solution. It's a discussion.
quote: Originally posted by ianjmatt: However, if you can show that by removing these causes (i.e. a solution) that the problem is resolved then I might be convinced. That is why I asked for your solutions.
One could only show that by real life experience of the solution in action. My theoretical solution would hardly do that would it?
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ianjmatt
Shipmate
# 5683
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Posted
quote: Originally posted by mdijon: ]One could only show that by real life experience of the solution in action. My theoretical solution would hardly do that would it?
No, but by testing the argument through debate we could see if it stood up.
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mdijon
Shipmate
# 8520
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Posted
I don't see that that works.
Take an example - I think that the demographics of a deprived school are a substantial problem. You don't. We could argue round about the likely effect or desirability of targeted resources based on privation, or of redrawing catchment areas etc. However, we'll have irreconcilable views because at the base of it I think these measures are addressing a real component of the problem and you don't. I don't see how one could resolve that except by discussing the baseline belief itself.
But in a way this is besides the point - because you didn't say "I'm not sure that's the problem - illustrate that by telling me how x will work in practice if you tackle it" - you said "I don't get it. You keep identifying what you see as problems, but don't seem to be offering any solutions. What is your point."
The latter implies that you feel I shouldn't identify problems without solutions as a fundamental position.
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mousethief
 Ship's Thieving Rodent
# 953
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Posted
quote: Originally posted by ianjmatt: quote: Originally posted by mousethief: Yes, I've always hated that assumption. If you don't have a solution of your own, you have no right to find fault with our solution. Sorry, if your solution makes things worse, or violates basic rights or principles, lack of a better solution is no justification for it.
But lack of a better solution is basically the status quo so nothing has changed.
Better to change nothing than to change for the worse.
-------------------- This is the last sig I'll ever write for you...
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Marvin the Martian
 Interplanetary
# 4360
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Posted
quote: Originally posted by mdijon: The difficulty is that some of these things are circular. It's difficult to make the schools in poor areas as good as the rich when the former have 20% speaking English as a 2nd language, more special needs, more children heading for exclusions, more children being taken out of school during term time or moving into/out of the area etc.
The poor bring their problems with them, and the rich area schools are sometimes helped by not having to deal with them.
And to think I was being roundly criticised for "thinking the problem is the poor themselves" earlier. How do you get away with it when I don't?
If the things you mention are the true causes of the problem, then they are still going to apply no matter what the policy is on school admissions. The kids who have those problems will still have them whether they go to St Poshgit's Public School, Our Lady-in-the-Middle Grammar or Ghetto Comprehensive. It follows that the solution is not to change the school admissions process, which would merely spread the problems out across a wider range of schools, but to actually deal with the problems themselves.
-------------------- Hail Gallaxhar
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Moth
 Shipmate
# 2589
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Posted
quote: Originally posted by Marvin the Martian: quote: Originally posted by Doc Tor: At least you managed to state the obvious
Funny how it's obvious when applied to machine guns and body armour, but when applied to education people suddenly start thinking that removing one person's opportunity in order to give it to someone else is a good and desirable thing...
But you were the one who derided 'throwing more money at it' as a solution. If I'd said 'Let's spend more on education', you would have accused me of typical left wing spending plans!
-------------------- "There are governments that burn books, and then there are those that sell the libraries and shut the universities to anyone who can't pay for a key." Laurie Penny.
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Moth
 Shipmate
# 2589
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Posted
quote: Originally posted by Marvin the Martian: quote: Originally posted by mdijon: The difficulty is that some of these things are circular. It's difficult to make the schools in poor areas as good as the rich when the former have 20% speaking English as a 2nd language, more special needs, more children heading for exclusions, more children being taken out of school during term time or moving into/out of the area etc.
The poor bring their problems with them, and the rich area schools are sometimes helped by not having to deal with them.
And to think I was being roundly criticised for "thinking the problem is the poor themselves" earlier. How do you get away with it when I don't?
