Posts Tagged ‘International Baccalaureate’

Educational Games Between A Level And IB Continues.

Friday, February 10th, 2012

The International Baccalaureate (IB) has set the scene for sixth form students since the 1970’s. Tougher than A levels the IB educational standards have been consistent presenting a qualification of quality; not the claim that can be easily made by A levels where standards has been questionable.

Matched to the increasing demands of overseas markets and their students, teachers using following the IB are unable to spoon-feed students as with A level. According to Anthony Seldon, Master at Wellington College, getting three A grade passes is really quite easy especially as papers can be retaken. Not so with the IB.

If the A level is seen as the easier entry route to university then not surprisingly most students and schools will seek the line of least resistance. The lower costs of operating the A level syllabus being a further incentive. The kudos and international relevance of the IB seems to have fallen by the wayside. Adding further grist to the mill are the universities who actually set a higher entry standard for IB students than A level. If instead they sought to generally increase the standard of entry by giving preference to IB students they would benefit from a higher quality of student and stimulate greater interest  in secondary schools.

Internationally we cannot rest on our laurels. The OECD has already placed the UK in the mid-twenties position in the world educational standards. Vocational degrees, the relevance of a degree to further training in the commercial world and the attractiveness of UK universities to overseas students all lie in the quality of our education. Yet we seek to lower the bar with A level rather than raise it with the IB.

Education Select Committee Knock The International Baccalaureate

Thursday, July 28th, 2011

The educational situation is becoming ever more complex for parents and teachers. Not only are we slipping in the international league for educational performance we seem to be constantly watching a game of tennis between schools and the department of education (DfE).

The International Baccalaureate (IB) heralded as the way of the future by many teachers is now receiving a bashing from the DfE. Ministers are being advised the IB  is not completely relevant and providing children with a flawed education. A difficult call for the government as the current GCSE programme is also failing to provide the correct standards. But schools such as Rochester Grammar School have just recorded the top set of results for the English IB. The increased range of subjects is quoted as providing a far more objective approach to educational qualifications needed in the ever more competitive employment market. Currently there are around 200 state secondary schools taking the IB.

The Education Select Committee advising Ministers believe the English IB was not properly thought out and can lead to certain children being targeted to achieve success at the expense of others. This is akin to the “teach to test” syndrome occurring with SAT’s and GCSE’s where teachers attempt to maximise target points from exam results by concentrating on exam performance. An activity often seen to be at the expense of further learning. Graham Stuart, Chair of the education committee says there is a need to conduct a “coherent review” of the UK baccalaureate, which was largely introduced without the proper consultation. The correct safeguards to prevent course manipulation were omitted from the process. This may be fact but I can’t help thinking that the IB may have its faults but has real potential to improve the standard and relevance of the educational standards needed by the next generation. The criticism by the Educational Select Committee may be a reaction to chagrin when they were not wholly involved in the adoption of the IB. But the current system also has profound problems in providing the standards of education required by employers and universities. Maybe the DfE need to grasp the reality that the current learning system is broken and the IB is a great opportunity to fix it.

World Standard Essential To Improve Educational Performance

Friday, September 3rd, 2010

Ignoring cultural differences, children throughout the world are taught the same concepts and rules in maths, science and ICT.  So why don’t we have a world standard educational curriculum especially in science, technology, engineering and maths STEM subjects.

Although significant international trading, security and humanitarian agreements exist in the form of NATO, United Nations, Red Cross etc. none operate in the form of global governance. It would be impractical to consider the extension of their remit could be easily achieved due to political and territorial implications. But the non discriminatory function of education should have no boundaries and would benefit from global scaling advantages in teaching resources, building design and relevance of curriculum. There is nothing new in the concept of international standards. International trading associations first originated in medieval times. Epitomised by the Hanseatic League of merchants they spread throughout cities of northern Europe from 1120. They were incredibly well organised and opened offices throughout Germany, Holland, Norway and the UK flourishing in the import and export trade. The Hanseatic cities had their own judiciary system and furnished their own protection and mutual aid thus having a sort of a political autonomy and in some cases creating political entities of their own.

Hundreds of year later the Hanseatic League concept has been reiterated but the doctrine has never become global. The European Union determine rules and regulations for its 27 member states, whilst ASEAN the Association of South-east Asian Nations set the goals for Asia. But neither have a common policy in education. In Australia the curriculum is controlled individually by each of the seven states, an in the UK the educational standards are controlled differently in England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Island and even examined by four different examination boards.

