Posts Tagged ‘OECD educational league tables’

Brightest Maths Students Slip Two Years Behind Far East By 16

Friday, February 22nd, 2013

Over the past decade we have seen the U.K. slip down the OECD world league table in educational quality. The shocking statistic just issued by the Institute of Education in London reveals that the brightest maths students in the UK, on a par with their peers in Hong Kong at the age of 10 years, fall behind their counterparts by two years by the age of 16 years. The UK now lies in the mid 20’s position in the OECD league. Has this assiduous slippage has been masked by the concentration on targets set by the department for education.

This massive slippage must be of great concern to educationists and parents in the UK. Sir Michael Wilshaw, the head of OFSTED  has demanded an investigation into how state schools are teaching mathematics. But this survey revealed  the ability of the brightest students, whereas the vast majority of our school children will be classed as good or average. Their performance has not been revealed but it would be a normal expectation that their ability in mathematics has suffered an even greater slide.

There will be much wailing and gnashing of teeth as our teaching resources, department for education and maths specialists battle to point the finger of blame at each other. We will see a continuation of the argument that school teachers are pressured to gain the greatest points against targets which has historically left the brightest and the struggling student isolated from the focus of the teacher. The alarm bells must surely ring witnessed by the massive drop in mathematical ability by the brightest students. The survey reveals that in the space of six years the smartest students have slipped two years behind their counterparts in the Far East. It doesn’t take a mathematician to realise this colossal degradation in performance is both a slap in the face for the UK educational standards and the thousands of school children whose dreams and aspirations lie severely curtailed by their maths education programme.

The outcome of the investigation must have a clear objective. We cannot afford to merely fix the hole in the dyke. The situation of falling educational standards has been cited for some years during which a multitude of educational initiatives have come and gone, and mostly failed. This is surely the time for a radical rethink of how we are teaching our children; perhaps the best benchmark should now be the Far East. We may have to eat humble pie and actually study how schoolchildren are taught in overseas schools and emulate this in the UK as a proven facility and avoid short term initiatives.

This should result in a completely new teaching format and skill base for the UK rather than a repair. Time is of the essence and the longer it takes to resolve this issue the greater our potential slip down the league table. We must also face the thousands of school children that we have let me down as a consequence. And face the reality that the U.K.’s educational program is creaking in a world that is demanding English and mathematics as core subjects in order to compete in the now global market.

Teaching Resources of the Future May Not Be Tablets Of Stone.

Tuesday, November 8th, 2011

As we hover near the precipice of recession keen2learn believes education be ring fenced from further cutbacks. Looking to the future children currently in school will be required to generate future prosperity and ultimately lead the country. On this basis we should be increasing the investment in education to groom those whose vital role will be to outperform their predecessors.

Not an easy situation to manage. Billions of pounds have been invested over the past decade to achieve this Utopian state. “Education, education, education” has been the mantra echoed by the many political leaders who rummaged  through our educational portals yet achieved nothing.  Investing in add-hoc schemes that ultimately became disruptive damp squids the waste of funds and impact on our teaching resources has been phenomenal. Comparing 2011 with 1987 science, technology and medicine have witnessed huge advances whilst education has struggled. The ability of teachers to teach and children to learn have maintained a disrupted approach to achievement. The countless initiatives have been launched with tumultuous fanfare to resolve an issue in maths, literacy or science that have quietly slipped, unloved and unmissed beneath the waves. Disastrously they each managed to leave a scar. Cohorts of children have been taken along paths, viewed by teachers as a waste of time and effort, from which they may struggle to recover.

And so our overall ranking in the world OECD educational league has slipped badly. We now languish in the mid 20’s position when we used to be in the top 10. Countries in the Far East having become the global  manufacturing and commercial hub are not unsurprisingly supported by children enjoying a far better ( although not perfect) standard of education. But why is that despite the ongoing development of society and the changing demands of commerce and industry we predominantly struggle to move the barriers forward. Our pedestrian approach maybe directly linked to the ponderous approach of national control. Would a fully independent schooling system influenced by the need to make a commercial profit directly supported by results provide the approach needed. The concept works with current independent schools, ignoring their financial constraints precipitated by the current climate, why cannot this be rolled out? Could Michale Gove’s Free School approach be taken to it ultimate conclusion. The waste of government spending being transformed into value for money.

Clearly this would remove the need for the department of educational and its myriad of support  outposts. More essentially it would transfer the scope and control of education that would have to match the demands of the modern world. It would remove the inflexibility of national curriculum, the unhealthy concentration on exam results and league tables. It avoid the intervention of countless  “temporary” Secretaries of state for Education who have a dabble to try and make their name, then move on having collectively, archived nothing.

Technology could surely play a significant role in the teaching resources of the future although this needs careful handling. The charge into interactive whiteboards over the past 10 years has resulted in investment programmes that never achieved their objective. Due to technical issues or inexperience by the user a huge majority of whiteboards ended up with the power switched off . Used as white blackboards that boosted the sales of dry wipe markers rather than achieve the interactive content. Indeed even when a success story emerged and the whiteboard was used efficiently, some teachers noticed whenever a child was asked to contribute the concentration of the rest of the class switched off until it was their turn.

Careful analysis is required before the technology path is pursued. And this involves the use of laptops, netbooks and  tablets.  A brave school, Mounts Bay Academy in Penzance is investing £300k to provide iPads for each of its 900 students. A key element of the plan is to reduce costs of textbooks and improve the pupils learning potential. Although Apple, who are supporting the programme and the teaching staff at the school believe it has potential this is early adopter territory. It will take a few years to to prove the efficacy of the project and allow teachers to adopt a teaching style tuned to tablets. We need to avoid another whiteboard “white elephant” and see if the tablets are robust enough, have the desired battery life, effectively support lesson plans and do not present  the pupils as a target for muggers.

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