Posts Tagged school

False start

This spring Sir Jim Rose’s final report on the primary curriculum will be published, recommending that all children enter formal education by the September after their fourth birthday. This is in spite of the fact that a significant number of experts have already voiced concern that formal education for five year olds is inappropriate; a delay until children reach six is seen to be preferable. Nevertheless, there is a high probability that Rose’s recommendations will become law by 2011.

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A physics teacher begs for his subject back

Echoing many of the problems our latest report The Corruption of the Curriculum has examined, Wellington Grey writes in an open letter to AQA and the Department for Education:
I am a physics teacher. Or, at least I used to be. My subject is still called physics. My pupils will sit an exam and earn a GCSE in physics, but that exam doesn’t cover anything I recognize as physics. Over the past year the UK Department for Education and the AQA board changed the subject. They took the physics out of physics and replaced it with… something else, something nebulous and ill defined. I worry about this change. I worry about my pupils, I worry about the state of science education in this country, and I worry about the future physics teachers — if there will be any.
I graduated from a prestigious university with a degree in physics and pursued a lucrative career in economics which I eventually abandoned to teach. Economics and business, though vastly easier than my subject, and more financially rewarding, bored me. I went into teaching to return to the world of science and to, in what extent I could, convey to pupils why one would love a subject so difficult.
For a time I did. For a time, I was happy.

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