Schools in the UK are segregated along class lines, creating a "toxic" effect for the poor, a teachers' leader says. This was set to worsen as government "austerity policies" pushed more children into poverty, Association of Teachers and Lecturers head Dr Mary Bousted warned.
Teachers alone were not responsible for poor pupils' under achievement. The government said many schools had failed to address poor performance. Dr Bousted said class remained a key determining factor in educational attainment.
In her closing speech to her association's conference in Manchester, the ATL general secretary described an education system "stratified on class lines". "We have schools for the elite, schools for the middle class and schools for the working class.
"Too few schools have mixed intakes where children can learn those intangible life skills of aspiration, effort and persistence from one another." She added: "The effect of unbalanced school intake is toxic for the poorest and most dispossessed."
Dr Bousted hit out at ministers for holding teachers solely responsible for the educational outcomes of the poor. "If the poor don't make as much progress as the rich, it is the school and the teachers within it who are to blame. "This, you and I know, is a nonsense. It is a lie which conveniently enables ministers to evade responsibility for the effects of their policies."
Teachers alone were not responsible for poor pupils' under achievement. The government said many schools had failed to address poor performance. Dr Bousted said class remained a key determining factor in educational attainment.
In her closing speech to her association's conference in Manchester, the ATL general secretary described an education system "stratified on class lines". "We have schools for the elite, schools for the middle class and schools for the working class.
"Too few schools have mixed intakes where children can learn those intangible life skills of aspiration, effort and persistence from one another." She added: "The effect of unbalanced school intake is toxic for the poorest and most dispossessed."
Dr Bousted hit out at ministers for holding teachers solely responsible for the educational outcomes of the poor. "If the poor don't make as much progress as the rich, it is the school and the teachers within it who are to blame. "This, you and I know, is a nonsense. It is a lie which conveniently enables ministers to evade responsibility for the effects of their policies."
Read more here.
0 comments:
Post a Comment
Grace A Comment!