If the things you mention are the true causes of the problem, then they are still going to apply no matter what the policy is on school admissions. The kids who have those problems will still have them whether they go to St Poshgit's Public School, Our Lady-in-the-Middle Grammar or Ghetto Comprehensive. It follows that the solution is not to change the school admissions process, which would merely spread the problems out across a wider range of schools, but to actually deal with the problems themselves.
OK, how's this for a compromise: some of the problems of the poor are inherent, including those identified above. However, there are many children from poorer backgrounds whose main problem is not inherent, but caused by going to schools taking a high proportion of children with inherent problems. Those bright, able children are held back by being at a school struggling to educate a more than averagely difficult bunch of children, and are unlikely to have the capacity to add value to a bright child.
If that child had equal access to the good schools in the neighbouring posher area, it would get a better education and maybe go on to a more fulfilling career (or at least have a wider choice of careers). Meanwhile, the children in 'posher school' are benefitting from not having the children with problems in their school.
What we want is a solution which means that children from all types of homes get an equal crack at a good education. Our problem is identifying a solution that does not make things worse for the present pupils of 'posher school' but does improve the situation of those in 'not so posh' school. Agreed?
-------------------- "There are governments that burn books, and then there are those that sell the libraries and shut the universities to anyone who can't pay for a key." Laurie Penny.
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mdijon
Shipmate
# 8520
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Posted
quote: Originally posted by mdijon: The difficulty is that some of these things are circular... poor areas... 20% speaking English as a 2nd language, more special needs, more children heading for exclusions... The poor bring their problems with them
quote: Originally posted by Marvin the Martian: How do you get away with it when I don't?
The way I put it? Perhaps partly because I don't then say;
quote: Originally posted by Marvin the Martian: It follows that the solution is not to change the school admissions process, which would merely spread the problems out across a wider range of schools
It doesn't follow that all the children in poor areas have all of the problems I listed. You might have child A in a stable home, reasonably bright, English as a first language, but not making much progress because the teacher struggles for the first term or so with the lack of English in 1/3 of the class and the disruptive behaviour from another 1/4. If that child went to poshgits & co they would do better. If the disruptive 1/4 were instead a disruptive 1 or 2 spread through 4 classes they might not be so disruptive.
I think the problem is the overall atmosphere created in poor area schools rather than the individual children themselves. Although I accept that the overall atmosphere is mainly a product of the group which is made up of individual children - but it doesn't follow that the individual children will still have exactly the same problems in any setting.
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Marvin the Martian
 Interplanetary
# 4360
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Posted
quote: Originally posted by Moth: But you were the one who derided 'throwing more money at it' as a solution. If I'd said 'Let's spend more on education', you would have accused me of typical left wing spending plans!
I derided spending more money on welfare, not on education. Indeed, I view improving the education provision for the less-provided-for as being central to the end solution - what else do you think my repeatedly-stated idea of dragging the worst schools up to the level of the best is?
-------------------- Hail Gallaxhar
Posts: 30100 | From: Adrift on a sea of surreality | Registered: Apr 2003
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Marvin the Martian
 Interplanetary
# 4360
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Posted
quote: Originally posted by Moth: OK, how's this for a compromise: some of the problems of the poor are inherent, including those identified above. However, there are many children from poorer backgrounds whose main problem is not inherent, but caused by going to schools taking a high proportion of children with inherent problems.
Compromise accepted.
quote: Those bright, able children are held back by being at a school struggling to educate a more than averagely difficult bunch of children, and are unlikely to have the capacity to add value to a bright child.
If that child had equal access to the good schools in the neighbouring posher area, it would get a better education and maybe go on to a more fulfilling career (or at least have a wider choice of careers).
So what we need is a system whereby bright, able children from whatever background are able to go to schools which are not struggling to educate a more than averagely difficult bunch of children, schools with the capacity to add value to a bright child in order that they might get a better education and go on to more fulfilling careers?
