Posts Tagged ‘academies’

Funding for Home Schooling?

Wednesday, July 7th, 2010

With a new government now in office, it is a good time to reconsider the case for government funding for home schooling.

At the moment, funding via the Local Authority (LA) is only available in exceptional circumstances, for instance that the child has special educational needs.  The Dept of Education has  confirmed that this situation has not altered:

“The current financial responsibility for home educated children has not changed, namely, that parents who choose to electively home educate their children assume financial responsibility for their education. ”

As the number of home-educated children has grown rapidly over the last five years, the previous government (after the Badman Review) put forward plans to monitor home-schooled children and there is no doubt that the present government also feels compelled to ensure that there is adequate control over this growing sector. A commitment to funding would demonstrate a greater acceptance of the validity of home education and a desire to facilitate improvements in the educational experience of the home-schooled.  In time, it would stimulate the development of more effective published resources, more varied and systematic teaching resources, technological advances, etc.

The new government has already shown a  commitment to academies and ‘free’ schools, enabling parents to group together to set up a new instituation, with the promise of funding to come.  The home-schooled may not have a central meeting place or regular classrooms but they are an educational grouping which is analogous to a school and just as much in need of institutional support. So funding should be available for them too.

Education Otherwise is one organisation which represents the interests of the home-schooled via the Freedom for Children to Grow Campaign for Home Education, and we are happy to join with them in lobbying for the effective funding in future for the home schooling of children, particularly between the ages of 11 and 16 when it is vital that effective teaching programmes are put in place.

As well as putting our views to Michael Gove, the Minster for Education, it may be worth making a case to Nick Gibb, the Minster of State for Schools, whom the Dept of Education has confirmed has responsibility for home schooling.

  • Share/Bookmark

IGCSE and the Academies

Thursday, March 4th, 2010

In February it was reported (e.g. in The Guardian) that flagship “Academy” schools want the government to be less prescriptive about the qualifications they can offer.

In particular, this  group of new schools, set up at vast expense by the Labour government, wants to be allowed to teach “elite” international GCSES (IGCSEs) discouraged in the state sector by the government.

The O-level-style IGCSE exams are favoured by many independent schools, which believe they are more rigorous than traditional GCSEs and more likely to impress universities and also employers.

But government ministers have declined to approve and fund these courses for state secondary schools, effectively preventing schools from offering IGCSEs. Meanwhile, an increasing number of prominent independent schools across the UK (who are not the receipients of funding anyway) have made the switch from GCSE to IGCSE because they believe IGCSE offers a better preparation for A-level and future careers.

In its recent manifesto, the Independent Academies Association (IAA), a coalition of the academies’ heads, insisted the government should be less prescriptive about the qualifications it allows schools to offer.

The body’s chairman, Mike Butler, said several academies had told the IAA that they see IGCSEs as “robust” qualifications and want to be able to offer them. “Academies should have the freedom and autonomy to determine the most appropriate curriculum for their cohort of students,” he said.

Colleges and universities considering student applications adopt an official policy that IGCSEs and GCSEs are directly equivalent but there are some signs that, for institutions “in the know”, IGCSEs carry greater weight. A top grade at IGCSE is seen as a better predictor of future success than the equivalent grade at GCSE.

Recognising this, there are clear indications that if the Conservatives win the forthcoming general election, IGCSEs will be brought into the mainstream, funded and encouraged in secondary schools. Then, if schools are given a free choice, there is a chance that most, if not all, of them, will opt for IGCSE in preference to GCSE. Certainly, the majority of universities would welcome such a development.

The increasing success of IGCSE is also good news for distance learners, adult learners, home-educated children and a variety of other students outside mainstream  education because IGCSEs do not pose the same practical obstacles that GCSEs currently pose, particularly in terms of the requirements for controlled assessment now unavoidable in most GCSE subjects.

For all these reasons, Oxford Home Schooling supports the IAA campaign.

  • Share/Bookmark