Educational Policy

Cards (6)

  • In a nutshell
    Educational policy has had a profound impact on society. There has been a shift in policy from the 1940’s where the tripartite system existed, legitimising inequality in education, to the new system of comprehensive schooling introduced in 1965. Although the New Labour policies sought to reduce inequality, the conservative policies have reintroduced a system of inequality by encouraging privatisation and marketisation.
  • THE TRIPARTITE SYSTEM

    Introduced in 1944, had two main types of secondary school (grammar and secondary modern) with selection by the 11+ exam. Most middle-class pupils attended the grammar school, whereas most working-class pupils attended the secondary modern.
  • THE COMPREHENSIVE SYSTEM

    Introduced in 1965, abolished the 11+ and all pupils attended the same local comprehensive school.
  • MARKETISATION POLICIES

    League tables - schools with good results encourage the best (usually middle-class pupils). Less successful schools end up with less-able pupils.
    The funding formula - schools are funded on how many pupils they recruit, so good schools get more money, and can improve staffing/resources.
  • NEW LABOUR POLICIES 1997 - 2010
    New Labour aimed to reduce inequality in education by introducing:
    Education Action Zones
    Aim Higher programmes
    Education Maintenance Allowance for poorer 16-18-year-olds
    Increased funding for state education
  • CONSERVATIVE POLICIES POST 2010
    Conservative policies since 2010 have reflected neo-liberal thinking about reducing the role of the state, moving away from the comprehensive system.
    Academies - all schools encouraged to become academies, some funded by privately-owned chains, some funded by central government.
    Free schools - state-funded but set up and run by parents, teachers, religious groups, businesses
    Spending cuts - cuts in government spending on education (Eg. in areas such as Sure Start, EMA, school building).
    Grammar schools - parliament discussed a reintroduction of grammar schools.