I agree. One.Hundred.Percent.
Maybe we could call the schools that provide that facility for them "grammar schools". That's a good name...
quote: What we want is a solution which means that children from all types of homes get an equal crack at a good education. Our problem is identifying a solution that does not make things worse for the present pupils of 'posher school' but does improve the situation of those in 'not so posh' school. Agreed?
Yes. Bring back the grammars!
-------------------- Hail Gallaxhar
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Doc Tor
Deepest Red
# 9748
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Posted
quote: Originally posted by Marvin the Martian: I derided spending more money on welfare, not on education. Indeed, I view improving the education provision for the less-provided-for as being central to the end solution - what else do you think my repeatedly-stated idea of dragging the worst schools up to the level of the best is?
I think it's very problematic. I think there are enough vested interests with sufficient influence to ensure that a 'rising tide lifts all boats' model of education doesn't have the desired outcome.
There was a huge push from the last government to get Oxford and Cambridge to take smart kids from state schools. Yet I read newspapers like the Telegraph who report the bald facts - that 55% of Oxford admissions were state pupils (but not that 93% of pupils were state educated), and then they twist and squirm over the idea that 'bright kids' are being pushed out of the top universities by council estate oiks.
Because the places at Oxford and Cambridge aren't infinitely expandable, educating more children to achieve their potential, and from there to wrest the top jobs - the barristers, the judges, the politicians, the heads of civil service deparments, the boardrooms and the Senior Common Rooms - from the hands of the already entitled, isn't going to go down at all well.
-------------------- Forward the New Republic
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Marvin the Martian
 Interplanetary
# 4360
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Posted
quote: Originally posted by Doc Tor: Because the places at Oxford and Cambridge aren't infinitely expandable, educating more children to achieve their potential, and from there to wrest the top jobs - the barristers, the judges, the politicians, the heads of civil service deparments, the boardrooms and the Senior Common Rooms - from the hands of the already entitled, isn't going to go down at all well.
Of course it isn't. Nothing is. But if we're going to try to do it at all, I'd rather try to do it the right way. It might be a little bit slower than outright revolution and sending all the toffs to the gallows, but it has the advantage of being moral.
I don't oppose the concept or ideal of greater equality of opportunity for all, I just oppose some of the methods people suggest using in order to bring it about.
-------------------- Hail Gallaxhar
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Sioni Sais
Shipmate
# 5713
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Posted
quote: Originally posted by Marvin the Martian: quote: Originally posted by Moth: [QUOTE][qb]What we want is a solution which means that children from all types of homes get an equal crack at a good education. Our problem is identifying a solution that does not make things worse for the present pupils of 'posher school' but does improve the situation of those in 'not so posh' school. Agreed?
Yes. Bring back the grammars!
And that would mean bring back the Secondary Moderns. If you think Comprehensives are bad, think again: the Sec. Mods. were institutionally, and quite deliberately, second class schools. Many LEAs, of all colours, worked damned hard to keep it that way as for a disproportionate part the councillors kids went to the grammars and they didn't want these centres of excellence ruined by having to accept anyone.
-------------------- "He isn't Doctor Who, he's The Doctor"
(Paul Sinha, BBC)
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Doc Tor
Deepest Red
# 9748
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Posted
quote: Originally posted by Marvin the Martian: quote: Originally posted by Doc Tor: Because the places at Oxford and Cambridge aren't infinitely expandable, educating more children to achieve their potential, and from there to wrest the top jobs - the barristers, the judges, the politicians, the heads of civil service deparments, the boardrooms and the Senior Common Rooms - from the hands of the already entitled, isn't going to go down at all well.
Of course it isn't. Nothing is. But if we're going to try to do it at all, I'd rather try to do it the right way. It might be a little bit slower than outright revolution and sending all the toffs to the gallows, but it has the advantage of being moral.
