The following Statement was made in the House of Commons on Monday
28 March. “With permission, Mr Speaker, I will make a Statement on
the publication of the schools White Paper. Since 2010, we have
been on a mission to give every child a great education. We have
made huge strides, but we know there is still further to go on that
journey, which my predecessors began and I am proud to lead today.
Too many children still do not get the start in life that will
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The following Statement was made in the House of Commons on
Monday 28 March.
“With permission, Mr Speaker, I will make a Statement on the
publication of the schools White Paper.
Since 2010, we have been on a mission to give every child a great
education. We have made huge strides, but we know there is still
further to go on that journey, which my predecessors began and I
am proud to lead today. Too many children still do not get the
start in life that will enable them to go on and make the best
use of their talents and abilities. Sadly, disadvantaged pupils
or those who have special educational needs are less likely to
achieve the standards we expect for them. Since 2010, we have
been rolling out many changes to our education system—changes
that have driven up standards, lifted us up the league tables
internationally and given us measurable evidence of what works.
We will now put that evidence to use and scale up what we know
will create a high-quality system for children, parents and
teachers.
We have an ambition that by 2030 we will expect 90% of primary
school children to achieve the agreed standard in reading,
writing and maths. In secondary schools, I want to see the
national GCSE average grade in both English language and maths
increase from 4.5 in 2019 to 5. By boosting the average grade, we
show a real determination to see all children, whatever their
level of attainment, do better. A child who goes from a grade 2
to a grade 3, or one who goes from a grade 8 to a grade 9,
contributes to that ambition as much as a child on the borderline
who may go up from a grade 4 to a grade 5, so every parent can
rest assured that their child is going to get the attention they
deserve, however well they are doing.
It goes without saying that every child needs an excellent
teacher. This White Paper continues our reforms to training and
professional development, to give every child a world-class
teacher. The quality of teaching is the single most important
factor within a school for improving outcomes for children,
especially for those from disadvantaged backgrounds. Our vision
is for an excellent teacher for every child in our country, but
if we are to do that, we need to make teaching even more of an
attractive profession. To make sure that it is, we will deliver
500,000 teacher training and development opportunities by 2024,
giving all teachers and school leaders access to world-class
evidence-based training and professional development, at every
stage of their career. We will also make a £180 million
investment in the early years workforce. Teachers’ starting
salaries are set to rise to £30,000, as we promised in our
manifesto, and there will be extra incentives to work in schools
with the most need.
A world-class education also needs environments in which great
teaching can have maximum impact. Therefore, we will improve
standards across the curriculum, behaviour and attendance. Making
sure that all children are in school and ready to learn in calm,
safe, supportive classes is my priority. All children will be
taught a broad, ambitious, knowledge-rich curriculum and have
access to high-quality experiences. We will set up a new national
curriculum body to support teachers, founded on the success of
the Oak National Academy. This body will work with groups across
the sector to identify best practice, deepen expertise in
curriculum design and develop a set of optional resources for
teachers that can be used either online or in the classroom.
These resources will be available across the United Kingdom,
levelling up education across our great country. We will continue
to support leaders and teachers to create a classroom where all
children can learn in a way that recognises individual needs and
abilities. In addition, we are going to boost our ability to
gather and share data on behaviour and attendance. We will move
forward with a national behaviour survey to form an accurate
picture of what really goes on in schools and classrooms and, of
course, to modernise our systems to monitor attendance. We will
introduce a minimum expectation for the length of the school week
to the national average of 32-and-a-half hours for all mainstream
state-funded schools from September 2023, at the latest.
Thousands of schools already deliver that, but a number do not
and that needs to change.
Too many children, especially those who are most vulnerable,
routinely fall behind and never catch up with their peers. The
awful Covid pandemic has made that worse. Even though I am
relieved to tell the House that the latest research on learning
loss and recovery shows that pupils continue to make progress,
there is still much more to do. That is why today’s White Paper
sets out a really ambitious plan for scaling up that recovery,
building on the nearly £5 billion of recovery funding that has
already been announced.
