Education MUST Change Direction

Education MUST Change Direction


#education #scottishgovernment #GIRFEC

I am, first and foremost, a teacher and I have been teaching children for 35 years and I think about the art of teaching almost daily, creating my own philosophy of education that now appears at odds with the system of schooling currently being endured by far too many children. We have allowed those in power to create a structure that makes teaching a science and I’ll lay my cards on the table right now – that’s nonsense.

Teaching is not a science, nor is it the province of robotic indifference or deference to higher authorities. Teaching is about relating to human beings and the great teacher is a craftsman who allows creativity and curiosity to flourish; teachers are not just beggared peddlers of information, bereft of personality or ideas.

The whole of society, certainly in the developed world, has lurched away from personal freedoms and replaced these with a sanitized version of safety to the point where children, and increasingly adults too, operate in a clinical and over-monitored culture. And when a culture focuses on safety and avoidance of risk, our education system and structure reflects those societal pressures.

Schools today are a shadow of what they could be, what they desire to be. The profession is now the most-highly trained and well-qualified in its history. We have a profession that is passionate about teaching and learning. We have teachers that are crying out for a higher degree of autonomy. We can tinker with the curriculum, we can tinker with course choices, we can tinker with accountability measures, we can travel down the road of reaccreditation of teachers every 5 years, we can (and do) take a big brother approach to management of education.

Or, those in power could lead education in a different direction of travel. They could provide schools with improved financial resource, they could open up the curriculum and offer greater choice, flexibility and breadth, they could allow schools to develop their own personalized culture relevant and in keeping with the students they teach, they could show far greater respect to those who actually teach, giving them far greater autonomy. They could, and should, concentrate their efforts on destressing the system, destressing our young, destressing the workforce. Our schools need fewer accountability measurements, fewer judgements, greater openness to new and innovative practices and the space and time to make it happen.

In the final analysis, we need to change the direction of travel.

To anyone who is listening, to anyone that can make it happen: please, let’s steer the ship away from its journey to Antarctica. Let’s head to sunnier and warmer climes. It’s not difficult, it’s just a matter of moving the rudder…

David Kirby

Foundation Apprenticeship Construction Lead Aberdeenshire Council

1 年

A refreshing read thank you Rod, Innovation and supporting staff to offer new approaches are key. Can I add a quiet plug for Technical and similar Practical/Enterprise subjects (which also include much academic rigour, risk and challenges) which offer opportunities to the broadest range of students and can also provide colleagues with opportunities to de-stress in a creative environment... every in-service day and some weekends in a boarding environment should have a making opportunity!

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Adam Caller

Founder & CEO, Tutors International

1 年

And what direction would YOU steer it if you had the helm?

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Freddie Main

Managing Director at Oak & Black Ltd.

1 年

We need to talk Rod… I’m in full agreement that the direction and focus of education needs to change. My product as a teacher was always ‘confident and happy people who are equipped to contribute positively to the world/society in their own way’. This kept it simple for me and always person-centred.

John O'Neill

Rector | The High School of Glasgow | MA Hons in History

1 年

Completely agree, Rod, and would also endorse the Haidt sub stack link too. Curiosity and risk, relationships and the open heart, are essential predispositions. Well said, Rod!

Nigel Archdale

Educational Consultant

1 年

Rod, your personal philosophy of education is one that resonates very strongly with mine. Thank you for articulating this so well.

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