I don't oppose the concept or ideal of greater equality of opportunity for all, I just oppose some of the methods people suggest using in order to bring it about.
What we have now is far from moral, but you're happy with that because you think it advantages you.
Again, no one is suggesting eating the rich. But the idea that the rich will inevitably not be able to buy all the privilege they're used to seems to be a sticking point here.
-------------------- Forward the New Republic
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Moth
 Shipmate
# 2589
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Posted
quote: Originally posted by Sioni Sais: quote: Originally posted by Marvin the Martian: quote: Originally posted by Moth: [QUOTE][qb]What we want is a solution which means that children from all types of homes get an equal crack at a good education. Our problem is identifying a solution that does not make things worse for the present pupils of 'posher school' but does improve the situation of those in 'not so posh' school. Agreed?
Yes. Bring back the grammars!
And that would mean bring back the Secondary Moderns. If you think Comprehensives are bad, think again: the Sec. Mods. were institutionally, and quite deliberately, second class schools. Many LEAs, of all colours, worked damned hard to keep it that way as for a disproportionate part the councillors kids went to the grammars and they didn't want these centres of excellence ruined by having to accept anyone.
My mother is as bright as I am, and she missed going to grammar school because she was shy and didn't answer at the interview. She left her secondary modern with no qualifications at all.
I sent one son to grammar school and one to a 'wide ability' school (since it was an area with grammars, very few were in the top 20% ability-wise). The ethos of the two schools was very different - the wide ability school was quite content with 5 grade A-C GCSEs, and taught to a maximum grade B standard. The grammar aimed at all A* grades. A child who failed to get into the grammar at 11 but later blossomed had a very low chance of achieving as well in the other school. By the way - he went 10 miles to go to that school - it was a lot better than the other non-selectives.
When I went to grammar school, no-one was tutored at home to pass the test. When my son went, 10 years ago, 50% were tutored. Now 97% admit to being tutored when asked, or went to a private prep school which tutored for the exam.
I am not anti-selection; in fact I think it could be helpful in some ways. The youth worker at our church, however, has said publicly that she is astonished at the harm it does our children. They tell her how much it hurts them when they 'fail' - no matter that their parents try to hide their disappointment. The tests are a Big Thing in our area - it's how parents judge primary schools and it's the focus of a year or more of preparation of children. The schools pretty much divide into grammar schools - good, other schools - rubbish.
What most parents actually want, when asked, is a good school just up the road that can teach all of their children, whatever their ability, well. Why this should be an impossible dream is very hard to say - other countries seem to manage it! [ 19. November 2010, 12:16: Message edited by: Moth ]
-------------------- "There are governments that burn books, and then there are those that sell the libraries and shut the universities to anyone who can't pay for a key." Laurie Penny.
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Imaginary Friend
Real to you
# 186
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Posted
quote: Originally posted by Moth: What most parents actually want, when asked, is a good school just up the road that can teach all of their children, whatever their ability, well. Why this should be an impossible dream is very hard to say - other countries seem to manage it!
It seems to me that this is actually a very hard problem. Do you know of any examples of countries that achieve it?
-------------------- "We had a good team on paper. Unfortunately, the game was played on grass." Brian Clough
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Albertus
Shipmate
# 13356
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Posted
quote: Originally posted by Sioni Sais: quote: Originally posted by Marvin the Martian: quote: Originally posted by Moth: [QUOTE][qb]What we want is a solution which means that children from all types of homes get an equal crack at a good education. Our problem is identifying a solution that does not make things worse for the present pupils of 'posher school' but does improve the situation of those in 'not so posh' school. Agreed?
Yes. Bring back the grammars!
And that would mean bring back the Secondary Moderns. If you think Comprehensives are bad, think again: the Sec. Mods. were institutionally, and quite deliberately, second class schools. Many LEAs, of all colours, worked damned hard to keep it that way as for a disproportionate part the councillors kids went to the grammars and they didn't want these centres of excellence ruined by having to accept anyone.