My children are the most important thing in the world to me and I
know that I am not alone in saying that. All parents want their
children to be happy and to grow up to a future that is full of
promise, so I am today making a pledge to parents; it is a pledge
from me and this Government via schools to all families. The
parent pledge is that any child who falls behind in English or
maths will receive timely support to enable them to reach their
potential. A child’s school will let parents know how their child
is doing and how the school is supporting them to catch up.
Tutoring has been a great success and that is making a
difference. It is here to stay, and we want it to become
mainstream and a fundamental pillar of every school’s approach to
delivering the parent pledge. There will be up to six million
tutoring packages by 2024.
We know that the approaches that I have outlined make a huge
difference to pupils, so I have asked myself this. We have 22,000
schools in England; how do we ensure that these happen
systematically in every school for every child? How do we get
that consistency across the system? It has become clear from my
six months in the department studying the evidence that
well-managed, tightly managed families of schools are those that
can consistently deliver a high-quality and inclusive education.
It is one where expertise is shared for the benefit of all and
where resources and support can help more teachers and leaders to
deliver better outcomes for children.
With that in mind, by 2030, we intend for every child to benefit
from being taught in a family of schools, with their school in a
strong—I underline “strong”—multi-academy trust or with plans to
join or form one. That move towards a fully trust-led system,
with a single regulatory approach, will drive up standards. We
also want to encourage local authorities, if they think that they
do well in running their schools, to establish their own strong
trusts, and we will back them. There will be a clear role for
every part of the school system, with local authorities given the
power that they need to support children. We will set up a new
collaborative standard requiring trusts to work constructively
with other partners.
I know from my experience in business and in rolling out the
Covid vaccine that the hardest thing for any complex system,
whether it is health or education, is scaling up, but I have
faith both in the brilliant leaderships that we already have in
our school systems and in our educationalists to be able to
deliver on this White Paper. We want to spread brilliance
throughout our country, levelling up opportunity and creating a
school system where there is a clear role for every part of the
system, all working together and all focused on one thing:
delivering outstanding outcomes for our children.
Soon, everyone will see what we all know—that this Conservative
Government are busy making our schools the very best in the
world. We should be so proud of how far we have come and rightly
hopeful about where we are going next. For that reason, I commend
this Statement to the House.”
8.53pm
(Lab)
My Lords, I thank the Minister for the briefing that she and her
officials provided for the Labour education team yesterday.
This White Paper is a thin document that we believe represents a
missed opportunity in many ways. Paragraph 123 says:
“The system that has evolved over the past decade is messy and
often confusing … Unclear expectations of academies and local
authorities permit grey areas which have sometimes allowed
vulnerable children to fall through the gaps. Government has not
been able to intervene adequately in the small number of trusts
that have fallen short in the expectations of parents”.
So what have the last 12 years been all about?
Other than an attainment increase at key stage 2 and GCSE, for
which there is minimal detail, this White Paper betrays a real
lack of ambition by the Government. When the headline soundbite
is some schools staying open for 10 or 15 minutes longer, there
is something seriously lacking.
The Secretary of State would have done well to have studied the
speech given by his shadow, , at the ASCL conference
earlier this month, where she spoke about the broader aims of
education and the importance of soft skills, creativity and
balance in the curriculum. The White Paper never really gets
beyond a fixation with maths and English.
There is no recognition of why many employers are seriously
critical of the current school system and curriculum. There is
seemingly no understanding that England is becoming an outlier
internationally in its narrowness and fixation on academic
subjects and end-of-course exams. There is no attempt to set out
a vision of what education is for and of the kind of world that
we are preparing children for.
There are no funding commitments of any seriousness, and
inflation will surely erode much of what has already been agreed.
This needs to be seen in the context of the new funding formula,
which has been introduced at the expense of the most
disadvantaged areas and is quite contrary to the Government’s
levelling up ambition.
