Goodbye teachers’ champion

18th November 2005, 12:00am

Share

Goodbye teachers’ champion

https://www.tes.com/magazine/archive/goodbye-teachers-champion
The education world mourns the loss of The TES columnist who showed passionate commitment - as an academic, educator, friend and family man.

Ted Wragg, who died suddenly last week, had been a champion of teachers and the children and young people they taught all his working life. Best known in The TES for his acerbic and witty back-page columns, which spanned a quarter of a century, he was a barbed gadfly on the body politic when it frequently came up with policies which he felt worked against the best interests of education.

His contacts were at the highest levels and yet he stayed outside the Westminster club, preferring friendships with politicians he respected to adoption by one party or another. He knew and advised David Blunkett and Estelle Morris and regularly discussed schools with John Prescott, the deputy prime minister. His last visit to The TES office was on the Friday before he died. He was en route for lunch with another ex-education secretary, Shirley Williams, to talk about the latest education white paper.

So when he talked about blood on the carpet in Whitehall over whatever the latest education controversy was, you knew it wasn’t a hunch. He was plugged in wherever it mattered but he remained independent to the last.

His trenchant criticisms of Sats, league tables, and Chris Woodhead-style school inspections - often made in the most withering and funny language - endeared him to thousands of teachers and parents. In the tributes that have poured out since his fatal heart attack at the age of 67, adults have remembered lessons when they were children as the best they ever had and teachers have talked about staying the course of their profession because of his inspiration.

There was shock and sadness in the nation’s staffrooms when the news came through. Dave McLoughlin from London who did his postgraduate certificate in education at Exeter said on hearing the news: “Ted Wragg lectures were always brilliant. He was the type of teacher that we all aspired to be.

Don’t know if I’ll be able to teach next period, but I’ll do it - bottling lessons wasn’t the Ted Wragg way!”

Professor Wragg was the teacher’s friend and his huge energy, which took him into so many schools and as a speaker at so many conferences, made him feel more like one of the family than a distant academic. Recently he appeared as one of the experts in Channel 4‘s The Unteachables, which had mixed success in getting a group of seriously disaffected teenagers back on the straight and narrow. The idea for the series came from him.

His reaction to the children was typical of how he connected with ordinary teachers. On screen he said: “I like all the kids and love them, but I could cheerfully take them behind a tree and ruin my career by smacking the hell out of them.” Teachers knew he understood the frustrations many of them face daily.

He wrote dozens of books and hundreds of articles. His books have been translated into Chinese, Arabic, Portuguese and Polish, among other languages. He was a world-class academic. He was ubiquitous in the best possible way.

He was born into a working-class family in Sheffield in 1938, and his parents had an implicit belief in the value of education. From King Edward VII grammar school he went on to Durham university to read German, where he got a first, followed by a first in his PGCE. Later came a master’s at Leicester university and a doctorate at Exeter. His first teaching job was in 1960 at the Queen Elizabeth grammar, Wakefield, where he taught modern languages. Four years later he moved to Wyggeston boys’ school, Leicester, as a very young head of German. Paul Fletcher, from Bury St Edmunds, who was taught by him at the time, says: “Not surprisingly, he didn’t stay long because a man of his talents didn’t hang around in the classroom. He was an inspiring teacher and I am lucky our paths crossed, because I went on to study German at university. His teaching style was effortless, his classroom control flawless, his humour still memorable.”

In 1966 Professor Wragg became a lecturer in education at Exeter university moving on in 1973 to Nottingham university where, at 34, he became the youngest ever professor of education. Two years later he was chairman of the school of education but by 1978 he was back in Exeter, where he was to remain a professor of education for the rest of his working life.

He retired, if that could ever be a word associated with Ted Wragg, two years ago but continued to teach regularly (and without pay - just for the love of it) to packed lectures at Exeter as an emeritus professor.

