I didn't see anyone, Gove, Lydia or me, blaming the teachers. It seemed that it was the person questioning Gove who was saying that it was the child who would determine what they were to be taught.
And if you read it again I WAS questioning the model -specifically what is the point of league tables ? And I do question a model where parents want to, and are apparently able to, choose one state school over another. And conversely, where some have to fight for a place at their local school.
As for the talented child, our teachers always had the possibility of placing him/her in a higher or more advanced class if they thought they could cope.
Some were presented to examinations a year earlier than usual and were then able to spend time on other subjects that interested them.
Of course this was Scotland: perhaps things were different here :-)
'It seemed that it was the person questioning Gove who was saying that it was the child who would determine what they were to be taught.'
No, he wasn't saying that John. He was asking that teachers and parents be allowed to help each child develop through secondary school in ways that aren't so narrowly prescribed. In other words, rather than have their future determined by Gove's narrow interpretation of success through his proposed Baccalaureate.
Liz wrote: Why begin teaching teenagers at 9 am when research suggests they function better beginning later in the day?
Surely because that when they go out in to the wider world, most employers will expect them to be up and ready to go at 08:00 /09:00 and not by bumming in at 11:00. (like I do - lol)
Surely education is also about how to become part of society and respecting it - not by expecting society to allow younger people to do what everything how they want.
Amongst other things yes.. most will need employers otherwise they'll end up living off the state..
I would suggest that getting into the routine of getting up early takes longer than the five years you mention.. some people never manage it.
Strange that in many other countries with successful school systems school starts earlier than in the UK ..
Liz, nobody said only 'simply to prepare children for work' although preparing them to able to earn a living is not such a bad thing I would have thought.
And you seem to have forgotten those that don't have the ablities to go on to higher education and should be separated out and sent to vocational schools at 15/16 - learning a trade is just as worthwhile as acheiving a bac. - allowing these young people to start school later in the day is just wrong, it won't help them later.
If we don't provide children with an education that enables them to earn a living then they will need to be supported by someone else. If you have rich parents you can spend ten years volunteering in an art gallery but if you don't, people who do work will be supporting you through taxation and redistribution.
Whatever is wrong with education (and Kenneth's cod example did not show cause) I don't want excessive molly-codling or CVs filled with A's in media studies.
I went to school with Michael Gove. We lived in the same area and often shared the bus home. I always liked him, and continue to do so.
He was a decent person then and I have no reason to doubt his motivations.
I continued to come across him in his early career, living in the same city, and I have always liked/respected him. I will continue to do so.
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