One proposal that I welcome is the introduction of a register for
children not in school, which is long overdue, not least in terms
of safeguarding issues.
On structures, some potentially interesting changes are proposed,
but without the detail it is hard to assess them. It could imply
the effective replacement of individual funding agreements by a
statutory framework. It could imply the end of the free school
programme except where there is a demographic need for new
schools. In recent weeks, the education media have been fed
stories of all schools being forced to become academies. The
White Paper does not state that explicitly. Can the Minister
clarify the Government’s intent? I read paragraph 146 as enabling
forced academisation where the local authority wants it,
irrespective of what individual schools want, as has been the
case in places such as Hull, Leicestershire and Thurrock.
The Government admit that contracting with academy trusts is at
an end and will be replaced with “academy trust standards”. No
further information is given. Is this a return to direct grant
schools, which Labour abolished in the late 1970s, with academies
remaining independent schools? Is the intention to set up a new
type of school which is “Secretary of State maintained” rather
than local authority maintained, similar to the grant-maintained
schools? We just do not know, and there is scant evidence that
the Government do either.
The premise that trusts are the best way of organising schools is
asserted but not proved. Occasionally, data is cherry picked. I
ask the Minister how many trusts do not contain 7,500 pupils,
which is said to be the benchmark for efficiency and
effectiveness. How does the DfE propose to deal with the many
trusts that are not that size? Talk of a family of schools
quickly comes up against a basic problem: that of geography. How
can you have a family of schools scattered the length of the
country?
Chapter 3 focuses on targeted support. There is no definition of
students falling behind, but the White Paper says that you must
not label children as “behind”. Can the Minister clarify where
the funding for this support will come from? Of course, the
elephant in the room on the whole question of education recovery
is the Chancellor. Sir knew exactly how much was
required to deliver meaningful programmes, but the Chancellor
callously put his red pen through it and hundreds of thousands of
children throughout the country are living with the consequences
of his parsimony. Yesterday’s DfE-commissioned report on pupil
learning loss from the pandemic bears that out.
There is no recognition of the huge issues in teacher recruitment
at present but quite a lot about the current attempts to change
initial teacher training, with the imposition of a political
ideology on all stages of teacher development. The proposals
around the Oak academy turning into a provider of resources and
lesson plans could be a worrying step towards enforcing a
national model of pedagogy and curriculum content.
After two years of pandemic chaos and six years since the
Government’s last schools strategy, this plan will leave parents,
teachers and pupils wondering where the ambition for children’s
futures is. Clearly, it is not with this Government.
(LD)
My Lords, I apologise for being a few minutes late; I hope that I
shall not be sent to the back of the class.
I thank the Minister for the Statement. I like the tone of it; I
like the fact that we are celebrating schools and the hard work
that teachers do. I detect a real change in the way that we look
at our education system.
All the research shows that parents are not interested in
structures. We go on about academies, academy chains and LEA
schools, but parents want good teachers, good leadership of a
school and a curriculum which excites, motivates and enthuses
pupils. I am afraid that we get hung up far too often on
structures. I think I detect the glimmer of hope that we will
again move away from the notion that structures are the way
forward—they are not; it has to be about the quality of the
education provision and of the teacher.
Turning to academy trusts—we have long debated this in the past—I
have a number of observations resulting from the Statement.
First, we hear that the voice of the parent should be heard.
Perhaps the Minister could assure us that those academy
trusts—few, thank goodness—which have done away with governing
bodies for each school will be a thing of the past. Schools, even
in multi-academy trusts, need to have a governing body,
particularly so the parent voice can be heard.
My second observation, which I raised time and again with the
Minister in the Lords before this Minister, is about chief
executives of academy trusts and how their salaries have got
completely out of control—some are getting up to £300,000. Over
the last two or three years the number of chief executives of
even small academy trusts earning more than £100,000 has grown. I
remember the noble Lord, , assuring us that he was going
to tackle this issue, but his tackling of the issue has seen the
problem escalate rather than get better.
