Primary and secondary education

Overview

The general public have been coerced into believing the new schools market has given them choice. But choice is illusory. In Bristol, the largest city in Wessex, the overall rate of pupils gaining 5 or more good GCSEs is well below the UK average (39%, 44% for England).

Education should equip the young (and others) not for another worthless job but for a life well-lived. It should enable them to demand and to build a society in which all jobs are worthwhile and to make satisfying use of their non-work time. Everyone needs the basic skills of literacy and numeracy, but we also need to develop people’s imaginative, practical and social abilities. The economy of the future, where people should come before production, will need rounded, feeling individuals, not trained robots. 

No-one should feel doomed to fail. And no school should be allowed to fail. In the race towards achievement, not everyone is starting from the same place but a true meritocracy requires that, as far as practicable, everyone should have an equal opportunity to fulfil their ambitions. Different models for delivering education may help produce better forms more related to individual pupils needs and abilities.

Education should be open to all in the community regardless of wealth, race, religion or identity. 

Educational opportunities should exist throughout life. They should also be more equal. For this, society itself has to be more equal. The gap in educational attainment reflects the gap between the advantaged and the disadvantaged. This vicious circle of entrapment in poverty for generations in one community has to be broken.

Sadly, there is a massive gap in the educational outcomes for millions of young people. This inevitably limits their chances of ever breaking out of the cycle of deprivation that haunts many communities. The Joseph Rowntree Foundation reported that for children from disadvantaged backgrounds there was a gap in attainments of 20% by Key Stage 2 (age 11) widening to 27% by GCSE stage (age 16) to 27%.

Educational inequalities mirror social inequalities. Unless the background social inequality is resolved then education by itself will never fill the gap: the reality remains ‘who you know, not what you know’.

If current trends continue, educational apartheid is a real possibility in larger cities but we shouldn’t forget the special and longstanding problems of rural areas, which are a major concern of a party devoted to the needs of the whole of Wessex.

Societies with the best results (e.g. Finland – there is much we should learn from Finland.) have smaller gaps between the haves and the-have-nots. Societies with the highest educational outcomes treat teachers with respect and encourage them to continuously improve.

Schools provision

Short Term – campaigning within the UK – Wessex Regionalists will campaign to ensure that:
  • education is seen as part of building better, more cohesive communities, growing out of inclusive schools at their heart; schools that cherish all and are cherished by all. Recognising the primacy of individual and communal autonomy, fully inclusive schools are a Party aim
  • as the norm, school facilities are made available for dual use by the school and, out of hours, the wider community
  • the emphasis in education is community focused.
Long Term – in a fully devolved region – Wessex Regionalists will:
  • make all education free at the point of access; ban the charging of fees for mainstream education – this is not a commodity that can be bought and sold – it is a fundamental right for all children
  • make all education community-based wherever possible
  • enable parishes, or groups of parishes, to run primary schools, with hundreds, or groups of hundreds working in co-operation, operating secondary schools and further education colleges
  • provide specialist services at county or equivalent level if not viable at any narrower level.
  • take the politics of the market out of school provision and restore parents’ role in the running of their schools
  • not allow any school to fail; the poorest performing schools would get the greatest support.
  • withdraw all public funding for private and faith schools because of their potential to divide communities on class and religious/ethnic lines
  • support local campaigns against proposed new faith schools, as well as to make existing ones more inclusive
  • scrap a national or regional curriculum leaving schools and communities to organise their schools around the needs of their communities; even the UK Governments Education Select Committee has recently highlighted “the benefits of celebrating greater diversity of subjects in the pre-16 curriculum (recommendation 35)
  • learn from education systems in those countries which appear to have better educational outcomes; this might possibly include considering splitting education provision into i) primary schools for pupils aged 1 to 7 based in existing village and local primary schools; ii) all-through education for 7 to 16 years of age students; ii) tertiary schools separately offering academic or vocational training, depending on local circumstances
  • encourage different methods of teaching and approaches to teaching which explore the potential benefits of approaches such as Forest and Beach Schools, Phenomenon Based Learning, Agora schooling even allowing traditional and alternative systems to operate side-by-side in the same school, but focused on what serves particular students best
  • bring in and enforce standards on home schooling to ensure pupils are able to be taught safely and in line with the common standards expected of all schools and that they are not being used to evade rules on faith schools, etc.
  • abolish tuition fees and restore student grants
  • treat teachers with respect – give them adequate access to continuous training, provide continuous support and reward them accordingly.