Posts Tagged ‘Government Policy’

AS levels to be scrapped?

Monday, July 5th, 2010

AS levels will not be scrapped. The sensationalised headlines do not reflect the proposals that have currently been aired by Michael Gove, the new Education Secretary.

What Gove is suggesting is an alternative qualification for the more academic, university-bound student. Indeed, as he says, such an alternative already exists, in the form of the Cambridge pre-U, although it is available only in a small number of subjects and in a very small number of state schools. It is an invitation to other university-led institutions to put together rival qualifications, just as there are a number of rival boards for GCSE.

It is a broad hint that in the fullness of time, such alternative qualifications will not only be allowable in state schools but also funded in the same way as A-levels.  Until funding is in place, the take-up and public awareness of such qualifications will remain limited.

We have already seen the same government strategy applied to GCSE-level qualifications where it has already been announced that the IGCSE qualifications shunned by the last government will now be acceptable in state schools. IGCSEs, e.g. those set by Edexcel, will appeal to many schools because of their academic rigour and because they do not entail coursework. Coursework is very fiddly to administer and it is believed that coursework favours girls rather than boys so boys-only schools will be keen to adopt specifications that do not entail coursework.

Has the modularisation of A-levels also favoured girls and enabled them to overtake boys in terms of A-level achievement? While no alternatives exist, it is difficult to evaluate this theory. A bigger problem with modularisation has been the opportunity to re-take modules in order to get a better result. To many, a Grade C achieved at the third attempt is not really worth as much as a Grade C achieved after a single year of study, without any retakes, but there is no obvious mechanism to differentiate between the two. Certainly, universities would find it much easier to distinguish between candidates if they have all taken exams once only at the end of the course.

To many, IGCSEs are O-levels by another name and the new qualification proposed by Gove is a return to the old A-level system. Many educationalists see this as elitist and retrogressive but others will argue that after two decades of “dumbing down” in school qualifications, in order to keep students of widely varying ability in school to the age of 18, it is about time, we gave more able students the chance to prepare for university in a way that the universities themselves want.

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Free “Schools” for the Home-Educated

Friday, May 28th, 2010

Should home-educated children enjoy access to a free education? Just because they no longer attend their local state school, should this mean they have forsaken all rights to low-cost or free educational resources? We at Oxford Home Schooling do not think so.

With the arrival of the new government, there has been renewed talk that parents (amongst others) will be empowered to set up their own schools and be in receipt of state funding.  Plenty of parents and businesses would be interested in trying.  But it is easy to underestimate just how difficult it would be for a goverment to introduce such a scheme. It takes years, decades  even, to build an effective school, even with the most dedicated professionals involved.  A good school is not going to appear overnight and the government is not going to fund thousands of small, ill-conceived schools on the off-chance that some of them will come good in the end.

At best, it may be possible to draw on existing specialised provision within the private sector and bring that into the mainstream. That could certainly be to the advantage of the home education sector because almost all the support organisations, like Oxford Home Schooling, are in the private sector. Such organisations could offer hugely improved facilities if they had additional funds to work with. This might include much more extensive contact with personal tutors, a broader choice of reources, much better use of “expensive” online facilities, and so on. This would help to put home-educated children on a level playing field with their peers in mainstream schools without compromising their much cherished independence.

But we will not be holding our breath. The days of an Oxford Home School nurtured and funded by the state are still a long way off!

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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.

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