Nick Gibb Was On BBC Radio 4 Today Spouting Nonsense About Academies

Nick Gibb Schools Minister.Friday, 25 March 2016

The new line he repeated several times is that ‘we can’t have two systems of education’ in one country.

1. Cynics might say that the reason why ‘we’ can’t is that it’s frequently uncomfortable for him and the Tories that local authority schools are doing fine, or even doing better than academies.

English education has long been one of several systems or even many systems which separate and segregate children and parents and teachers: obviously there’s the private and public division, with private schools being left out of this whole debate anyway. Then there is the religious, non-religious divide – and religious schools are also divided between ‘voluntary controlled’ and ‘voluntary aided’. There are old Foundation schools where the land and school is held by the Foundation Trust and not by the local authority. Then again in counties like Kent there are ‘grammar schools’ i.e. selective schools, and the other ‘high’ schools which are to all intents and purposes, ‘secondary modern schools’.

2. Another of Gibb’s myths was the one about how academy chains free heads up to co-operate with each other.

Headteachers and schools across local authorities have been co-operating for decades. Some of the best work on co-operation has happened this way – Tim Brighouse’s work is one of many examples. The Language in the National Curriculum project was another (£20 million invested then thrown away because Tories didn’t like the ‘autonomy’ given to teachers!)

3.  The phrase ‘local authority bureaucracy’ much repeated is a nonsense too. 

LA’s have people who run education. These have in the past included experienced teacher advisers who have helped schools. But ‘‘abolishing bureaucracy” is typical populist government talk. What do we think that the appointment of tiers of management and supervision coming from the new Regional Commissioners and the people sitting in the academy chain HQs is all about? Are they not bureaucrats?

4.  The key buzzword is ‘autonomy’.

The man talking about ‘autonomy’ this morning sent a letter to the Times Educational Supplement’ ‘clarifying’ the use of exclamation marks. When I joke that he is the Minister for Exclamation Marks, I’m only half-kidding. This is central control as never before. And he talks about ‘autonomy’.

5. (It should also be noted that this morning he seems to imagine that all headteachers are men. When we say that these Tories are stuck in some strange parallel universe made up of nannies, private schools, laughing at people who write to Jeremy Corbyn, ex-members of the Bullingdon Club, talking about people as a ‘bunch of migrants’…it is staggering to hear them confirming the narrow, secluded culture they grew up in, on a mass media outlet like radio. And Gibb thinks he suffers from being the oik  amongst the grandees, always going on about how deprived he was of a full education….but most of his education was private so heaven knows why he blames local authorities for his own miseries….but that’s another matter. Well, it would be, if these people – Gove was another – who use the perceived greatness or crapness of their own education as a rationale for how education should be run now.)

http://michaelrosenblog.blogspot.co.uk/2016/03/gibb-on-academies-this-morning-its.html?spref=tw&m=1

GR Comment:  Indeed yes. Gibb cuts as ridiculous a figure as Morgana.

GR Comment: I was surprised that this Gibb fellow didn’t bother to think when he said yesterday that Corbyn’s stance siding with the Teachers on academies showed that ‘ Labour was retreating into the fringes ‘

So ,it’s out there

Education minster thinks Teachers are on the fringes of our Society

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3 Responses to Nick Gibb Was On BBC Radio 4 Today Spouting Nonsense About Academies

  1. Pingback: Nick Gibb was on BBC Radio 4 spouting nonsense about academies | ukgovernmentwatch | Vox Political

  2. beastrabban says:

    Reblogged this on Beastrabban’s Weblog and commented:
    This is a fascinating piece taking apart the spin the government’s spokesman, Nick Gibb, was trying to fob off on the public last Friday on Radio 4. It refutes his statement that we shouldn’t have different educational systems in this country, by showing how in fact there is already a range of different types of schooling. It also puts the lie to his statement that this will somehow cut bureaucracy. More can be said about this – much more. The article merely states that the academy chains have their own systems of bureaucracy. It also says that the existing school system has methods to allow schools to link up and learn from and share with each other. And finally, it shows how Gibb, like ‘Oiky’ Gove, has a weird view of education based on his own experienced having a very privileged schooling, but not one nearly as privileged as that of the Eton-educated toffs in power above him. And his attitude to schools also appears to be stuck in the 1930s-50s world of Billy Bunter.

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