Morning Star.png

 

 

Schools Versus Communities

 

 

Editorial, The Morning Star, London, 30 July 2016

 

The case of Michaela Free School, which was revealed to be placing children
in "lunch isolation" if their parents fell behind with paying lunch money,
reveals so much about what is wrong with recent education policy.

 

Obviously, there is the shocking nature of the approach itself, and the
underlying values it suggests. The idea that the best response to parents
who struggle to keep up with the cost of school lunches is to punish and
stigmatise their children is both vindictive and counterproductive. It is an
approach that would be more at home in Victorian London than a 21st-century
capital.

 

Not only is it likely to damage the self-esteem, self-respect and learning
of the students affected, it actively drives a wedge between the school and
the community it is supposed to serve. There seems to be no attempt to find
out why parents are struggling or to meet them to discuss underlying issues
but, instead, the school issues what basically amounts to a ransom demand
threatening to isolate and bully their child until they pay up.

 

Unfortunately, this condescending and divisive approach to the parent
community does not seem to be out of character for the Michaela School. When
the school opened in 2014, they wrote to new parents with the following
message:

 

"I am certain you will want to meet our high standards. It won't always be
easy. When your child's black shoelace is broken and you are rushing to work
and only have a white shoelace to give them, you may find yourself wishing
that you had sent your child to a school that would make an exception to the
uniform once in a while. You'll then remember that we have high standards
for a reason: to ensure your child has access to an extraordinary
education."

 

This may have come as a shock to a number of local parents who, according to
the local press, had not expressed a preference for the school and its
archaic approach to uniform and discipline but had been allocated a place
after missing out on their first six preferences.

 

The school's "back to the past" approach also extends into teaching and
learning and it boasts of teachers who "believe in imparting knowledge,
benchmarking and healthy competition," an educational approach that seems to
be modelled on the assembly line, not the creative and critical process of
educating young minds.

 

Darling of the right wing party

 

This may leave you wondering who is actually running our schools. And well
you may ask. Some readers may be familiar with the name Katharine
Birbalsingh. She was the darling of the Tory right after she gave a speech
at the 2010 Conservative Party conference, attacking the state education
system and providing ideological justification for the destructive reforms
we have faced since.

 

She was promptly sacked, having named and shown photographs of children at
the school as part of her tirade and having made comments the school deemed
"insulting" to her colleagues. Now she's in charge at the Michaela School.

 

It may be an extreme example but it highlights a number of wider issues.
First, the whole free school project means there is little or no control
over who is running our schools. The fact that someone sacked for political
abuse of their position can just set up their own school and carry on is a
disgrace.

 

Marketisation and commoditisation

 

Second, the approach of the Michaela Free School to its parent community is
representative of a growing gulf between schools and their local
communities. 

 

Marketisation and commoditisation of education deepens these divisions as
teachers and parents confront each other not as collaborative communities
but as businesses and customers.

 

Finally, in all of this, the very nature of education is being lost and
replaced with an out-of-date failed model in which the transmission of
knowledge and behaviours replaces the development of creative and critical
thinking.

 

Our answer to this must be to revisit the nature and structure of education,
starting with outlining plans for a National Education Service.

 

 

From:
<http://www.morningstaronline.co.uk/a-d8eb-Schools-versus-communities#.V5xLz
Pl9601>
http://www.morningstaronline.co.uk/a-d8eb-Schools-versus-communities#.V5xLzP
l9601

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 



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