I have no
ideological problem with Free Schools. My decade-old book
on parent school relationships recommended that government experiment with
parent-led provision. Free Schools could form an important R and D arm of our
education system, providing they are properly researched and evaluated –
everything this government says about Free Schools and Academies smells of optimism
bias, and opponents have the opposite problem. As for Academies, my
daughter goes to one, I have mentored Teach First teachers in a couple, and at
Creative Partnerships I saw outstanding practice in many of them.
My problem is with
Academy-speak, and what the rhetoric about free schools and Academies implies
about the other few thousand schools out there. Government never claims that
all local authority schools are failing – the evidence is too contrary, and GCSE
successes in schools such as Bethnal Green
Technology College (in a borough with no Academies) prevent any brash
assertions. However, there are constant hints that those institutions and
individuals which choose not to extract themselves from Local Authority
so-called ‘control’ are somehow dull, stubborn or both. In this week’s DfE
announcement about the creation of 79 new Free Schools, Michael Gove argued
that “the people who are driving Free Schools and
UTCs are true pioneers. They are leading a revolution in the education system.”
A bit like the
PM’s call for real
excellence, it’s hard to know
what he means by true pioneers. Many of these schools are taking interesting
approaches, from prioritising foreign languages to linking with independent
schools. But every innovation happening in free schools could
take place, and probably is taking place, in local authority schools.
The Schools
White Paper also gave the same impression about Academies, as if any school
not taking the Academy route had some kind of deficiency in capacity or
ambition. At a recent academies event, one principal allegedly claimed that
‘only academies have true moral purpose’.
The decision made
by hundreds of outstanding schools not to become Academies is not necessarily
down to lethargy or timidity. It may be a positive choice around wanting to
remain part of a family of schools, an understanding about what extra funding
might not buy, or even a quaint love of local democratic accountability. Moreover,
conversion is a bureaucratic process, and its consequences can create added
bureaucracy. Many heads are simply choosing to focus on learning and leadership
– standards, not structures.
For Free School
and Academy leaders are in a sense bureaucratic pioneers. Their central freedoms, around admissions, assets
and staffing, are mainly bureaucratic, not educational. Their liberty to veer from the national curriculum lies largely untaken.
Many academy
heads are fantastic leaders, and there does appear to be an ‘academy state of
mind’ of bullish passion, attention to detail and entreprenuialism that some Heads could learn from. But pioneers are everywhere in England’s education
system, from small scale classroom tinkerers to revolutionary heads. The most
intelligent leaders, whether teachers, Heads, politicians or policymakers, will
look everywhere for inspiration, rather than confine themselves to one type of
school.
A few Free Schools,
especially Bristol
Free School, look like land grabs on behalf of the affluent. No need for
swords or ploughshares when you’ve got sharp elbows. But the vast majority do
appear to have social justice aims at their heart. And their founders, leaders
and teachers will be working crazy, passionate hours to make
sure their pupils succeed. Welcome to the world and politics of schooling in
England, and good luck. There’s a lot we can learn from each other.
One final
thought. The words ‘true’ and ‘real’ appear to have gone straight from
playground banter to Tory speeches. True pioneers. Real Excellence. It’s being
used like the star on exam A grades. Stop this True/Real madness.
2 comments:
Thank you for a highly intelligent blog on the current thinking. It is so easy when faced with the language of Grove to instantly take the opposing view. Sadly, I feel that we are losing the argument that within all structures of schools there is good and bad and that we can all learn something from all
An excellent analysis, both of the rhetoric of the free schools/new academies supporters and the truth of what is happening on the ground. We need more level headed analyses such as this one to make sense of supply side reforms to education and avoid everything being swept up in a welter of party political ideology.
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