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Wednesday, September 28, 2011

Chalk Talk: So, children, what do you think of your new free school so far?

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You might think you can be confident about what the answer will be if you ask a group of people a "feelgood" question about themselves.

However, as Education Secretary Michael Gove found out last week, the reply is not always the one you anticipated, especially when you are dealing with children.

He was attending the opening of the Woodpecker Primary academy in Enfield, north London, one of the 24 new free schools that have been launched this term, when he asked a reception class: "Is this the best school in London?"

The loudest voice in the class answered back: "No."

Undeterred, he went on to the next classroom and asked them: "What do you like about this school?"

The reply from one pupil came back: "You don't have to do well."

Not the sort of answer you really want when you are trying to push the message that the new breed of "free" schools is a key weapon in the Government armoury for raising standards.

Confessions time at the annual conference of Universities UK, the umbrella group representing British vice-chancellors.

A Freedom of Information request had asked that vice-chancellors should divulge the most expensive meal they had had in pursuit of their university duties.

A tricky one, that – especially if you had to list how much of the bill was spent on wine.

Professor Eric Thomas, the chairman of Universities UK and vice-chancellor of Bristol University, bit the bullet – ?321!

It was, however, for taking ten students to a pizza restaurant.

Sighs of relief all round but – come to think of it – he still did not tell us how much was spent on wine. Did they have any pizza?

Good to see that peace and harmony has broken out amongst the brothers and sisters who run our top independent schools.

Only a few months ago the Headmasters' and Headmistresses' Conference – which represents the top 250 traditionally boys-only schools in the UK – was threatening to break away from the Independent Schools Council. Some thought that the ISC was becoming overly inclusive and not portraying independent school education in the best light that it could.

Now, however, the threat has been withdrawn and a leading light of the HMC, the retiring headmaster of Harrow school, Barnaby Lennon, has just been given the job of chairing the ISC.



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Top marks for good behaviour

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Far from despairing about discipline, we should celebrate the huge drop in school exclusions, the previous government's 'behaviour tsar' tells Richard Garner

Sir Alan Steer, former adviser to the Government on school discipline. He was previously a very successful headteacher DAVID SANDISON

Sir Alan Steer, former adviser to the Government on school discipline. He was previously a very successful headteacher

Talk of a stern clampdown on school discipline by Education Secretary Michael Gove has raised the spectre of chaos ruling in our our classrooms – not for the first time.

The former government behaviour "guru" (although he dislikes the epithet) Sir Alan Steer has an alternative viewpoint. He believes there is a good news story to be told – particularly about behaviour in secondary schools. "I'd like to ask: 'Minister, what is a good news story?'" he says, almost in exasperation, as he contemplates the latest exclusion figures.

For two years they have been falling – quite substantially. Last year permanent exclusions fell by 19 per cent and this year they are down to just over 5,000 a year – a further drop of more than 10 per cent. Yet the headlines are all about how 900 children a day are being excluded for assaulting or abusing another child or adult at their school.

The comments from Schools minister Nick Gibb accompanying the statistics are also all about how the problem must, and is, being tackled.

"Four or five years ago when the number was around 10,000 a year, to have it down to about 5,000 would have been unthinkable," Sir Alan says. "It is not because heads can't exclude [as has been suggested by ministers]," he goes on. "That is totally untrue and it is an absolute myth. What we have seen is the success of the policies that have been implemented over the past 10 to 15 years – but because that story happened before this Coalition was elected we don't hear about that."

Sir Alan was the Government's behaviour "tsar" for five years from 2005 to 2010. Just over a year after leaving office, he now feels able to give vent to his feelings about how the new administration is tackling the issue.

He would acknowledge that some of the successes predate his appointment (and, indeed, are just down to common sense rather than Government initiatives). They are also down to firm leadership in schools coupled with quality teaching.

He himself once told me that he believed it was better to resort to a "right royal rollicking" for a first offender rather than rush to exclusion when he was in post as a headteacher." It shows that you care," he says.

He also acknowledges that he was under pressure to recommend new crackdowns on behaviour during the years he was churning out reports on how school discipline should be tackled. "I was always hearing the phrase: 'will you be tough enough?'," he says. "Yet evidence from Ofsted, the education standards watchdog, is that behaviour in most schools is good and getting better – although you may not think that from reading certain tabloids. Really, though, if you're going to say the national inspection service is rubbish you have to have more evidence than 'I know that because I met a man in the Pig and Whistle, and he said it was getting worse'."