As was mentioned in Oral Questions, academies can choose the
curriculum they want. There are certain things which are crucial
for all children. Again, when we discuss the White Paper, we need
to look at giving all schools the same freedoms and
opportunities, but with those freedoms come responsibilities.
There are areas of the education curriculum where we should
ensure that every school, whether a local authority academy—there
is a new thing—a free school, or, if they still exist, any local
authority schools not in academy trusts, must teach.
One thing that slightly jarred with me in the Statement was that
only one school was mentioned. It was not that anything this
school—Oak National Academy—had done was wrong, just that only
one was picked out. A teacher would not pick out one clever pupil
in the class, they would celebrate the whole class. There are
lots of examples of schools which have done just as much, if not
more, innovative things than the Oak National Academy. That
jarred slightly.
This afternoon we talked about creative subjects and the EBacc. I
challenged the Minister to give a direct reply, which she was not
able to do, and I understand why. The White Paper will give us
all an opportunity to explore the effect the EBacc has had on
certain subjects in the curriculum. It might well be—it is not my
particular wish, but I got this sense from the Minister’s
reply—that she sees T-levels as providing the less academic, more
vocational route, hence they would not be part of the EBacc. That
would be a grave mistake and the EBacc should encourage creative
subjects as well.
I am pleased the Government have listened to the issue of a
national school register, but there are a number of other
matters, as the Minister well knows, such as unregistered
schools. One of the reasons we are not able to take action
against unregistered schools, as Ofsted will tell you, is that
they can morph into very small units. Unless we are prepared to
see home education treated in a different way, it will be very
difficult to deal with unregistered schools. That is an area
where we need to focus.
We are told that Ofsted will inspect all schools. That is right,
but let us remember that schools have been through a terrible
time just keeping the doors open and keeping children educated. I
would hope that Ofsted would be more about an opportunity to work
with schools and would offer a supportive inspection. Rather than
waving a big stick where perhaps the wheels have wobbled during
the pandemic or things have gone wrong, I hope that Ofsted might
proverbially put its arm around the school and say, “Look, these
are the issues that need sorting out.”
I have a few questions. First, we know that children from
deprived communities have suffered the most for all the reasons
that we have debated and discussed in the past. I was a bit
disappointed that that issue was not particularly addressed in
the comments. Secondly, children have missed out on
extra-curricular social and academic experiences—opportunities to
develop the skills that they will need for the future. Why have
the Government not used the first White Paper in six years to
change and expand the range of opportunities that are given to
children? Where is the ambition?
The White Paper has so far had quite surprisingly mixed reviews.
Geoff Barton, general secretary of the Association of School and
College Leaders, said that, although the paper outlined promising
measures, it lacked ambition or “big ideas”. The Education Policy
Institute think tank said that pushing all schools to become
academies was “no silver bullet”, and that, although the White
Paper contained “some bold aims”, it seemed
“unlikely that many of these bold pledges will … be met.”
My party looks forward to the opportunity that this White Paper
gives to address not just the questions that I have raised or
those raised by the noble Lord, Lord Watson, but issues such as
children being permanently excluded from school, how they are
treated, and how we need to make sure that we give them a much
better opportunity and a much better education. I look forward to
working with the Government on the White Paper.
The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State, Department for
Education ()
My Lords, I thank both noble Lords for their remarks. I will do
my best to respond to them now, but I look forward to further
opportunities to discuss the White Paper in more detail.
The noble Lord, Lord Watson, asked where all this comes from and
criticised the thinness of the document. The White Paper stems
from a very clear ambition for our children at every stage of
their schooling and beyond. We have approached this by trying to
understand what is already working well in our school system and
scaling that up. The gap between what the best schools and trusts
achieve for our children at key stage 2 and key stage 4, and what
that means for their future prospects, is very sizeable,
particularly for disadvantaged children. Our focus is on scaling
up what works and has been shown to work over the last 12
years.