Indeed. I used to be pro-selection: I went to a Grammar School and it was excellent in itself and just right for me. But the Sec Mods that my less academically able- or less fortunate, because the 11 plus was rather rough and ready- schoolmates went to were bloody awful. I'm not anti-Grammar but I am anti Sec Mod, and if the price to pay for getting a reasonably good education for all (not that this necessarily flows from nonselection, mind) is losing an excellent academic education for a few and a dismal experience for the many, IMO it's a price worth paying, especially if you combine it with lots of opportunities for study at your own pace and level later in life.
-------------------- My beard is a testament to my masculinity and virility, and demonstrates that I am a real man. Trouble is, bits of quiche sometimes get caught in it.
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Marvin the Martian
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quote: Originally posted by Sioni Sais: And that would mean bring back the Secondary Moderns. If you think Comprehensives are bad, think again: the Sec. Mods. were institutionally, and quite deliberately, second class schools. Many LEAs, of all colours, worked damned hard to keep it that way as for a disproportionate part the councillors kids went to the grammars and they didn't want these centres of excellence ruined by having to accept anyone.
Yes, that was bad. So let's keep the good bits of the system and change the bad bits - namely, let's make non-grammar schools places where the kids who aren't suited to grammar-style education get the absolute best possible education that is suited to them. Where specialists at teaching children with the problems identified by Doc Tor and Moth can be concentrated and therefore most effective, rather than having to be spread across all schools thus diluting the benefits they can bring to those who need them.
It means you can teach the way the children in any given class need you to teach, rather than having to be all things to all children at the same time. Everybody gets the education that is best suited to them, enabling them to be the best they can be and get the best results - both in exams and in life - they can get. What's wrong with that?
-------------------- Hail Gallaxhar
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Marvin the Martian
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quote: Originally posted by Doc Tor: What we have now is far from moral, but you're happy with that because you think it advantages you.
I've been proposing changes to the education system throughout this thread. That they're not the changes you think are needed is indisputable, but it's a far cry from me saying things are perfect the way they are.
As I've said before: we're both looking for ways to improve the lot of the poorest and least advantaged. We just differ about how best to do it.
quote: Again, no one is suggesting eating the rich. But the idea that the rich will inevitably not be able to buy all the privilege they're used to seems to be a sticking point here.
Not with me it's not. I favour a true meritocracy, where people can rise to the top based on ability rather than background. Again, we just differ on how best to achieve that goal.
-------------------- Hail Gallaxhar
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Moth
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There would also have to be a lot of movement between schools if we did that, so that kids who blossom later can change.
Why not true comprehensives - schools which teach in sets and really do cater for all abilities well?
-------------------- "There are governments that burn books, and then there are those that sell the libraries and shut the universities to anyone who can't pay for a key." Laurie Penny.
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Albertus
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Yes,why not? That way, too, we might get a bit closer to parity of esteem. It'd be good for primarily academic kids to recognise and respect those with more technical abilities, and vice versa- and, indeed, for all kids to develop both sides of their abilities to some extent.
-------------------- My beard is a testament to my masculinity and virility, and demonstrates that I am a real man. Trouble is, bits of quiche sometimes get caught in it.
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Marvin the Martian
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quote: Originally posted by Moth: The ethos of the two schools was very different - the wide ability school was quite content with 5 grade A-C GCSEs, and taught to a maximum grade B standard. The grammar aimed at all A* grades.
The problem there is with the ethos of the wide-ability school. Every school should be pushing every student to do as well as they possibly can.
quote: A child who failed to get into the grammar at 11 but later blossomed had a very low chance of achieving as well in the other school.
Yes, this is a problem. My ideal solution would be to allow children to take 12+, 13+, 14+, etc exams and move to schools that would be a better fit for them at those times if appropriate. Also, children who find they aren't suited to grammar education should be free to move to schools where they are better catered for.