During his time as education tsar, he tried to get the message across that "respect" was key to improving discipline – and that meant respect of the pupils by the teachers just as much as respect of the teachers by the pupils.

Respect, to his mind, meant giving them good-quality teaching that made them want to learn. "After all, if you go back to your own schooldays, wasn't it the teacher who didn't have command of his subject in whose lessons you played up the most?" he asks.

He is therefore critical of the latest government initiatives to try and combat poor discipline. One centres around giving teachers the power to use "reasonable force" in trying to restrain unruly pupils. It is, he says, a concept that was pushed under the previous government and its first inclusion in the statute books even predates Labour – although Coalition ministers would argue that teachers are still sceptical about how much force they can use.

The other is the plan to allow schools to use the power of same-day detention. "I can't think of anything more worrying to parents than if you're expecting your child home at a certain time and an hour or so later they haven't turned up," he says. "It's ridiculous."

Sir Michael Willshaw, headteacher of the highly successful Mossbourne Academy in east London – who was the architect of this plan in that its use at his school impressed Education Secretary Michael Gove, has said he would always alert the parents to the fact he had taken this step. Sir Alan, though, is worried that the new advice to heads does not stress this point.

He is not complacent about discipline, though, believing there are crucial issues – even "scandals" to use his words – that need to be tackled urgently. One is the type of education children receive once they have been excluded from school. In too many instances, he says, it is still the case that a child excluded from school may only receive home tuition for about one hour a week.

"Where are they going to be for the rest of the time?" he says. "They're probably not the sort that would be found in the local library. They will be driven into crime, drugs, substance abuse or alcohol participation." Or rioting in the streets during the summer holidays.

Nick Gibb, in his reaction to the latest exclusion figures, said ministers were encouraging the idea of alternative provision for excluded youngsters – possibly through private providers tabling plans to set up "free" schools to teach them.

The Independent last month revealed how in Sunderland the local premier league football club was teaching excluded pupils in classrooms at their Stadium of Light, recreating the atmosphere of a football match as they turned up for school to make them feel better about learning.

Sir Alan says he feels it was a "national scandal" that provision should vary so much from place to place. "The Government's answer is that the market will provide, but if the market doesn't provide in any given area you still have to have the necessary provision," he says.

One plan, though, he does agree with is a move – spelt out by ministers – to ensure schools should retain responsibility for the education of excluded youngsters. "Headteachers may not like it because they may have thought they had got rid of their troublemakers ," he says. The scheme, being trialled in several areas of the country from September, would force schools to consider what they should provide for excluded youngsters. It could mean schools banding together to set up pupil referral units,

Sir Alan also believes it is a "national scandal" that child mental health care services are a lottery for children. Depending on which area of the country a child lives in, it can take up to 18 months to get an appointment.

"If a young child had appendicitis and had to wait that long for treatment, there would be an uproar," he says. "It is just wrong."

He has had 18 months out of the limelight, which has enabled him to turn his attention to other things.

He is now chairman of the Ambition AXA awards scheme, which aims to reward young people with exceptional talents in the fields of sports, working in the community, the arts, science and enterprise. The awards, to be presented in the new year, are open to 11 to 18-year-olds, who have until mid-October to apply.

He has retired from his job as headteacher of Seven Kings School in Ilford, east London – where his reputation for having run an outstanding ship led to his selection for the job of behaviour tsar.

His new role, to which – as ever – he is devoting more time than he expected, is markedly different to when he had access to the seat of power in the education world.

Why the change of direction? "I couldn't keep churning out reports on discipline," he says.

"Besides, it's positive and you've heard me rabbit on about how there is so much negative publicity about youngsters these days. It's nice to be involved with something that's entirely positive."

It is a comment, one suspects, he would like those still in the corridors of power to take note of.

Exclusions: The good news story

Last year the number of permanent exclusions in English state schools dropped from 6,550 to 5,740. There were 5,020 exclusions from secondary schools and 620 from primaries.

The number of fixed-term exclusions also fell from 363, 280 to 331, 380 (279, 260 of which were from secondary schools and 37,210 from primaries).

The rate of permanent exclusions for boys was four times higher than that of girls. Black caribbean pupils were also nearly four times more likely to be excluded compared with the average – as were children entitled to free school meals.