The big idea is to make that work on a national scale. I
understand why the noble Lord questions where the sparkly new
policies are. There are, of course, new elements within the White
Paper but the big, difficult idea and the hardest thing to do
will be to scale up that quality. Our ambition is crystal clear:
it is about quality for all our children. We have approached it
in a spirit of looking at the evidence and being very transparent
about that evidence. I hope that the noble Lord will have a
moment to look at the data annexe that sits with the White Paper;
it is not in the hard copy but is available online. I hope he
will feel that it is anything but cherry picked. We have made
every effort to be as transparent as possible, including both
data that supports our arguments and data that does not, so that
we can show how we have reached our conclusions. Most
importantly, we have approached this in a spirit of fairness—it
should feel fair to all of the actors in the system as we move
forward.
The noble Lord asks why we have a fixation on academic standards,
particularly in English and maths. Of children who did not reach
the expected standard at key stage 2, just 21% achieved grade 4
or above in English language at GCSE and only 14% achieved that
at key stage 4 in 2019. Of those with five or more GSCEs, 55%
completed a degree, compared to 6% of those with fewer; post
GCSE, they are 16 percentage points more likely to be employed,
and they earn on average £9,000 more a year. I could go on. The
impact on the economy is massive—these are huge and important
markers at the start of a child’s life which translate to their
future prospects, their future social mobility and the future
health and wealth of them, their families and our nation.
I did not follow the noble Lord’s argument on the funding
formula. It is clearly not at the expense of disadvantaged
areas—quite the reverse. We currently have an outdated mechanism
for funding our schools. We now have a national funding formula,
and we will be working progressively and incrementally to make
sure that funding goes to schools directly in response to the
need and nature of the cohort that they serve.
The noble Lord also asked about compulsion and requiring schools
to become academies. We are keen and have worked very hard in
this White Paper to try to make sure everyone involved in the
schools system feels they are part of this journey. We are
considering all options, and we will engage with the sector to
deliver a fully trust-led system.
The noble Lord, , talked about the importance of
local governing bodies. In preparing the White Paper, we—and I
personally—spent a great deal of time with local
authority-maintained school heads, particularly primary school
heads. One of the things they talked about that was almost
universal was a sense of being local and part of their local
community. Therefore, in the governance plank of the five planks
of our “strong trusts” framework, we are clear that schools need
to feel local, have a sense of local identity and have a role in
their local community.
The noble Lord, Lord Watson, talked about families of schools and
families being strung out across the country. I will not take the
analogy too far, but we will be working hard on commissioning to
make sure we have geographically coherent trusts, so they can
benefit from all that that offers.
The noble Lord, , talked about CEO salaries. We
take that seriously and are continuing to follow on from the good
work of my noble friend . The Oak National Academy is
not an individual school; it was the platform that was created
during the pandemic that delivered all the digital lessons for
children across the country. I apologise if the name was
confusing.
To finish, the noble Lords, and Lord Watson, said we would
need a number of measures to turn things around for our children.
That is what is in this White Paper—it is about great teachers, a
great curriculum, good attendance, good behaviour, a pledge to
parents if their children fall behind, and creating a system that
delivers the strongest, fairest and most ambitious school system
for our children.
9.14pm
(Lab)
My Lords, I do not doubt the commitment of the Minister to
equality for all children. However, in responding to the White
Paper, the National Children’s Bureau comments that too many
children still live in poverty. That must be addressed for
education success to follow. The White Paper has left many in
education underwhelmed and, as my noble friend Lord Watson said,
it has left our schools underfunded.
In all the years that academisation has been an option, only 44%
of schools have taken it, some voluntarily, often with
inducements, and some not. No solid evidence can be adduced that
academy status per se equates to better outcomes for young
people. School leaders have declared that total forced
academisation would be a distraction, so why does the Minister
think that politicians know better than school leaders?