The opportunity for a global standard is massive, yet history proves the task is almost insurmountable. Benefits in modern teaching and classroom resources being applied in third world countries would install the educational standards that should be the birthright of every child. It is easy to understand the reluctance of many nations to breach far reaching cultural configurations but the goal of global education hold benefits of lowering costs, improving standards and the spread of education to the poorer countries of the world.

The evolution of world trading is advancing at an increasing rate. Led by advances in technology, market conditions and a shift in the centre of gravity of trade towards Asia emphasise the need for an educational system that can track with the times. Although many arguments surround the adoption of the International Baccalaureate at least this could be considered the start of the process. It still has a long way before becoming a global standard and ensures children in London, Sydney, New York, Beijing or Harare receive the ideal education.
The rate of change in the world will increase at an exponential rate. We have a duty to groom children for the future and equip them with the acumen to make the world a better place and deal effectively with the many changes that will emerge over the years to come.

Could A Pan European Syllabus Save The UK National Curriculum?

Thursday, January 7th, 2010

Education has been evolving over thousands of years. But if we can educate scholars such as Aristotle in ancient Greece and Copernicus in medieval Poland why do we struggle to achieve an educational programme that is fully fit for purpose in 2010?

Whilst we learn of medical advances that push the boundaries in health care, education seem to have stagnated. Disease control, organ transplants, keyhole and robotic surgery have emerged but teaching appears moribund, struggling to meet required literacy and numeracy standards in primary schools. The possible reasons for this situation are legion. The effect of the national curriculum, SAT’s, 11 plus, GCSE and special government schemes costing billions of pounds have failed to achieve the intended breakthrough.

The dilemma for parents wanting the best for their children starts when their child is four years old epitomised by the frantic activity needed to get their child into the ideal school. Although five years is the formal schooling starting point for the UK greater academic success has been achieved in countries where children start school aged six or seven, such as in Finland and South Africa. In fact they are critical of the early years controlled schooling in the UK claiming children should be involved in structured and unstructured play activities during this period.

The type of school in the UK creates further anxiety. The choice of Montessori, Steiner, Kumon, and faith schools in the independent or state school system complicates the decision, as does that old chestnut of class size. Some techniques appear more successful than others but no single technique emerges as the outright winner. Is it the skill of the teacher or the teaching format that is the common denominator?

Technology in the schooling process has moved on. Kids are taught keyboard skills and teaching resources are awash with interactive white boards. Soon many schools could be linked through the web to allow a strong teacher to simultaneously broadcast to several schools. So what is not working? There appears no simple answer. Various influences are cited as inducing a negative effect, notably teaching to test, where lessons are geared to passing exams rather than providing a broad educational strategy.

Strangely the combined forces of the European Union have failed to influence the UK educational programme. This seems odd. Whilst we have the specification for the shape of bananas, the one area we could benefit from a European standard is in education. A federal approach could remove the duplication in each member state and pull in the best practice from the members. The potential benefits are demonstrated in the International Baccalaureate and International GCSE both of which offer benefits welcomed by trend setting schools, but predominately rejected by schools overwhelmed by the current inefficiencies and reluctant to adopt yet another change. Yet these schemes have proven effective in other European countries whilst the UK has little to show despite the effort and determination of it’s teachers and pupils.

The clock ticks on. Educational development must be the primary focus of any government. Technology, improved communications and the paradigm shift in the commercial centre of gravity towards the far east has changed the emphasis. Our children will need to thrive in a global market. They need the career flexibility of a broad based education to take advantage of emerging opportunities.

It been proven beyond reasonable doubt that we need help. The average tenure of the Secretary of State for Education is around 18 months yet they are charged with the strategic policies for a schooling journey lasting a minimum of 10 years. Perhaps we should leave teaching to teachers and establish a team tasked with the definition and implementation of a new curriculum and procedures drawn from the very best in Europe. It must be better than the current situation which if maintained could leave us the poor relation justly receiving the condemnation of generations of children to come.

Restricted Education Puts UK At Global Disadvantage.

Tuesday, December 8th, 2009

The average sixteen year old in the UK is studying two academic subjects at GCSE. Our educational programme centres on English and maths whilst the rest of the world is pushing for six academic subjects.