Of course, the whole system would hinge on stressing, again and again, and putting policies in place that support the view, that different types of schooling aren't inherently better or worse than others, but merely tailored to the needs of the children they serve. I realise that would be the hardest part of the whole system to get established.
quote: What most parents actually want, when asked, is a good school just up the road that can teach all of their children, whatever their ability, well. Why this should be an impossible dream is very hard to say - other countries seem to manage it!
The goal of my proposed system is that eventually there would exist enough variety of schools that every child can get the best possible education for them. I think that necessarily involves having different schools for different educational needs, but I think it's better to have such specialisation than to try to make schools all things to all children. It's better for everyone to get 100% of what they need in separate places than for everybody to get 60% of what they need in the same place.
-------------------- Hail Gallaxhar
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Imaginary Friend
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quote: Originally posted by Marvin the Martian: The goal of my proposed system is that eventually there would exist enough variety of schools that every child can get the best possible education for them. I think that necessarily involves having different schools for different educational needs, but I think it's better to have such specialisation than to try to make schools all things to all children.
That sounds very nice in theory but I think it runs into a significant practical problem: How do you select which children go to which school, and how do you ensure that the playing field is level for that selection process?
-------------------- "We had a good team on paper. Unfortunately, the game was played on grass." Brian Clough
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Doc Tor
Deepest Red
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quote: Originally posted by Marvin the Martian: I favour a true meritocracy, where people can rise to the top based on ability rather than background. Again, we just differ on how best to achieve that goal.
It's not a 'just', though.
You're proposing systems that we've tried, like grammar schools, and have seen fail the majority of children. You want a meritocracy where 97% of the kids who get to grammar have been hothoused by anxious parents or taught specifically to pass the 11+ at prep schools. How are you going to unwind that?
And in your most recent proposal for a sort of 'super grammar' where kids are kicked in and out of different schools based on their end-of-term results? Bloody hell, man, do you know what stress this would impose on mere children? Rather than have one opportunity to fuck their lives up at 11, there'd be multiple opportunities. Lose status, friends, routine, familiarity and teachers who know them and know their name, and do that, year in, year out? Do you have shares in Prozac?
Which is why I'm glad we don't have grammars in my area, and why my kids are at the local comp. There's aggressive streaming, but if they screw up, there's lots of support and always the opportunity to do better - without getting kicked out, losing their mates and any semblance of stability.
Children are not little adults. Especially at 11.
-------------------- Forward the New Republic
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Marvin the Martian
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It wasn't me that first mentioned the problem of bright, able children being held back by being at a school struggling to educate a more than averagely difficult bunch of children. Surely the solution to that problem is putting such children into a situation where they are no longer being held back?
And bear in mind that "being held back" doesn't just happen in the classroom. It happens in the playground, where "nerds" and "geeks" are bullied mercilessly for being smarter than everyone else and where the lowest common denominator rules.
-------------------- Hail Gallaxhar
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Moth
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How about the Finnish solution ?
Very egalitarian and very successful.
-------------------- "There are governments that burn books, and then there are those that sell the libraries and shut the universities to anyone who can't pay for a key." Laurie Penny.
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Marvin the Martian
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quote: Originally posted by Moth: How about the Finnish solution ?
Very egalitarian and very successful.
Yes, that would be fabulous. Though a lot of the changes would have to be sociological, rather than educational.
I also note that they do have academic separation (AKA selection) based on grades, albeit done at 15 rather than 11.
-------------------- Hail Gallaxhar
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Doc Tor
Deepest Red
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quote: Originally posted by Marvin the Martian: It wasn't me that first mentioned the problem of bright, able children being held back by being at a school struggling to educate a more than averagely difficult bunch of children. Surely the solution to that problem is putting such children into a situation where they are no longer being held back?