The most common reason for exclusion was persistent disruptive behaviour. However, the figures also show that almost 900 pupils are excluded – either permanently or for a fixed-term – every day for abusing or assaulting fellow pupils or adults. A breakdown shows that staff in primary schools are more likely to suffer assaults than those in secondary schools.

There were 510 appeals against exclusions lodged by parents in 2009/10 – of which 24 per cent were successful. Of these, reinstatement of pupils was directed in 27 per cent of cases, a decrease of 12 percentage points on the previous year.

Overall, just 30 pupils throughout the country were returned to the classroom, down from 60 the previous year. However, this fall could partly be due to the fact that information on appeals against exclusions against academies are not collected and the number of academies has been constantly rising.



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Naturwissenschaftlichen Unterricht: eine physische Lösung

Physicists want to biology and chemistry to teach? Christopher white proposes instead to get them to mathematics teaching

Who teaches your children? Or rather, our children. Their education often we considered the biggest investment can, and still IT is not necessarily guaranteed experts in their subjects.

When the mind is a fire lit it will then be lit by almost all good teachers which may, but notes, burn it brightest and longest if nourished by a specialist - someone with a deep knowledge of and love, that they are teaching. For some topics, they are desperate short supply.

This applies in particular to physics. B., teachers and students for a further year teaching return, are around 500 State schools in England, still without a proper physics. And while the current batch of 650 new is qualified at the beginning of her career the biggest this month for 30 years, it is still shy of 1,000 each year for a decade and a half for their number to reach parity with biology recruited teachers.

The lack of specialists may be partly because they are forced to generalize. Potential high school physics must also learn how to make a of other disciplines to inform, which under the umbrella of the catch-all "Science" are.

It was with laudable objectives, including the increasing acceptance by A-level, that more than 20 years ago made this a topic of three separate areas, but it had this unintended consequence, also. "" "Both the schools and the teachers and instructors called"Science", thought of a subject", explains the Institute of Physics's Director of education and science, Peter main. "So if you wanted to teach physics, you were teacher science."

It can result in subjects, primarily also a specialist available is the false teachers. "There is this paradoxical situation, where in some schools have you physics specialists, teaching biology, and in the same school they teach physics, biology specialists", adds the Institute Director of pre-19 Charles Tracy, a former physics teacher education. "It is often only carelessness in the schedule, where it is easier to say, it is called a theme, the"Science"and it does not matter which teaches, rather than assigning specialists to teach their subjects."

For talented physics graduates who have no special love for biology or chemistry, can the prospect to teach either they might have easily pour cold water on all educational ambitions. It is a query, which comes after Tracy events, career. "Students often questions,"If we go in teaching physics, we need lessons, biology and chemistry?",", he says. "they can not-it depends on where they to get a job." "But it is still an ethos in many schools, which is a theme called 'Science'."

The number of potential teachers, which it is difficult to determine, but you choose around a quarter of physics graduates enter the profession as a teacher of mathematics and instead of the own person to train. Physics could be the solution to combine these two topics, so that trainee of teachers have mathematics rather than chemistry or biology as their subject?

It is believed that this attract additional technical graduates in the classroom. For engineers, physicists, mathematics is an everyday tool, in which they are inevitably sound, while they not biology or chemistry may have studied for 16 years.

A handful of teachers, like for example Watford grammar school David Weston, work this combination of physics and mathematics already. An engineering graduate, he prefers this science to teach must have all. "There are some obvious crossovers, where the same material in both - like mechanics teaching."

Studied biology not for GCSE, Weston is not particularly secure with relatively simple facts. "I'm trying to remember, like, ' how many kidneys have again we?" Oh, that's right... "," he jokes.

Weston is a break from the profession for nine years teacher but is in fact just back from a range of mathematics teaching attempted.

While a distinction clearly do not keep this would keep all science teachers, it is believed it could somehow go to improve retention. It is assumed that their support for physics and mathematics, rather than biology or chemistry as a combination for trainee teachers give the Government. "It certainly is something that we look at," confirmed a spokeswoman for the Department of education.

A pilot program with |Oxford University allows trainee teachers for the combination of mathematics and physics: decide and then the evidence should speak for themselves. "If we by a cohort, who are trained in, we would expect that they tear some schools," says Tracy. "And then can we follow through and show the get it does show you high-quality teachers." Teachers, that given the choice, we might prefer, teaching our children.

