Difference between revisions of "Anarchy 94/Education in 1980: open or closed?"
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{{tab}}It should be clear, in conclusion, that the criteria adopted at the outset clearly determine the character of education for decades to come. The alternatives are very real and if Bernstein’s analysis is correct, by 1980 the {{qq|open}} system will be as essential for our economic needs, as for more obvious social reasons. Education will be much more varied; it will play a much bigger part in the lives of people in mid-<wbr>career in adult life than now; it will be the vehicle for {{qq|inter-<wbr>employ­ment}}, for those redundant in one skill and seeking others; and it will have to cope with rising expectations in all sections of the community, and a growing expectation of a good education for all children as of right. The {{qq|working class scholarship boy}} of 1944 vintage, who regarded himself as exceptionally fortunate to be received into the educational preserves of the few, will be a part of social history. All—or the vast majority—will have become {{qq|achievement-<wbr>oriented}}—not always academically, but vocationally, artistically, athletically, tech­nically. If they haven’t, we shall have failed to learn from the last 12 years. {{qq|Can there be any doubt that the resistance to change that affects all our social and industrial life is due to the fact that most British adults have never been taught to think? We may have enough scientists and technologists, but we are cruelly short of technicians. We desperately need to broaden the base from which we train skilled people of all kinds. There is no major industrial country in the world where this has not been recognised. … {{w|Harold Wilson|Harold_Wilson}}’s white-<wbr>hot technological revolution is going to look pretty silly founded on a secondary education of three and a half years.}}<ref><font size="2">{{popup|Tyrrell Burgess|British journalist (1931-2009)}}: {{qq|Up the School Leaving Age}}, ''Guardian'', {{popup|3.1.68|3 January 1968}}.</font></ref> Or on one of four and a half years, with no further or higher education for the majority.}} | {{tab}}It should be clear, in conclusion, that the criteria adopted at the outset clearly determine the character of education for decades to come. The alternatives are very real and if Bernstein’s analysis is correct, by 1980 the {{qq|open}} system will be as essential for our economic needs, as for more obvious social reasons. Education will be much more varied; it will play a much bigger part in the lives of people in mid-<wbr>career in adult life than now; it will be the vehicle for {{qq|inter-<wbr>employ­ment}}, for those redundant in one skill and seeking others; and it will have to cope with rising expectations in all sections of the community, and a growing expectation of a good education for all children as of right. The {{qq|working class scholarship boy}} of 1944 vintage, who regarded himself as exceptionally fortunate to be received into the educational preserves of the few, will be a part of social history. All—or the vast majority—will have become {{qq|achievement-<wbr>oriented}}—not always academically, but vocationally, artistically, athletically, tech­nically. If they haven’t, we shall have failed to learn from the last 12 years. {{qq|Can there be any doubt that the resistance to change that affects all our social and industrial life is due to the fact that most British adults have never been taught to think? We may have enough scientists and technologists, but we are cruelly short of technicians. We desperately need to broaden the base from which we train skilled people of all kinds. There is no major industrial country in the world where this has not been recognised. … {{w|Harold Wilson|Harold_Wilson}}’s white-<wbr>hot technological revolution is going to look pretty silly founded on a secondary education of three and a half years.}}<ref><font size="2">{{popup|Tyrrell Burgess|British journalist (1931-2009)}}: {{qq|Up the School Leaving Age}}, ''Guardian'', {{popup|3.1.68|3 January 1968}}.</font></ref> Or on one of four and a half years, with no further or higher education for the majority.}} | ||
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<font size="2">{{j|{{note|*|*}}For those who think this figure unrealistic, it has been estimated that by 1986 some 28% of the age-<wbr>group will have attained at least two {{qq|A}} levels ({{w|Richard Layard|Richard_Layard,_Baron_Layard}}, ''{{w|Financial Times|Financial_Times}}'', {{popup|11.3.68|11 March 1968}}). And we have yet to appreciate the scope for an explosion of long-<wbr>frustrated educational aspirations of those who will be in their 40’s and 50’s in the 1970’s and 1980’s—but who missed the {{w|Robbins|Robbins_Report}} boat.}} | <font size="2">{{j|{{note|*|*}}For those who think this figure unrealistic, it has been estimated that by 1986 some 28% of the age-<wbr>group will have attained at least two {{qq|A}} levels ({{w|Richard Layard|Richard_Layard,_Baron_Layard}}, ''{{w|Financial Times|Financial_Times}}'', {{popup|11.3.68|11 March 1968}}). And we have yet to appreciate the scope for an explosion of long-<wbr>frustrated educational aspirations of those who will be in their 40’s and 50’s in the 1970’s and 1980’s—but who missed the {{w|Robbins|Robbins_Report}} boat.}} | ||
Revision as of 20:19, 21 September 2016
open or closed?
The best clue to the possibilities of the next twelve years is what has happened over the last twelve. To quote Alec Clegg,[1] they have been the “most remarkable so far in the history of our education”. In terms of school building, teacher training, university expansion, there has been a fantastic acceleration. There has been the “primary revolution”, the new maths, a spurt in technological education from the abyss it was in in 1956. But most remarkable of all there has been an unprecedented awakening to educational possibilities: “unstreaming” is a concept to be taken seriously, rather than dismissed as the preserve of cranks; the economic potential of education is a fact to which we are all alerted; the “comprehensive” case has been carried intellectually if not administratively; the idea that higher education can take place only in Oxbridge, Redbrick or White Tile has been savagely eroded by the “binary” system.