Britain is on a par with Australia in what could become an academic backwater. We expect some educational prowess in English as the mother tongue, but this is not the case. Our standards in English literacy and maths are falling. Whilst we slide in these key subjects Germany, France, Japan, USA and Canada push children towards four to six academic subjects. With maths and their indigenous language matching the educational programme in the UK, overseas students are additionally pursuing science, history, social studies and English as a modern foreign language.

British children will ultimately compete in global markets. Overseas governments recognise the potential of this development and have raised their schooling ambitions. The legacy of our children in mastering English, once regarded as an advantage peculiar to the UK et al. is now matched by the significant use of English overseas. Spurred by the Internet, films and its growing dominance as the international business language, English is by far the predominant modern foreign language studied overseas. Bang goes our first reserve! And whilst our schools persuade children to pursue non academic vocational subjects to achieve overall school targets we are left with maths as the focal academic subject.

Our natural reserve and perhaps entrenched educational procedures and standards are cluttering the forward plan. We don’t readily accept change – shown by our reluctance to adopt the IGCSE and International Baccalaureate in the National Curriculum. But if we fail to adjust to the demands brought by the globalisation of the job market we may miss one of the fundamental reasons for education. And learn to bitterly regret it.

Who Would Want To Be Educated In The Present System

Thursday, October 22nd, 2009

Alistair Owens http://www.keen2learn.co.uk

Research shows on average we have three careers and 17 jobs during our working lives. Is it feasible to plan for such diversity during the primary, secondary and university education of children? What are the relevant subjects to take and courses to pursue to match this requirement? Are we playing endless games with our educational resources?

The barrage of criticism over our schooling process continues.  The “teach to test” syndrome, constrained curriculum and performance targets beg the bottom line question – does any of it matter, is any of our current schooling still relevant in this rapidly changing world? The concern cascades from all levels. Primary schooling starts too early according to the Cambridge Review and secondary schools decry the poor achievement of children leaving primary education. Employers such as Sir Terry Leahy of Tesco states that many children leaving secondary school are ill prepared for employment. Universities cite the “A” level syllabus as inadequate and lacking the depth of preparation needed for university. Graduates who finally made it through the whole battlefield often find their degree has mixed relevance in their career path.

Graduates with a first degree from the “Ivy league” or “red brick” universities, irrespective of their specialty, become inevitably swallowed up by the accountancy head hunters. A survey of graduates after two years in employment shows an extremely small proportion pursue a job based on their degree specialty. Bankers and accountants being consistently recruited from non maths disciplines is a clear sign of the imbalance of students pursuing maths at degree level. As a result the skills developed in other disciplines are being usurped. Worse still employment league tables emphasis the financial relevance of degrees by discipline, which could further skew the attraction of certain degrees such as science which are lower in the table than others such as economics.

What lessons should be learned from this situation? What teaching resources do we actually need to equip children for their future? What education programme lasting the full 15 Years of the learning journey to graduation will maintain its relevancy in employment in this rapidly developing world? More importantly which degrees should be underwritten to develop and retain the skills needed to support critical activities?

I discovered that my career path followed the norm. It comprised of three different careers and 12 jobs. Starting in marine engineering in the merchant navy, then into management services, industrial engineering, product management, marketing, General management, and currently MD of a dot.com educational games, toys and puzzles retailer. Oh, and a writer!

None of this was planned. Apart from the engineering skills, the schooling I received was largely untargeted.  Looking back, could I, should I have structured the elective element differently? Probably not. Even now the diversification of my career was largely due to opportunist moves and internal promotion. But ideally to progress in general management, unsurprisingly, you need to be a generalist with as broad an education and experience as possible.

Many blue chip employers move management trainees though a number of roles in different departments to broaden their experience. Exposure to such a programme makes them knowledgeable, versatile and increases their promotional prospects.

Is this the answer? Should our entire educational programme be geared to provide a general broad brush education? This would overcome the anguish of the 14 year old following the National Curriculum required to select “A” level subjects to follow a career path or degree which could ultimately change with time. How, in our changing world, is it possible to identify a career at age 14, only to find the role has been superseded after graduation at 21 years old and their subject choice outmoded. Most jobs available now didn’t exist when a graduate started school.

Rather than specialising in selected subjects in which a student excels, should they be required to complete a wider range and achieve an overall educational award graded by the number of subjects taken at pass level. The International Baccalaureate heralds the way in secondary education, and so could this model extended down to primary and up to degree level? This would be an opportunity to broaden the educational spectrum of many children. It would also provide the broadest education as possible with an international base to prepare them for long term flexibility. After all, the UK is heading for a massive change in its historic employment base.

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