Christopher white is communications officer at the Institute of physics



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Chalk Talk: Paperless exams: why we won't be holding our breath

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There was a whiff of revolution in the air when Isabel Nesbit delivered her parting shot as chief executive of Ofqual, the exams regulator. The day of the paperless exam was heralded, with a massive move towards online sitting and marking of exams in the future.

Now it looks as though her successor, Glenys Stacey, appears to be adopting a far more cautious approach. Speaking at a seminar in London, she warned that spending on IT was not always a protected area of a school's budget. "My interests are in a level playing field," she said.

In other words, if a school has faulty computers, its pupils might be at a disadvantage to the well-heeled private school down the road as they frantically try to get the computer to work.

Her concerns were echoed by Jack Lewars, representing the English School Students' Association – ie, those who actually sit the exams. He was worried that – in the minds of many people – IT was inextricably linked with sites such as Facebook, Twitter and Youtube. As a result, the use of IT in exams would be seen as a "dumbing down" of academic standards in comparison with the hand-crafted essay.

For whatever reason, then, any change is likely to be evolutionary rather than revolutionary.

Good news from a poll of six to 15-year-olds on what they want to be when they grow up: the most popular job is teaching – chosen by 31 per cent. Only a couple of years ago, it was reported that most of them aspired to be "celebrities" when they grew up. Only four per cent this time wanted to be reality TV stars.

Come to think of it, there are so many reality TV shows nowadays that it might be a realistic ambition for such a small number!

Interesting footnote: more youngsters wanted to be lorry drivers (three per cent) than bankers (two per cent).

The poll was carried out to coincide with a new film, That's What I Am, which features a 1960s teacher as its inspirational hero. But don't tell Sir Chris Woodhead, Michael Gove and assorted other traditionalists from the world of education that.

Interesting to note that almost half of all proposals to set up new free schools come from state school teachers, according to research published at the weekend. Apparently most of them plan to become the headteacher of their new school. I doubt whether Education Secretary Michael Gove ever saw his flagship scheme as a route to the top job for teachers.



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A free school, which really deserves a chance

Unfortunately! The results came, a plan for an independent school in South London by a review in which reject the Government's decision, to wean young people from the gang culture, and it has yet to receive from the drawing board.

The plan hatched by two South London teacher, all graduates of three months work experience has been in their chosen profession, they go to stop ensure directly from school out to the streets. A number of appointed had already submitted to support for the school, which were unknown as diaspora high school in Lewisham.

However succeeded in yet for the same reasons, where the original assessors of system error with - namely found that it not the request that it could meet 50 percent of its places for the first cannot guarantee to fill two years. Signed 110 parents for the first year for 120 seats, but have not the figures for the second year, although applications by were killed in more than a trickle.

I will not even say that I know better than the officials at the Department of education established. I would say, is that a company offers this kind of help to disillusioned, disadvantaged young people, that handles the actual cause of some of the violence that we saw on our streets of downtown, in the second tranche of independent school proposals in the next month or so contain announced by Education Minister Michael Gove will be.

I have set up a number of free schools this September and found that she had chosen many of the parents who sent their children to them as an alternative to private education. I am not against, who believe as I do, that it is welcome, that it's back to the private sector and the State cover again. What it shows is, that they have are probably quite wealthy backgrounds, and the free school movement on more than just aid for this sector of society should be.

So, come on, Mr Gove, let's see, something like what diaspora offered potential young Tearaways in your next tranche of proposals.

Many surveys language provision in the United Kingdom have come to the conclusion that the language being fools of Europe due to the lack of young people, who take the subject in the school. Now there is a competition to prove that this moniker is wrong. Started by Collins and LiveMocha, it should find that most multilingual child and students in the UK. An amazing 33 languages spoke adult last year's winner. www.collinsmost multilingual.com.



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Patricia Lee-Sang:'We have to believe they can change'

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We've heard from the politicians, but what can educators do to help prevent a repeat of this summer's troubles?

Rioters in Liverpool where, as in other major cities last month, young people were involved in burning, looting and violence REUTERS

Rioters in Liverpool where, as in other major cities last month, young people were involved in burning, looting and violence

There has been a lot of heat and very little light so far in terms of what needs to be done to stop the riots happening again. While it's the Government's and the police's job to restore law and order, it's our job in families and communities to restore hope and a sense that there is a future for young people that is worth living and working for.

We believe that kids can and do change their ways and everybody deserves a second chance. Parents need advice and support to help make this happen and community-led initiatives can work where institutions fail.

