EDUCATION POLICY

Cards (164)

  • 1944 Butler Education Act:
    • Selective education where students received different education based on ability
    • All students sat an IQ test at age 11 (the 11+) to determine their school
    • Top 20% went to grammar schools, bottom 80% to secondary moderns, and technical schools for vocational education
    • Evaluations:
    • Class inequalities with grammar schools mainly for middle classes and secondary moderns for lower classes
    • IQ test determined futures at a young age
    • Some secondary moderns had low standards
    • Gender inequalities with girls needing higher scores than boys
  • 1965 Comprehensives:
    • Equality of opportunity with one type of school for all pupils
    • Tripartite System abolished and Comprehensive schools established
    • Local Education Authorities maintained control of schools
    • Evaluations:
    • Poor standards in some schools
    • Banding and streaming along social class lines
    • Parents had little choice in education
  • 1988 Education Act:
    • Introduced free market principles and greater parental choice
    • Raising standards in education
    • Neoliberalism and The New Right principles
    • Marketisation, Parentocracy, League Tables, OFSTED, National Curriculum, Formula Funding
    • Evaluations:
    • Competition increased standards
    • Selection by mortgage and cream skimming
    • Middle classes had more effective choice
    • League tables criticized for encouraging teaching to the test
  • 1997 New Labour:
    • Responded to globalisation
    • Raising standards and focus on equality of opportunity
    • Increasing choice and diversity
    • Policies: increased funding, reduced class sizes, introduced Academies, Sure Start, EMA, tuition fees
    • Evaluations:
    • Early academies improved standards in poor areas
    • Better at improving equality of opportunity than the New Right
    • Parents liked Sure Start but it didn't improve education
    • Tuition fees deterred working class kids from university
  • 2010 Coalition Government:
    • Reduced public spending on education due to financial crisis
    • Policies: cut funding, forced academisation, Free Schools, Pupil Premium
    • Evaluations:
    • Standards continued to improve
    • Academisation and Free schools are ideological with no evidence of improved standards
    • Free schools advantage the middle classes
    • Pupil Premium impact still uncertain
  • Tory Education Policy 2015-2019:
    • Continued marketisation and neoliberal agenda
    • Policies: austerity and funding cuts, conversion to academies, more grammar schools, Pupil Premium, EBacc, T Level Qualifications
    • Evaluations:
    • Fully blown education market may lack democratic oversight
    • Grammar schools increase advantage for middle classes
    • EBacc potentially narrows curriculum
    • T Levels increase choice and diversity
  • In response to the Covid-19 Pandemic:
    • Schools were locked down from mid-March to June 2020 and then from January to late March 2021
    • Home-based, online learning became the norm
    • GCSE and A-Level exams were cancelled in 2020 and again in 2021
    • Teachers awarded their own grades, with 45% of pupils receiving an A or A* grade in 2021 compared to 25% in 2019
    • The Catch Up Premium was introduced in 2021, providing £650 million directly to schools and £350 million for a national tutoring programme
    • Post-covid funding for schools is set to increase by 7% per pupil by 2024-25
    • Funding increases to education from 2023 do not cover the rising costs of living
  • Effects of Covid-19 on education:
    • Resulted in a 'covid education gap' with children falling behind in progress in maths and reading
    • Created a covid disadvantage gap, with poor pupils falling further behind wealthier pupils due to differences in home-support standards during lockdowns
    • Students from the least deprived schools did almost three hours more work per week during lockdown compared to students from the most deprived schools
    • Teacher Predicted Grades were generous, giving an unfair advantage to students receiving them compared to those sitting exams in 2023
  • Core Aims of The New Right in Education:
    • The New Right aimed to improve standards through marketisation
    • Marketisation involves making schools compete for pupils and government funding
    • Parentocracy gives parents the choice over which schools to send their children to
  • The 1988 Education Act introduced:
    • League tables
    • The national curriculum (including GCSEs)
    • Formula funding
    • Open enrolment (parental choice)
    • OFSTED inspections
  • League Tables:
    • Schools ranked based on exam performance
    • Published in newspapers and online
    • Intended to force schools to raise standards
  • The National Curriculum:
    • Required all schools to teach the same subjects from age 7-16
    • Introduced GCSEs and SATs
    • Aimed to make it easier for parents to compare and choose between schools
  • OFSTED:
    • Established in 1993 to inspect schools
    • Reports published and underperforming schools may be shut down
    • Aims to raise standards
  • Open Enrolment (parental choice):
    • Parents allowed to select multiple schools
    • Some schools became oversubscribed
    • Criteria for selecting pupils, including siblings at the school and proximity
  • Formula Funding:
    • Funding based on the number of pupils enrolled
    • Undersubscribed schools may decrease in size or close
    • Oversubscribed schools could expand
  • The declining power of Local Education Authorities:
    • Parents gained more power to choose schools
    • Heads of schools managed budgets
    • LEAs lost control over education management at the county level
  • Evidence that the 1988 Education Act worked:
    • Improved GCSE results over the last 30 years
    • No fundamental changes to the act by successive governments
    • Application of competition internationally through PISA league tables
  • Criticisms of the 1988 Education Act:
  • League Tables distort teaching and learning
  • Criticism that the curriculum in schools has become more narrow over the years
  • Schools increasingly 'teach to the test' to look good in league tables, potentially stifling children's ability to think critically and laterally
  • SATS harm children's mental health, causing stress and pressure to perform well
  • Rich Parents have more Choice of Schools due to higher incomes
  • Middle Classes have more effective choice due to their higher incomes
  • Cultural Capital gives the middle class more choice in school selection
  • The best schools cream skim, becoming more selective and preferring middle class pupils
  • Polarisation leads to an increase in Inequality of Education Opportunity, with the best schools getting better and the worst getting worse
  • New Labour's education policies aimed to raise standards and create a skilled labor force to compete in the global knowledge economy
  • New Labour wanted to achieve greater equality of opportunity by making education more inclusive and improving the experience of education for all
  • New Labour's education policies were influenced by both Neoliberalism and the New Right, as well as Social Democratic ideals
  • New Labour emphasized introducing free-market principles into education to make schools more competitive and give parents more choice
  • New Labour increased the role of the private sector in education through academies and Private Finance Initiatives
  • New Labour introduced vocational education policies to prepare children for the world of work
  • New Labour focused on improving equality of opportunity and tackling social disadvantage through state education
  • New Labour introduced policies to promote equality of educational opportunity, including Academies, Sure Start, Education Maintenance Allowance, and increased state expenditure on education
  • Under New Labour, there was a renewed emphasis on teaching essential skills such as literacy, numeracy, and I.T.
  • New Labour introduced citizenship classes to address social fragmentation
  • The national curriculum was made more flexible with added vocational elements
  • A Levels were modernized and made modular with the introduction of AS Levels