Regime change or muddle?
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Regime change or muddle?
https://www.tes.com/magazine/archive/regime-change-or-muddle
This was completely unnecessary since the Executive had already publicly committed itself to doing so in the coalition deal between Labour and the Liberal Democrats.
More importantly, the “league table” issue completely obscured what Mr Peacock actually did announce - major proposals for reforming 3-14 assessment and the 3-18 curriculum. Even here, he was hit by suggestions that 5-14 testing was to be no more - when, in fact, he announced the opposite. Indeed, it is arguable that we will end up with more assessment as the coverage of subjects and stages is extended.
In one sense, assessment regime change is relatively simple once the educational principles and online technicalities have been sorted. The curriculum plans could well be much more controversial - if they live up to billing. Mr Peacock has already come close to declaring his disenchantment with subject-based teaching, does not want the present system merely “refreshed” and demands an end to the overcrowded curriculum.
Unfortunately he went on to demonstrate exactly the deficiencies he was exposing by urging a place in the curriculum for the Executive’s commitments on enterprise education, environment education, citizenship education and parenting skills. The minister’s curriculum review group will have to be very robust and radical if it is to withstand these pressures and come up with something which is more than a rehash of the Munn report’s “modes of knowledge” of almost 30 years ago.
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