With one in six children reporting mental health difficulties, an
opportunity to reassess assessment and the curriculum should have
been taken. The potential for centralisation of pedagogy through
Oak Academy is a problem. It looks like deskilling our teachers,
with talk of “delivering” lessons. While the White Paper is about
England, will the Government take the opportunity to learn from
the very good practice in evidence in Scotland and Wales,
including on school governance, curriculum and assessment?
(Con)
I thank the noble Baroness for her remarks. On academisation, she
will be aware that the picture is very different in secondary and
primary education. About 78% of secondary schools are now
academies compared to about 38% of primaries. She questions their
performance. Our emphasis has been very clear. We are talking
about creating strong trusts and we are building on the
experience of the existing strong trusts. If all children did as
well as pupils in the top-performing 10% of trusts at key stage
2, our results nationally would be 14 percentage points higher,
going from 65% to 79%, and would be 19 percentage points higher
for disadvantaged pupils. I know the noble Baroness shares my
passion and the passion of my colleagues in the department for
supporting particularly those disadvantaged children.
On Oak Academy, far from deskilling teachers, we are going to
make the most enormous investment in teachers in terms of teacher
training opportunities and continuing professional development at
all stages of a teacher’s career. We are aware that, particularly
in primary, individual teachers are writing lesson plans from
scratch. Oak Academy is by teachers, for teachers and of
teachers. It is there as an option for teachers. Again, I know
the noble Baroness shares our concerns about teacher workload.
One way we can support teachers is by providing them with the
best-quality curriculum to draw from.
The Lord
My Lords, I echo the noble Lord, , in his thanks for the White
Paper. In doing so, I declare my interest as president of the
Woodard Corporation. In expressing gratitude, I appreciate in
particular how the White Paper recognises the vital role the
Churches have played in the educational landscape of this country
for more than 200 years and that it sets out how the role needs
to continue to be enabled in the future development of the school
system. I will focus on two questions regarding the move towards
the fully academised educational landscape set out in the White
Paper and invite the Minister to agree that it requires two key
things.
First, it requires significant investment of resource to make
that transition possible. The Church of England is the largest
provider of academies, with over 1,500 of our schools having
already converted, but that still leaves two-thirds of our
schools waiting to become academies. This will require time and
resource for the conversion process, as well as strong, new
trusts to be formed to enable that transition. Recognition that
MATs must grow to a sustainable level of about 7,500 pupils means
thinking carefully and strategically about small rural schools
and how a funding model can work for them, to enable their vital
education to remain at the heart of communities, particularly
rural communities, across our land.
Secondly, I hope the noble Baroness can give assurance that
legislation will be introduced to ensure that the statutory basis
on which the dual system of Church and state as partners in
education, which has been in operation since 1944, securely
translates into the contractual context in which academies are
based, so that the sites on which schools are situated can
continue to be used for the charitable purposes for which they
were given. So, in expressing thanks, I ask the noble Baroness to
assure us that these things will be addressed and secured in
order to ensure that Church schools can approach this new future
with confidence.
(Con)
I thank the right reverend Prelate for his questions. I also
extend my thanks to Church schools but also to all schools that
have been working in the most difficult circumstances,
particularly in the second half of this term, with the pressures
that Covid has placed, once again, on their staff. I can, I hope,
reassure the right reverend Prelate that we will be protecting
the faith designation of diocesan schools on a statutory basis as
we move forward with our plans. We are providing funding to
support academisation and to make sure that schools, particularly
schools in the most entrenched areas of educational
underperformance, are funded to join strong trusts.
On small rural schools—to go back to the point of the noble Lord,
, about feeling local—perhaps
there are no schools more local than small rural primaries, which
often play a really important part in their community. We will be
putting a great deal of thought into this and look forward to
working with the right reverend Prelate’s colleagues at the
diocesan education board in thinking through how we can deliver
this in a way that supports small rural primaries.
