Week #2, school #2; and I have an admission to make. This subbing lark should come with a health warning: May seriously damage your moral high ground.
Anyone who knows me would be able to tell you my views of the Grammar school system and academic selection. Northern Ireland is the only part of the UK that still holds onto academic selection for entry into secondary schools and it is holding onto it fiercely. I, just in case you don’t already know, am fiercely opposed to a two tier education system (or indeed the three or four tier system we actually have)
It is an opinion that has brought me into verbal conflict with several members of my family and my closest friends, all of whom benefited from a Grammar school education. I, myself, benefited from a Grammar school education – the difference being that I have worked most of my adult life with children who didn’t pass the test at eleven and are thus not benefiting from a Grammar school education. I see what the great divide does to them. I have witnessed the sense of resignation they have that they aren’t ‘meant’ to be academic so they’ll not bother. I’ve worked on breaking down barriers that a sense of failure (aged eleven) builds. And it’s just not right.
The Grammars in Northern Ireland wield a lot of power. The Government love them because they allow us to produce the best exam results in the UK year after year. And how do they achieve such fantastic results? Well, using academic selection they pick out the pupils with the highest IQs; the academic cream if you like. Unsurprisingly these pupils perform well in national tests (relatively speaking) which gain the schools good reputations. These good reputations make them extremely attractive for business and community support (everyone loves a winner) so they see all kinds of funding opportunities opening up. They can plough this money into improving the infrastructure and resources of the school, which in turn improves their standing in exam league tables and leads to a higher percentage of post 16 students, who attract the largest amount of governmental and commercial funding. And so the cycle continues.
I’m not suggesting that Grammar schools are wallowing in cash. The way state education funding is at present no schools are finding it easy to balance books. It just seems to me that Grammar schools are better equipped for this hardship and seem to find it easier to produce money than non selective schools when push comes to shove. Just look at the beautiful gardens and perfectly manicured playing fields on which Grammar schools play their Rugger and Cricket. Compare those to the council owned dog walking parks that the high school next door use.
Grammar schools produce results; of that there is no doubt. If I hadn’t gone to a Grammar I doubt very much that I would have gone to university – I have no idea what I would’ve done but I wasn’t the kind of pupil who could motivate themselves against the odds. I would have blended in and faded out of education. I certainly wouldn’t be a teacher.
Back when I was eleven I did the test that was to determine whether at thirty one I would be sitting typing up a blog in a classroom after teaching a year 12 poetry lesson or… well I just don’t know.
I’ll be honest. The reason I fixate on this issue is because in my mind I shouldn’t have passed that test. I failed every one of the practices in the build up . Somehow I squeezed through and onto the road to Grammar school. To this day I don’t know how. In quiet moments I find my mind wander into ‘Sliding Doors’ territory and I find myself imaging what my life would be like had I dropped a couple more points in that test. I know it’s pointless; I believe that things happen for a reason, that I was guided up the path I was meant to take – but I can’t help wondering. And then I start wondering about the pupils I teach. What would happen to them if they’d done just a little better or worse when they were eleven.
I believe that schools selecting their pupils on the basis of IQ is wrong; I believe that eleven is far too young to map out someone’s educational career; and I believe labelling pupils as either academic or non-academic is just plain immoral.
After all of that please don’t think less of me because I am writing this entry from a classroom of a Grammar school. Just because I am in a position where I have to take what work is offered doesn’t dilute my opinions. I’ll teach their pupils, I’ll take the pay cheque but they can’t make me like it.
Anyone who knows me would be able to tell you my views of the Grammar school system and academic selection. Northern Ireland is the only part of the UK that still holds onto academic selection for entry into secondary schools and it is holding onto it fiercely. I, just in case you don’t already know, am fiercely opposed to a two tier education system (or indeed the three or four tier system we actually have)
It is an opinion that has brought me into verbal conflict with several members of my family and my closest friends, all of whom benefited from a Grammar school education. I, myself, benefited from a Grammar school education – the difference being that I have worked most of my adult life with children who didn’t pass the test at eleven and are thus not benefiting from a Grammar school education. I see what the great divide does to them. I have witnessed the sense of resignation they have that they aren’t ‘meant’ to be academic so they’ll not bother. I’ve worked on breaking down barriers that a sense of failure (aged eleven) builds. And it’s just not right.
