Close X
Thursday, December 12, 2024
ADVT 
International

UK Education Reforms Spark Debate On Class And The Classroom

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 09 Sep, 2016 11:15 AM
    LONDON — In Britain, the class system and the classroom are intertwined, and education reforms inevitably cause political controversy.
     
    Prime Minister Theresa May made a bold move Friday by announcing plans to let more schools select children based on academic results.
     
    In her first major domestic policy speech since taking office in July, May said she would ease restrictions on new selective schools — and give existing ones 50 million pounds ($67 million) to expand — to help make Britain "a place where advantage is based on merit not privilege."
     
    The issue of academic selection is highly controversial, and May's plan is sure to face strong opposition. For decades British children were tested at age 11, with those who did best going to academically focused grammar schools, and the rest to "secondary moderns" which gave them little chance of getting to university.
     
    The two streams were largely merged by the 1970s, and nowadays most children attend state secondary institutions known as comprehensive schools. Many educators say creating new grammar schools will lower standards in comprehensives by siphoning off the brightest and most ambitious pupils.
     
     
    They also say well-off parents can pay for private tutors before selection exams.
     
    Chief schools inspector Michael Wilshaw said Britain "will fail as a nation if we only get the top 15 to 20 per cent of our children achieving well."
     
    Others argue that comprehensives fail the brightest children, and say grammar schools improve social mobility because they select pupils on academic ability rather than parental income, as private schools do.
     
    May said that "the debate over selective schools has raged for years."
     
    "But the only place it has got us to is a place where selection exists if you're wealthy — if you can afford to go private — but doesn't exist if you're not," she said.
     
    She said new grammar schools would have to take a portion of children from lower-income households.
     
    May's plans face a fight from opposition parties in Parliament, as well as some members of her own Conservative Party. May's Conservative predecessor, David Cameron, opposed expanding grammar schools, saying parents "don't want children divided into successes and failures at 11."

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Pakistan Police told to watch JuD fundraising

    Police in Pakistan have been told to act against the outlawed Jamaat-ud-Dawa Pakistan (JuD), linked to the 2008 Mumbai terror attack, for fundraising, it was reported on Friday.

    Pakistan Police told to watch JuD fundraising

    Indo-Canadian Man From Brampton, Ont. Charged With Drug-Smuggling

    Indo-Canadian Man From Brampton, Ont. Charged With Drug-Smuggling
    Gursharan Singh, who hails from Brampton, Ontario and is one of six men charged with smuggling operation, pleaded guilty yesterday before senior US District Judge 

    Indo-Canadian Man From Brampton, Ont. Charged With Drug-Smuggling

    How This Sikh Army Veteran Stood Out At Democratic National Convention

    How This Sikh Army Veteran Stood Out At Democratic National Convention
    Kalsi, accompanied retired General John Allen on stage along with a group of military veterans at the Wells Fargo Centre in Philadelphia on Thursday night.

    How This Sikh Army Veteran Stood Out At Democratic National Convention

    Indian-American Girl Becomes Youngest Delegate At Democratic National Convention

    Indian-American Girl Becomes Youngest Delegate At Democratic National Convention
    18-year-old Indian-American girl has become the youngest delegate at the Democratic National Convention at Philadelphia which has nominated Hillary Clinton as the party's presidential candidate.

    Indian-American Girl Becomes Youngest Delegate At Democratic National Convention

    Australian Teen Crashes Car Into School While Playing Pokemon Go

    Australian Teen Crashes Car Into School While Playing Pokemon Go
    A 19-year-old Australian trying to catch a Pokemon ploughed his car into a school in Melbourne.

    Australian Teen Crashes Car Into School While Playing Pokemon Go

    Now Donald Trump Jr Accuses Barack Obama Of Plagiarism

    Now Donald Trump Jr Accuses Barack Obama Of Plagiarism
    Mr Trump Jr suggested that Obama's speech in Philadelphia on Wednesday night lifted a line from his Republican National Convention remarks, pointing out that both addresses contained the line "That's not the America I know."

    Now Donald Trump Jr Accuses Barack Obama Of Plagiarism