Teaching has always been a self-less profession, with those involved
giving far more in unpaid time than would be expected in other walks of life.
Teachers would always give that bit more for the kids. And it was appreciated
by children and parents alike. There are a large number of people who can say
down the years that this or that teacher made a huge difference to their lives.
So why today do we treat teachers so badly?
I guess it all started with Thatcherism, with its simplistic private,
good public bad approach to every walk of life. The belief that everything
works better run like or by business. So schools become reduced to exam
factories, running conveyor belts of children, concerned only with turning out
compliant rather than questioning citizens.
Many good teachers over the years have kicked against this very limited
take on the role of education. They have endeavoured to embrace the widest
concept of education and learning- seeking to open eyes and broaden the pupil’s
horizons.
The arrival of academisation really marked a step up in the ascent of the
role of business in the education sphere. So businesses came to run schools.
Now, a rudimentary bit of education should make clear to any student (or
politician ) that business does not get involved in anything other than to make
a profit. The common good has very little role to play for the business.
So the academy
model has been used by businesses across the country to get into education and
very nicely have many of them done out of it. The schools are taken out of
local authority regulation and handed over to business. This often sees the
teachers treated as commodities to be disposed of at will. Those at the top of
academy trusts reward themselves handsomely, often to the detriment of the
teaching staff.
The panacea that is
offered to schools, tempted to convert to academies, often results in the
education being provided declining. There have been countless cases of fraud
and nepotism uncovered, with those in charge rewarding themselves to the cost
of society.
BBC’s Panorama has
done great work in uncovering what goes on under the veil of academisation,
including cheating on exams.
As with so many
areas of life, once proper regulation is removed the possibility for corruption
to flourish abounds.
What is all the
more worrying is the gradual erosion of those precious values that teachers down
the years have so steadfastly adhered to. What message does it send to the
child, when he or she is being helped to cheat in exams? How does it help
teachers to set one against the other, forcing many out of the profession?
We are turning the
education system into something that values all of the most base elements of
human nature.
All though is not
lost, teachers, parents, children and unions across the country are all
fighting back against this government led onslaught to destroy our values based
education system. The academisation process is being resisted as more and more
evidence of the abuses that result become apparent in the public sphere. There
is a long way to go but, thankfully, the fight back has begun.
published - Wanstead and Woodford Guardian - 18/7/2019 - paper
- 19/7/2019 - online
published - Wanstead and Woodford Guardian - 18/7/2019 - paper
- 19/7/2019 - online
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