And bear in mind that "being held back" doesn't just happen in the classroom. It happens in the playground, where "nerds" and "geeks" are bullied mercilessly for being smarter than everyone else and where the lowest common denominator rules.
Not at my school. Not at my kids' school either. I think you're projecting.
-------------------- Forward the New Republic
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Moth
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quote: Originally posted by Marvin the Martian: quote: Originally posted by Moth: How about the Finnish solution ?
Very egalitarian and very successful.
Yes, that would be fabulous. Though a lot of the changes would have to be sociological, rather than educational.
I also note that they do have academic separation (AKA selection) based on grades, albeit done at 15 rather than 11.
It's rather a chicken-and-egg situation though - are Finns egalitarian because of their education system, or is their education system egalitarian because they are?
I other words, if we do suddenly mix all our kids up by lotteries or some such mechanism, will we eventually get to a more egalitarian society?
-------------------- "There are governments that burn books, and then there are those that sell the libraries and shut the universities to anyone who can't pay for a key." Laurie Penny.
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Marvin the Martian
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quote: Originally posted by Moth: It's rather a chicken-and-egg situation though - are Finns egalitarian because of their education system, or is their education system egalitarian because they are?
Indeed.
quote: I other words, if we do suddenly mix all our kids up by lotteries or some such mechanism, will we eventually get to a more egalitarian society?
And if not, how much damage will be done?
-------------------- Hail Gallaxhar
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Imaginary Friend
Real to you
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There is a partial lottery system here in DC, both for regular public schools and for the charter schools. As far as I know, there's not much evidence that this does much more than add stress to the 'motivated' who apply for the better schools and then have to sweat through the random selection procedure.
-------------------- "We had a good team on paper. Unfortunately, the game was played on grass." Brian Clough
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Angloid
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quote: Originally posted by Moth: Our problem is identifying a solution that does not make things worse for the present pupils of 'posher school' but does improve the situation of those in 'not so posh' school. Agreed?
There's a fallacy implicit in this statement which suggests that a school which selects its pupils (either by academic ability or by its situation in a middle-class area) will inevitably suffer if it admits lower-ability or working-class pupils.
I attended a selective grammar school which naturally achieved reasonable exam results and university places. But much of the teaching was poor to mediocre and the school should have produced much better results than it did, considering the intake. Similarly, my wife recently taught in a comprehensive with a predominantly middle-class intake, which had real problems and was seriously underachieving. This is because there was little incentive for the staff to do better, as they knew that with their material they were unlikely to 'fail'.
If the student bodies had been more mixed, in terms of ability and background, they would have provided a challenge which in turn would benefit the most able pupils as well as the less able. Conversely, teachers in a school with a predominantly working-class and lower-ability intake need to be that much more determined and visionary in order to succeed. Give them a few potential Oxbridge candidates to leaven the mix and you will encourage the staff and provide role-models to inspire the pupils.
It is also important in a class-ridden society such as the UK, that children should not be brought up in ghettoes and solely mix with or experience their own class and culture.
-------------------- Brian: You're all individuals! Crowd: We're all individuals! Lone voice: I'm not!
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Marvin the Martian
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quote: Originally posted by Angloid: It is also important in a class-ridden society such as the UK, that children should not be brought up in ghettoes and solely mix with or experience their own class and culture.
On that front I can confidently state that I saw a far greater diversity of colours and creeds at my grammar school than was present in either of the Comps I'd have been eligible for had I failed the 11+. Doesn't apply at all times and in all places of course, but it's certainly true of that particular area.
-------------------- Hail Gallaxhar
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Albertus
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Good point about the dangers of mediocre teaching with classes made up exclusively of more able pupils. Applies in universities too- there was a letter in the Times Higher a coiuple of weeks back from an academic at Birmingham City University who said the teaching there was much better and, crucially, more transformative than at Oxford, where he'd previously worked and where a lot of the students both arrived and left as reasonably bright 2:1s. That certainly rang a bell with my experience of teaching in HE.
