Wednesday, May 16, 2007

The death of the grammar school

In the middle part of the twentieth century the grammar school was, par excellence, an effective engine of social mobility. Providing a quality of education that was at the very least equal to that provided by the private sector, the grammar schools provided for an elite minority of state educated children an opportunity to go to university that had been effectively denied to those who failed the eleven plus. Tonly Crosland's effective abolition of the grammar school was disastrous for the cause of social mobility.
So, why have the Conservatives announced that they no longer have plans to re-introduce them? David Willetts, in a long and thoughtful speech to the CBI lays out the primary reason.
Many people, genuinely worried about social mobility, believe that grammar schools can transform the opportunities of bright children from poor areas. For those children from modest backgrounds who do get to grammar schools the benefits are enormous. And we will not get rid of those grammar schools that remain. But the trouble is that the chances of a child from a poor background getting to a grammar school in those parts of the country where they do survive are shockingly low. Just 2% of children at grammar schools are on free school meals when those low income children make up 12% of the school population in their areas.
In other words, if it is social mobility that is your concern grammar schools are inefficient at providing it. It is better to work to improve the schools that we have, and to improve the standards and methods of teaching within them than to re-introduce academic selection. The implementation of comprehensive schools has been poor, to say the least, but there is still validity in the rationale for them. If you divide children at 11 into the bright and the thick, two things are inevitable. The first is that the quality of the 'bright' schools will be much higher, both in terms of facilities and funding. The second is that these schools will eventually be 'captured' by the middle classes.
Willetts's point that low-income children make up only 2% of grammar school intakes is a reflection of that. Paying for a tutor, or for specialist exam coaching, is still cheaper than forking out for school fees: it's a good deal for the parent. But that sort of advantage is not available to poor parents. In this light, grammar schools are essentially a subsidy to rich parents. Does this matter? Even if most of the grammar school intake is made up of bright middle class kids - so what? Middle class kids are people too - if they're bright enough shouldn't they get the chance to go to the best schools?
That's absolutely right, but it's not really what Willetts is addressing. His argument is that, esssentially, there is in existence a class-based admissions policy. The best schools are those with the fewest poor kids, and the rich kids go to the best schools. Chicken; egg. Creating a new tier of better funded best schools is unlikely to change this. What was an engine of social mobility in the 1960s has turned into an engine of social rigidity.
It is a mantra of the Cameronite Conservatives that policies should be examined for how they impact on the least well-off; the least able to opt out of state provision. Grammar schools are to a very great degree for 'us'; for Cameron's totem. A move to re-introduce grammar schools, to re-stratify the education system into the academic haves and have-nots, would play very well with Conservative voters and potential Conservative voters. I don't believe that it would address the problem of social stagnation.
What we have at the moment is selection by parental income. What the re-introduction of grammar schools would do is blur the edges of that slightly. What Willetts is proposing is something different:
At the heart of our education reforms is creating, in Tony Blair's words, 'self-governing independent state schools'. This involves a lot of painstaking work getting rid of the barriers that stand in the way of much greater and more diverse provision of schools in this country. It means making it easier for successful schools to take over failing schools. It means making it much easier to create new schools including by parents groups themselves if they wish. It means making it easier for new providers of education to enter the maintained sector without facing barriers to entry. It particularly means applying these initiatives to the parts of the country which suffer the most from the blocked opportunities and life chances of a low mobility society.
It may be a rejection of the grammar-school system, but I think it is also an attempt to improve the standard of education across the board - not merely for 'people like us'.

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2 Comments:

Blogger Devil's Kitchen said...

Just 2% of children at grammar schools are on free school meals when those low income children make up 12% of the school population in their areas.

I'm sorry, I don't get this logic. Here's the thing, OK; if someone is on FSM, then their parents are low earners.

Now, I'm pretty sure that one could show that there is a correlation between low IQ and low earners.

If IQ is in any part hereditary (which, given a decent knowledge of genetics, I would say that it is) then you would expect the children of low IQ parents to, on average, have a low IQ.

Thus, children on FSM are more likely to have a lower IQ and thus less likely to get into grammars.

DK

7:40 pm  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

DK: "... children on FSM are more likely to have a lower IQ and thus less likely to get into grammars."

Well, yes, though MPs would hammer six-inch nails up their nostrils rather than admit it.

Tim J: "... if it is social mobility that is your concern grammar schools are inefficient at providing it."

I'm not so sure ... Back in my day (I was among my school's last grammar intake in 1976), grammar schools had their biggest impact on social mobility in the inner cities, where family circumstances and sheer poverty could hold kids back from any decent secondary education. In the suburbs, society was already fairly mobile, and the brightest kids often had parents who (like mine) had themselves benefited from a grammar school education. Today, how many of the remaining grammar schools are in the inner cities? Do we really know what effect a revamped, nationwide grammar school system could have?

Tim J: "Middle class kids are people too - if they're bright enough shouldn't they get the chance to go to the best schools?"

Well, exactly. How many middle-class parents can afford school fees of 9K per child per year? What's more, how many can afford to live in the catchment area of a decent comprehensive? We manage it -- just -- but we live in a shoebox. Many middle-class, educated couples younger than us can't afford even that. Their kids -- if they choose to have any -- will attend schools at which you can be beaten up for handing in your homework on time. Even my parents had better opportunities than that. For the lower middle classes, social mobility has not only juddered to a halt: it seems to be going into reverse.

12:22 pm  

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