One young man I know was constantly depressed and always tired. He lives in south London and his two goals in life were to be a successful rapper and to live beyond 21. He has just turned 16. He doesn't look like he eats or sleeps properly and was kicked out of school for stealing. He refused to go to a pupil referral unit and his mother thought he would be safer at home. He was out of full-time education for more than a year.

Now with tuition help, he is mastering the basic maths that he should have learnt by the end of primary school. He is also writing poetry and is motivated to take exams and go to college. He has even said that his short spell in a secure unit helped him to decide to change his life. He realises that he has to get out of the street lifestyle in which "you're born alone and die alone". Hopefully, he will get the chance to at least achieve his second life goal.

We know from watching the news and YouTube what young people who have learnt to no longer think or care about consequences are capable of doing on the streets of London and beyond.

Yet when a human rights charity bid that I worked on was submitted both to the Lottery-funded Jubilee People's Millions Fund and the Ministry of Justice to engage and train vulnerable and "at risk" girls and boys from seven high-crime boroughs in London to become youth media ambassadors (including workshops on using social media to promote personal and community safety) it was rejected and the charity hasn't the funds to continue.

Elsewhere, London Mayor, Boris Johnson, promised at a summit in August 2010 attended by key representatives from the black communi- ty, that he would deliver a mentorship scheme for 1,000 vulnerable and "at risk" young people with 1,000 mentors by the summer of this year.

This promise was repeated in community conversations that Boris led in Southwark, Haringey, Hackney, Croydon and Waltham Forest. More than 1,700 mentors have already signed up for the scheme and are still waiting for something to happen.

Rather than awarding the contract to a consortium including the children's charity Barnados, and the Tavistock Institute, experts on group and organisational behaviour, and led by specialist community-based organisations who have both the credibility and track record of delivering such a scheme, Boris hijacked the process and enlisted the University of East London and the founder of the Eastside Young Leaders Academy, which does not have a lengthy track record of delivering such a big scheme.

Such practices just add to the deep frustration of professionals within communities who want to make a difference to young people.

Lastly, six free-school bids for community-led schools of excellence and leadership for urban youth in London were rejected by the Department for Education. Supporters of these bids, myself among them, have come together and issued a joint letter to Michael Gove, requesting a meeting and asking for his department to reconsider their decisions.

We argued that as London continues to suffer rises in violent youth crime, the need for credible, effective and good-quality educational provision for underachieving youth in the inner cities is desperately acute. We wrote this before the riots – and at the time of writing have had no reply.

Depressing, isn't it? Well thought-out and innovative community-led solutions, which give a signal of hope and help to young people in need, are not being recognised nor resourced. In this, we have a lot in common with the police.

We are both front-line community professionals who have not been given the means to do our jobs properly; we are highly visible and held responsible for the failings of a few.

So what is the answer? First, we need to watch, listen to and understand the messages that children and young people are sending us. We need to be able to make distinctions between those with criminal or anarchic intent who are looting, killing and profiting from social unrest and disorder; those who don't know their left from their right and are getting themselves drawn into madness and badness and, finally, those who have legitimate cause for grievance and peaceful protest.

We need to come together as partners to analyse and assess the situation, strategically and locally. We need to plan how we finance and implement bold community-led solutions, which generate tangible results for young and local people.

We need to get around the table with the powers that be and put pressure on them to reverse short-sighted and damaging decisions which work against families and communities.

We need to see short-term wins and long-term gains in education, jobs and enfranchisement for those living on the edge of society. As events in other parts of the world teach us, it's difficult to win a war against those who have nothing to lose.

This is going to take penetrating observations, hard listening, tough talking, difficult decision-making and sustained action. But for all our sakes, we need to walk and talk solutions to the riots and to dampen the fires that led to the events of early August.

Patricia Lee-Sang is a former headteacher of an international school and former Deputy Principal Race Relations Adviser for London, who has lived and worked in Europe and Africa.She is the Director of Aspire Education Group



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The ten best back-to-school buys

Selected by Samuel Muston
<b>SCRABBLE PENCIL CASE:</b> Wordy types will love this faux-leather case which is decorated with a montage of scrabble pieces and is roomy enough for all those pens, pencils, rulers and rubbers. £7.95, wildandwolf.com

Make wise and useful new term a little more bearable with these...

Click on the image on the right to start the Gallery



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