(Con)
My Lords, the Secretary of State deserves the warmest
congratulations, with the ministerial team and all those
officials and others who have been involved in Opportunity for
All: Strong Schools with Great Teachers for your Child. I suggest
that anyone who thinks there is excessive focus on English and
maths should consult parents. Parents want their children to read
and write; parents know the world is difficult; they know that
numeracy and now digital skills are critical. They know that a
good education is the passport for the future, and the most
disadvantaged parents know that quite as much as the most
affluent. I really like this White Paper for its coherence, its
ambition, its relative simplicity and its evidence base. How many
times have we all heard head teachers saying, “I’ve had so many
documents come through that I have to read—I’ve got to teach my
school and do everything else”? Somebody once said to me, “I’ve
given the documents to my husband to read because I just don’t
have time to read it all.” This is accessible and
approachable.
Children spend around 15,000 hours at school; the same amount of
time as they spend at home. Professor Sir Michael Rutter, the
architect of child psychiatry, wrote a book, Fifteen Thousand
Hours,with the team at the Maudsley, comparing the output of 12
secondary schools in Southwark. They found that the brightest
children at some schools were doing worse than the least able
children at another school. This is about teachers, about
expectations and about rigour. For those of us who want to see
what can be achieved, we can only celebrate again the
extraordinary results at the Brampton Manor Academy. This year,
89 young people got Oxbridge offers—ethnic minorities, school
meals, first generation university.
I have so much to say, I had better be quick. I have two
questions I want to ask. Will the Minister say a little more
about the Education Endowment Foundation; and will she say just a
bit more about excluded pupils? They are a really vexed problem.
They can be disruptive in a class aiming for high standards, but
we do not want them to fall out of the system, so I very much
hope she will address that.
(Con)
My Lords, I will pass on my noble friend’s very warm words to my
right honourable friend the Secretary of State. I am glad that
she appreciates the White Paper. I agree with her wholeheartedly
about what parents want. I was lucky enough to spend some time
with a group of parents yesterday while visiting a school in
Newham, where 94% of the children have English as an additional
language. The mothers and fathers to whom I spoke were all
crystal clear about how important it was for their children to
achieve.
In relation to my noble friend’s specific questions, the
Education Endowment Foundation, which we fully endowed through,
and announced in, the White Paper, provides us with the academic
rigour in terms of evaluating different interventions across the
education system, so that teachers, school leaders and MAT
leaders can feel confident in the interventions that they use.
All that we have suggested in the White Paper has been supported
and recommended by the EEF. In relation to excluded children, if
my noble friend will bear with me for another day, we are taking
the Statement about the special educational needs and alternative
provision Green Paper in this House tomorrow, when I will be
delighted to talk about that in more detail.
(LD)
My Lords, there is a great deal in this White Paper on special
educational needs and teacher training. Indeed, teacher training
is the main thrust of it. Then we talk about 90% literacy. Some
15%—or 10% if you are being conservative—of the population are
dyslexic. Another 5% are dyscalculic. If you put the other
“disses” in there, you have a great pot of people who are going
to struggle in the classroom. How, unless you have a major
investment in special educational needs, are you going to hit
that target? Or are we going to do something very sensible such
as saying that if somebody communicates through a computer
coherently—every computer that you buy now has a built-in
voice-operated section and read-back facility—we will count that
as being literate? If we are, we can achieve it. If not, we are
basically going to break the back of people achieving an
unrealistic target if it is still with a pen and paper. If the
Minister can give me an answer now, it will help the rest of the
debate today, and the debate on the Statement tomorrow.
(Con)
I hope I can give the noble Lord a fuller answer tomorrow, when
we talk about the SEND Green Paper. But in terms of this document
talking a lot about children with special educational needs and
disabilities, that is intentional. We are absolutely clear that
the best place for the majority of children with special
educational needs is in mainstream education close to their home
and their friends. We need to make sure that mainstream schools
are a safe, welcoming, supportive and effective environment for
those children. We have looked at and tried to model the
interventions that are set out in the White Paper to see how we
can reach the targets that we have set out. As the noble Lord
knows, however, currently only 22% of children with special
educational needs reach the expected standard, compared with an
average at key stage 2 of 65%—so it is well below what we need to
get to.