His research illuminated critical trends in UK schools, particularly around assessment, teaching skills and performance-related pay. The Teacher Education Project, which he directed from the late 1970s, remains one of the largest studies of teaching styles ever conducted in this country; he had a messianic desire to spread good practice.

Professor Wragg had faith in the teaching profession. He taught regularly in schools throughout his life. He knew what he was talking about. He believed most teachers knew what they were doing and that the constant stream of initiatives streaming from successive governments - he hated the Thatcher years most of all - undermined them. He memorably talked about the education of a child being like a tree, which suffered if it kept being dug up and its roots inspected before being replanted in a different place.

His critics tended to come from the right of the education spectrum and claimed he was of the woolly- minded, progressive type. Chris Woodhead, when chief inspector, described Professor Wragg as one of a group of academics who were “the real heart of darkness” in education. Wragg retaliated by calling him Woodentop and pouring scorn on his pronouncements.

He called Kenneth Baker, who introduced the national curriculum, Mr Bun the Baker; and once described the former higher education minister Margaret Hodge as “as useful as a sledgehammer in a transplant operation”.

He kept up his naming and sometimes shaming of politicians. Most recently he had taken to calling Ruth Kelly the Duchess of Dudsville (or Drivel) and Lord Adonis as Tony Zoffis (as in “Tony Zoffis says” - say the name out loud if you don’t get it). He was a merciless satirist and wrote sketches at one point for Rory Bremner.

Little wonder he never became Sir Ted. He spurned the establishment. He once said to a head- hunter who was offering him a job as the head of a quango that he wouldn’t touch it with a bargepole.

But most politicians realised what he had to offer, as the Education Secretary, Ruth Kelly, has admitted: “His views could never be ignored.”

Professor Wragg was not the unreformed leftie of his enemies’ caricature.

He was a staunch defender of academic rigour, thought Shakespeare should be taught to children of all ages and was a strong defender of spelling, grammar and literacy.

Ken Boston, chief executive of the Qualifications and Curriculum Authority, said last week that he have never come across anyone with such a rich understanding of classrooms and children.

The QCA did not escape from his sharp tongue, however. After they issued what Professor Wragg thought were “ludicrous” new reporting requirements on teachers he pointed out that the teacher of an average class of 30 would now be expected to make 3,500 reasoned assessments on his or her pupils every term.

He wrote about it at the time recalling that on a visit to a Munich school, the headteacher gave him a slim pamphlet which set out the Bavarian school curriculum. “Have you brought yours?” the head inquired. “I stifled my mirth. The dozens of papers, booklets and folders that contain our national curriculum occupy three shelves.”

He encouraged us here at The TES in our campaigns, notably “Children Helping Children”, for which British schools raised pound;225,000 towards helping schools re-open in Afghanistan. He was a judge and one of the inspirations of The TES Make the Link awards to encourage schools to make links with others across the world. He was always outward looking and he was read by educators worldwide.

In his spare time he enjoyed music and playing in a skiffle band. He was a keen follower of football - his team was Sheffield Wednesday - and he coached and trained as a professional referee. He played three times a week, taking to jogging as he got older to keep fit. He jogged virtually every day. When his wife hid his kit when they were on a trip to Belfast during the height of The Troubles he went running in his suit instead. It was during one of his jogs that he suffered the cardiac arrest which was to kill him.

Professor Wragg was the most devoted family man and caring friend. His 94-year-old mother, Maria, survives him. So too does his wife, Judith, to whom he had been married for 45 years, his three children Josie, Caroline and Chris, and three grandchildren.

Edward Conrad Wragg, educationist, born June 26, 1938, died November 10, 2005

Want to keep reading for free?

Register with Tes and you can read two free articles every month plus you'll have access to our range of award-winning newsletters.

Keep reading for just £1 per month

You've reached your limit of free articles this month. Subscribe for £1 per month for three months and get:

  • Unlimited access to all Tes magazine content
  • Exclusive subscriber-only stories
  • Award-winning email newsletters
Recent
Most read
Most shared