Precedents for all these trends were there before 1956: in a few progressive private schools; in academic journals; in a handful of LEA’s; in the polytechnics and Keele, etc. But over the last 12 years the documentation and dissemination of these concepts has established them irreversibly on the educational scene. More and more schools are adopting them or being influenced by them. And they have raised a whole new crop of expectations and problems that have to be solved.
How can we “integrate” what remains of the privileged sector of education to make a truly “comprehensive” system? In such a system, how can we avoid “consensus education”,[2] which distrusts men like Duane and McKenzie who break with convention and experiment with their pupils? How can we gain the advantages of size, and scale, but avoid the dehumanisation and anonymity of over-
Why have these gains been made in the primary schools and not elsewhere? The reason is plain. With the abolition of the 11+, the pressure to sift and label children from the age of 5 or 6 was taken off the primaries. The newfound freedom to experiment without the fear that one should really be training the child to pass exams has already proved itself beyond dispute. In the primaries, we have moved closest towards what Professor Basil Bernstein, of the Institute of Education at London University, has termed the “open” school.[3] Can we not achieve something of the same revolution in the years after 11?
Despite “going comprehensive”, the secondary schools are much the same as they were 10 or even 20 years ago, for the simple reason that the selection and sifting that used to begin at 5 is now concentrated and intensified in the years 11–15: again because the secondary system is still dominated by the function of sorting out the gifted minority who will enter the universities (which, despite expansion, have failed to keep pace with rising numbers of qualified applicants, and rising expectations of higher education. Last year only 59% of those with two “A” levels gained university entrance).[4]
In his concept of the “open” school Professor Bernstein has provided a realistic framework within which to formulate answers to this question. For what we have now at secondary level and beyond is still a “closed” school system. Despite all the flurry of experiment and innovation in a few schools and LEA’s, and in the primaries, theBut the world outside is changing: full employment, enough affluence to buy adolescent independence, the emergence of the “teenager” as a contra role to that of “pupil”,[5] youth culture, the increasing tendency of the young to question the relevance of “the syllabus” to their personal and social development. Jollied along by the Schools Council, faced by more articulate children, conscious of report after orthodox teachers in secondary schools are at least aware that there is no going back to the “closed” system proper, that the impetus is towards the “open” system.
What constitutes the “open” school? The two systems can be set out (see below) as “polar” systems, admittedly vastly over-
“Open” (organic) | “Closed” (mechanical) | |
(a) | education in breadth | education in depth |
(b) | self-regulation | punishment |
(c) | unstreaming | streaming |
(d) | social “mix” | social division |
(e) | equal allocation of resources | disproportionate allocation of resources to elites |
(f) | complex value system | simple value system (caricature of the “Protestant” ethic — austere work, orthodox dress, etc.) |
(g) | “idea centred” teaching | subjects |
(h) | team teaching, etc. | forms |
The second principle implies that the older the pupil, the greater his need for dense and complex structures, and the greater his capacity to act responsibly within them. Once this is realised, school organisation can assume forms which might otherwise appear unmanageably complicated. This is already clear in schools where—from Summerhill onwards—ingenuity is exercised in ways of devolving responsibility to pupils as soon as possible (and in genuine, not merely token, ways). In Mexborough, for example, though the scale is small, a sixth form college has been established which is attached to, but partially autonomous within, the local grammar school, and which takes in pupils from the secondary moderns who wish to stay on after 15. This, of course, is far from being comprehensive, but it significantly moves towards a more “open” system than exists throughout the rest of the country. “At the start … some fears were expressed that without rules and a disciplinary system there would be chaos. This has not proved to be the case. As a body, the students have shown a most commendable sense of responsibility. … It could be boasted that there has been no single act of vandalism within the college in three and a half years.”[7] The same argument applies even more strongly within the universities. And the principle could be implemented earlier than the age of 16.[8]
The “open” school also serves more realistically as a focal point for community needs. The old-
If, however, the alternative of universal “comprehensive” education till 18 is adopted, this would not necessarily deter the more favoured income groups, or hold their children back, but would cater much more fully for the vast majority of lower middle class and skilled manual workers’ children. The apex of the system might ideally then be seen as a large polytechnic, or city college, with some 20,000 students,[*] some full-
The scope for experimentation in the size and design of the junior colleges is enormous—they could range in size from a few hundred (as at Mexborough) to 5,000—and the 16-
<references>
- ↑ Alec Clegg: “Education: Wrong Directions?” New Society, 11.2.65.
- ↑ Peter Preston: “No Chance for Choice”, Guardian, 31.8.67.
- ↑ Basil Bernstein: “Open Schools, Open Society?” New Society, 14.9.67.
- ↑ Richard Layard: Financial Times, 11.3.68.
- ↑ Barry Sugarman and others: Introduction to Moral Education, Pelican Original, 1968.
- ↑ Bernstein: op. cit.
- ↑ Brian MacArthur: “Sixth Form Run Like a Junior University”, The Times, 11.12.67.
- ↑ This argument is frequently dismissed by the mere act of reference to William Golding’s novel Lord of the Flies. What the novel explored in fact was the reaction to the need for self-
regulation of a group of boys previously totally dependent on imposed and external constraints. - ↑ Brian Jackson and Dennis Marsden: Education and the Working Class, Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1962.
- ↑ See Alan Little and Asher Tropp: “Blueprint for a University”, New Society, 6.6.63. And for a summary of progress under the “binary” system towards an analogous system of rather smaller and less comprehensive polytechnics, see Brian MacArthur, “Role of Polytechnics is Defined”, The Times, 2.3.68.
- ↑ Tyrrell Burgess: “Up the School Leaving Age”, Guardian, 3.1.68.