Interesting point from Marvin about diversity. My immediate question is whether this was in an area with a lot of white working class people where members of minorities tended to be either professionals or aspirational business people. [ 19. November 2010, 17:04: Message edited by: Albertus ]
-------------------- My beard is a testament to my masculinity and virility, and demonstrates that I am a real man. Trouble is, bits of quiche sometimes get caught in it.
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mdijon
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# 8520
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quote: Originally posted by Marvin the Martian: And bear in mind that "being held back" doesn't just happen in the classroom. It happens in the playground, where "nerds" and "geeks" are bullied mercilessly for being smarter than everyone else and where the lowest common denominator rules.
quote: Originally posted by Doc Tor: Not at my school. Not at my kids' school either. I think you're projecting.
While my politics are pretty far from Marvin's I have to say that is exactly what happenned to me and others in my class at school. We were bullied for doing well. In my case I was such an outsider (for racial reasons) that I didn't have the option of fitting in anyway, and had an incredibly supportive family, so it had less effect, but for others it was catastrophic.
-------------------- mdijon nojidm uoɿıqɯ ɯqıɿou ɯqıɿou uoɿıqɯ nojidm mdijon
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Doc Tor
Deepest Red
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Posted
quote: Originally posted by mdijon: quote: Originally posted by Marvin the Martian: And bear in mind that "being held back" doesn't just happen in the classroom. It happens in the playground, where "nerds" and "geeks" are bullied mercilessly for being smarter than everyone else and where the lowest common denominator rules.
quote: Originally posted by Doc Tor: Not at my school. Not at my kids' school either. I think you're projecting.
While my politics are pretty far from Marvin's I have to say that is exactly what happenned to me and others in my class at school. We were bullied for doing well. In my case I was such an outsider (for racial reasons) that I didn't have the option of fitting in anyway, and had an incredibly supportive family, so it had less effect, but for others it was catastrophic.
Bullying happens everywhere. I was bullied, not for being bright, but for having really sticky-out teeth.
What's important is how bullying is dealt with. I'm aware of one local academy school, very strong academic values who insist there's no bullying at the school. I know that's not true. I also worked for a couple of years next to the 'best' private boys school in the area. The kids were little shits, to each other and to the local community.
We complained often, but the Master's opinion was that boys would be boys.
There is much, much less toleration of - and indeed active campaigns against - bullying in state schools. In my kids' school, it is rigorously enforced, and indeed, it's one of the things that Ofsted look for. Apart from a bit of argy-bargy in Induction week, there's been nothing at all against both my top-set children.
-------------------- Forward the New Republic
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mdijon
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I'm sure all that you say is true, but I don't think it goes against the idea that being bullied for doing well is a strong dynamic in keeping children in certain schools back. I'm told it doesn't occur in quite the same way in independent and public schools. Perhaps there are things the school can do that reduce it's impact, but I doubt that it can be prevented entirely.
-------------------- mdijon nojidm uoɿıqɯ ɯqıɿou ɯqıɿou uoɿıqɯ nojidm mdijon
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leo
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quote: Originally posted by Marvin the Martian: Yes. Bring back the grammars!
I failed the 11+ because my father had died in a tragic way just before the exam. I went to a sec. mod. However, I joined the Grammar School 6th form at the same time as someone else from my former junior school left. He still drives a Pickford's truck while I have a degree and a couple of postgrad qualifications. Bad system.
If you compare exam results in the league tables, you will see that local authorities who retain grammar schools have a lower percentage of GCSE grades A-C across the board than those who have comps. That's because the sec. mod. kids languish while the GS kids do well. In comps., the bright kids pull the less bright ones up. Not the other way round.
-------------------- My Jewish-positive lectionary blog is at http://recognisingjewishrootsinthelectionary.wordpress.com/ My reviews at http://layreadersbookreviews.wordpress.com
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