Articles tagged with British education system

Criticisms of educational system aren’t just an American phenomenon

Photo courtesy Stockvault

Photo courtesy Stockvault

Back in the Stone Age, when journalists used something called a typewriter, I was always pleased when my editors asked me to write about a newly released “report” on education.

I thought it was easy work: All I had to do was pull information from the two-page summary and press release that accompanied the report—and perhaps call some “expert” for a quote.

But now I’m older—and, I hope, a little wiser.

Earlier this week, I came across a British study that purportedly blamed schools for dooming young boys to a lifetime of “crime, drugs, and prison.” Schools, summarized a story in the Tele-graph, were failing to properly educate poor young boys, leaving them to become “misfits and criminals” when they grew up.

My initial reaction was, “Aha! A report that says schools are to blame for society’s woes. That sounds like politically inspired nonsense. Perhaps here’s an opportunity to write about bad research with exaggerated, ideologically based biases.”

A bit of a knee-jerk reaction, I admit. But my impression was reinforced by other media accounts, as well as some of the publicity material produced by the Centre for Policy Studies, the London-based think tank that released the report, Wasted: The Betrayal of White Working Class and Black Caribbean Boys.
(more…)

Naomi Dillon|December 10th, 2009|Categories: Educational Research, Leading Source|Tags: , , , |

Teachers in U.K. expected to fend for themselves against violent students

Okay, the world of education just keeps getting stranger and stranger. Now we’ve got teachers wearing body armor.

Well, maybe I exaggerate slightly. They’re only wearing protective arm guards.

But still, I was astonished when I read an online article from London’s Daily Mail that British teachers “are forced to wear body armour [sic] and get jabs against infectious illnesses to protect against bites and assaults from troubled children.”

Thankfully, it turns out that World War III has not broken out in British schools. No, protective measures are being adopted by teachers dealing with students with severe behavioral problems-those that are mainstreamed, attending special schools, or locked up in juvenile detention centers.

Anyone who knows anything about special education knows that, while the vast majority of students with disabilities are delightful, those with severe behavioral problems can be tough to handle. And if teachers don’t get adequate support, life is just hell.

For British teachers, though, the issue isn’t just that some students are potentially violent. They understand that. No, what’s particularly annoying to them is that some of them are being forced to shoulder the cost of protective arm guards to fend off biting students, as well as pay the cost for immunizations when those bites draw blood.

‘Due to the nature of the assaults they face, often teachers in special schools have to have vaccines such as tetanus and hepatitis B,” one North Wales geography teacher complained. “I know that for some colleagues this has come at a personal cost of around £80 for a hepatitis B injection.”

Hmm, once again the British education system is leading the world as we prepare to enter the second decade of the 21st century. I wonder: Are your teachers having to take similar protective measures?

Del Stover, Senior Editor

Naomi Dillon|April 17th, 2009|Categories: Governance, Leading Source|Tags: , |
Page 1 of 11