i'd agreeAnd apparently all the teachers are pi$$ed ^^^
and as sid the fellow teacher says - the system does not want failure.
here in scotland we have specialised in developing an education system that rewards failure.
we created bull**** qualifications like "group awards", Access level, intermediate level and foundation level.
ffs people now get a greatbig list of qualifications for turning up, never mind actually having to apply themselves.
schools are too focussed (at the moment) on trying to achieve passes for everyone, rather than realising that some people really are wasting their time stuck in the comprehensive education system.
and that's where everything got f***ed up - when the grammar/academy or lower/upper schools, whatever split you use - came into effect back in the day.
it ruined the chance for the less academic among the populus to learn to do something really practical and worthwhile - it sounded the death knell of the UK skill base and screwed us royally for having a skilled industry base.
now the government want 50% of people leaving school to attend university. what a freaking joke. the 10% that went to the "real" universities was far more sensible. the other 40% should get the opportunity for further education agreed, but not in some silly pseudodegree in made-up-ness.
bring back the decent tech colleges - some of them had a phenomenal reputation for producing highly skilled, highly compentent individuals. now they are forced to be "universities" they are stuck with a range of degrees in "****tyness" as well as some really good courses - but their reputation has been tarred with the same brush as the other "pretend" universities.
but also take into account what primary teachers are forced to cover. gone are the days of the good ol' 3R's, (if your too young to know what that means, then pity help you....) and the rote learning of simple things like times-tables. (i remember having to spend the first 20min of class standing behind our desks chanting away...).
they now need to add in: social subjects; religious, moral and philosophical education; language; technology; science; art; music; and every other god-damn thing you can think of. and 90% of this is taught by the one teacher - a non-specialist in pretty much every aspect they teach.
i don't blame the primary teacher (my sister is one....) but the fact is they are forced to do this by the government. we see so many kids coming into secondary schools now who can barely read, write or do simple arithmetic - and it is getting worse. the simple fact is that the teachers don't have the time to devote to this at the very beginning of the kids' education. and that is where it fails - at the start.
we (the teachers) had the chance to "declutter" the curriculum here in scotland with the advent of "A Curriculum for Excellence" - but that got shafted by too many beaurocrats and arselickers wanting the chance to show off. as far as science goes, at any rate, the Royal Society are dubbing CfE as "the biggest disaster in education" - and yet Fiona Hislop the education minister is completely ignoring this and forgin on regardless.
now I have a real bee in my bonnet over this, as my own sons are going to be the first to get shafted by this new system as the assessments and courses are due to go live in 2014 - just as my eldest will start secondary.
anyway enough ranting - and apologies to anyone from a "new" university