The Grammars in Northern Ireland wield a lot of power. The Government love them because they allow us to produce the best exam results in the UK year after year. And how do they achieve such fantastic results? Well, using academic selection they pick out the pupils with the highest IQs; the academic cream if you like. Unsurprisingly these pupils perform well in national tests (relatively speaking) which gain the schools good reputations. These good reputations make them extremely attractive for business and community support (everyone loves a winner) so they see all kinds of funding opportunities opening up. They can plough this money into improving the infrastructure and resources of the school, which in turn improves their standing in exam league tables and leads to a higher percentage of post 16 students, who attract the largest amount of governmental and commercial funding. And so the cycle continues.
I’m not suggesting that Grammar schools are wallowing in cash. The way state education funding is at present no schools are finding it easy to balance books. It just seems to me that Grammar schools are better equipped for this hardship and seem to find it easier to produce money than non selective schools when push comes to shove. Just look at the beautiful gardens and perfectly manicured playing fields on which Grammar schools play their Rugger and Cricket. Compare those to the council owned dog walking parks that the high school next door use.
Grammar schools produce results; of that there is no doubt. If I hadn’t gone to a Grammar I doubt very much that I would have gone to university – I have no idea what I would’ve done but I wasn’t the kind of pupil who could motivate themselves against the odds. I would have blended in and faded out of education. I certainly wouldn’t be a teacher.
Back when I was eleven I did the test that was to determine whether at thirty one I would be sitting typing up a blog in a classroom after teaching a year 12 poetry lesson or… well I just don’t know.
I’ll be honest. The reason I fixate on this issue is because in my mind I shouldn’t have passed that test. I failed every one of the practices in the build up . Somehow I squeezed through and onto the road to Grammar school. To this day I don’t know how. In quiet moments I find my mind wander into ‘Sliding Doors’ territory and I find myself imaging what my life would be like had I dropped a couple more points in that test. I know it’s pointless; I believe that things happen for a reason, that I was guided up the path I was meant to take – but I can’t help wondering. And then I start wondering about the pupils I teach. What would happen to them if they’d done just a little better or worse when they were eleven.
I believe that schools selecting their pupils on the basis of IQ is wrong; I believe that eleven is far too young to map out someone’s educational career; and I believe labelling pupils as either academic or non-academic is just plain immoral.
After all of that please don’t think less of me because I am writing this entry from a classroom of a Grammar school. Just because I am in a position where I have to take what work is offered doesn’t dilute my opinions. I’ll teach their pupils, I’ll take the pay cheque but they can’t make me like it.
12 comments:
I am torn about this. Children are NOT all equal. Trying to turn them all into academics doesn't work either.
I think the problem that you speak of, lies in the inequality of treatment these two groups of children experience. When I brainstorm "a utopian school system" this is what I picture:
-Students are encouraged to experience a WEALTH of subjects early on, and choose the areas that interest them most (THEMSELVES... with adult guidance of course.)
-Students are respected equally, and educated equally- regardless if their strengths are in fixing cars, dance/movement- or algebraic formulas.
I think the systems we implement have far fewer flaws than are humanity- which seems to corrupt the best laid attempts to do the right thing. It's my hope we start evolving spiritually and catch up with our over-inflated egos.
This was a cool post to read. I'm beginning to discover just how I little I know about the world via blogosphere.
Cheers,
BrAZen
You make good points - and I agree.
You talk about offering a wealth of subjects early on - the issue for me is at what point do you narrow the choice? When is a good age to begin to specialise? And what form such the adult guidance take?
And oh how I long for that utopian school system where all streams of learning are respected equally. But try telling parents that doing an apprenticeship in joinery is equal to doing an a-level in history. The irony is that the joiner will probably have the higher earning potential in three years.