(GP)
My Lords, one of the themes that the White Paper majors on is
listening to the voices of parents and making sure that they are
heard. However, More Than a Score and Parentkind today put out a
survey from YouGov, showing that 80% of parents think that SATs
do not provide useful information about a child’s progress; 95%
say SATs have a negative impact on their child’s well-being; and
85% do not consider SATs results when choosing a school. Only 1%
of the members of the National Association of Head Teachers
thought that key stage 1 SATs should go ahead this year; 3%
thought that key stage 2 should go ahead. The White Paper is on
the bigger, longer-term issues, but are we not seeing, both in
terms of the Government’s determination to push ahead with SATs
and in terms of the focus on academic targets and testing in this
White Paper, a push to schools to more and more teach to the test
in a narrow range of subjects? Are we yet again not listening to
parents and not listening to pupils? I take the point from the
noble Baroness, Lady Bottomley, about pupils spending 15,000
hours in school. We have the unhappiest children in Europe. We
are failing our children, and focusing just on tests in a narrow
range of subjects is a big part of that. Will the Government
think about the happiness of our children?
(Con)
The Government think a lot about the happiness of our children.
We worry a lot about the children who are in underperforming
schools, and where their life chances are being held back because
of the nature of the education they receive. This is why we are
focusing our education investment on areas of really entrenched
under-performance. The noble Baroness shakes her head, but 54% of
children in secondary schools in Knowsley today are in schools
which have been judged more than twice as requiring more
improvement. That is what will turn around our children’s life
chances, and that is where we are focusing.
(Lab)
I thank the Minister for the answers she has given. I welcome the
ambition of the Government’s policies as set out in the White
Paper. I will look at the statistics they have provided with some
care. Are such statistics in a White Paper run past the UK
Statistics Authority—not just the figures, but the conclusions
drawn from them? It would be useful if we could be told.
I hope I will be forgiven if I suggest, for those with long
enough memories, that the support expressed in the White Paper
for well-managed families of schools delivering high-quality and
inclusive education, coupled with the encouragement in the White
Paper for LEAs to establish their own strong trusts, might be
taken as an attempt to recreate the achievements of the Inner
London Education Authority after many years. Of course, the fear
of many people is that academies—particularly when we have
multi-academy trusts—lead, in effect, to the privatisation of the
education service. The distinction between an MAT and a
commercial organisation is often hard to discern.
My first question for the Minister is, what are the Government
going to do to ensure that all academies, whether SAT or MAT,
operate with a social purpose? My second question, given the
emphasis on what parents want from education in the previous
question, is, what role do the Government want for parents in the
governance of academies? There is a reference in the White Paper
to a review of the governance of the system, but it is notable
that in the document, The Case for a Fully Trust-Led System,
there is only one reference to parents, and then only as passive
observers. Should the Government not do more to enable the
participation of parents in school governance?
(Con)
I am really puzzled by the image the noble Lord paints of
multi-academy trusts representing privatisation. They receive
exactly the same funding as any other state-maintained school,
and they are inspected in exactly the same way. The majority of
them are charities. I am not sure quite where privatisation comes
in. What we see in the best trusts—and perhaps this is behind the
noble Lord’s question—is that they use the resources from the
taxpayer intelligently, in the interests of the child. I will
give an example from the north-east of England. I recently
visited a trust which, through better procurement, was able to
reinvest those savings in dedicated tutoring for all their
students. I do not know where the noble Lord’s concern comes
from, but I genuinely think it is misplaced.
I turn to the noble Lord’s second point, about trust standards.
We will be working with this sector. There is not a lot of detail
in the White Paper because we want to co-create those standards
together with the sector, and we look forward to reporting back
more on that in the future. This would, of course, include the
role of parents.
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