I like your utopia - get it started and I'll teach there for free (well, maybe for baked goods)
you have had 3 schools sam ur head must be buggerd if u cant even remember
what school are you working in now
good morning sammy
i failed my 11plus. twice.
i know the system is a load of old tripe and only serves to divide 'sheep' and 'goats' and to be honest i try to avoid the 'debate' these days because it makes me so cross. there are a lot of willfully obtuse grammar school heads....
failing the 11plus did not mean i couldn't go to university. as you know i did. and i did very well etc etc. what it did do is make it harder for me than for other people. in case anyone's in any doubt over what i mean i will go into some detail:
despite getting a string of A's in my GCSE i had to prove my academic worth to the local grammar school before they'd let me in to do Alevels. when i got there i was surprised to find myself sitting alongside people who had obtained fairly poor results in their exams (but had passed the 11plus).
i was also surprised to find that the majority of my school friends at grammar school expected to go to university. it was in their life's vocabulary. they knew terms that i did not know. at my secondary school we were encouraged to think of ourselves as people who would probably leave school at 16 and at the most go to the tech. this also set me at a disadvantage to my peers in 6th year. i had to very quickly develop a new language and a new way of thinking about the future.
at several points it became a matter of luck that i ended up going to university. not in terms of the grades i got but certainly in terms of the choices i made as someone really lost in a world where i been taught since age 11 that i didn't belong. as it happens I do belong to that world. it was entirely right for me to go to university but i was so close to missing it. and i am not unique in this experience.
of course this is only one way in which the current system discriminates.
what many people don't realise is that grammar and secondary schools follow the SAME curriculum. there IS no 'academic VS vocational' discussion to be had in terms of what is studied in schools at the minute. the only difference is what cultural boxes the system encourages people to trap other in. that is, in my opinion, a disgrace. education does not exist to tell you who you are, it exists to let you find out for yourself.
take heart. change will come.
I only wish you were here to witness the standing ovation I am giving you. You are exactly right.
So on one hand you have someone (me) who was pushed to succeed academicly against his natural urges to sleep (mainly) beacuse he passed that evil exam...
and on the other we have someone (you)who had to fight and use her own motivation to gain the same benefits because she didn't pass it.
Aren't we the same age? Did we perhaps do the same test on the same day?
possibly! (i think you might be younger than me, you stinker :P). i have to say at no point did i ever have an 'against all the odds i will succeed!' type attitude. not at all. it was a case of: oh, i passed those exams, guess i'll try and do school for a while longer if nothing else comes up. seriously, i hadn't a bloody clue what i was doing and it all could've gone a different direction so easily. it is mostly down to luck that i ended up doing a degree.
i wish i was there too. when are you coming down to sunny maghera again sam?!
oh yeh, forgot to mention. after i wrote the long bit earlier it occurred to me that if i'd got a load of C grades in my gcses the thought of doing a levels wouldn't have crossed my mind. i would never have thought of going to the grammar school (and if i had i wouldn't have got in) and would never have met those students who also got C grades and were doing Alevels who were there because they passed their 11plus. i wonder how many kids leave school thinking they're not as clever as other kids who go on to university when really they are.... call me paranoid but i can't help thinking it serves certain sections of our society very well at the minute to keep people in the dark about things like this. grrrr. sammy wilson. grrrrrrrrr.
:)
am i the only one that u ignore now sam
No, Dave - I ignore a lot of people. But sure I know you wouldn't let me ignore you for long. What are you doing these days? Still studying at the tech? Missing the Learning Support Unit?
aye i have moved on to a higher level of the course i completed last year and i miss all the fun we had in the learning support unit
No, not fun. Repeat after me Dave: "a learning experience" you had 'learning experiences' in LSU, not 'fun'. Don't go spreading around that it was all fun and games - and just for the record games will henceforth be known as 'educational exercises'
we had leaning experiences how are u sir i learned a lot from you
(HOW TO PLAY CHECKERS)
HEHEHE
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