Information on Loughborough
News Index
2012
Feb 2012Jan 2012
2011
Dec 2011Nov 2011
Oct 2011
Sep 2011
Aug 2011
Jul 2011
Jun 2011
May 2011
Apr 2011
Mar 2011
Feb 2011
Jan 2011
2010
Dec 2010Nov 2010
Oct 2010
Sep 2010
Aug 2010
Jul 2010
Jun 2010
May 2010
Apr 2010
Mar 2010
Feb 2010
Jan 2010
2009
Dec 2009Nov 2009
Oct 2009
Sep 2009
Aug 2009
Jul 2009
Jun 2009
May 2009
Apr 2009
Mar 2009
Feb 2009
Jan 2009
2008
Dec 2008Nov 2008
Oct 2008
Sep 2008
Aug 2008
Jul 2008
Jun 2008
May 2008
Apr 2008
Mar 2008
Feb 2008
Jan 2008
2007
Dec 2007Nov 2007
Oct 2007
Sep 2007
Aug 2007
Jul 2007
Jun 2007
May 2007
Successful leaders CANNOT transform their schools- new report
Posted on 15/03/2010
University of Leicester
“Twenty years of market-led education and the fantasy that good head teachers can fix society’s problems are jeopardising the future of a generation of young people” - says a top school leadership expert.
In a powerful and original new report, leading academic and former headteacher Professor Bernard Barker has launched a no holds barred attack on the policy apparatchiks who have turned education into a “frenzied rat-race”.
After 19 years as a secondary head, and 10 years researching school leadership at the University of Leicester, Professor Barker’s book The Pendulum Swings: Transforming School Reform (Trentham Books) criticises the five assumptions that shape Government policy.
He maintains that
• Successful leaders CANNOT transform their schools and change the system.
• Effective and efficient schools CANNOT overcome disadvantage and improve life chances
• Markets and competition CANNOT improve school efficiency and results
• Central regulation and inspection DO NOT ensure high standards
• “Best practice” in teaching and organisation CANNOT be transferred from one school context to another
As the first comprehensive schoolboy to become a comprehensive school head, Professor Barker calls for a return to progressive values that are concerned with children’s personal growth as much as their future economic productivity.
He said: “My research argues that education and society need to create the conditions for one another’s growth; and recommends action on four policy priorities:
• The responsibilities of national and local authorities should be rebalanced, so that decisions are brought closer to people and their communities. Strong communitarian policies should be adopted to reduce the impact of economic and social trends that have seriously damaged life and learning in many towns and cities.
• As public confidence in the test and examination system has collapsed, a National Commission should be established to investigate the operation, validity and reliability of current arrangements; and to recommend assessment practices that value qualitative as well as quantitative aspects of children’s learning.
• Cease to base school improvement efforts on the expectation that education can overcome the overall effects of social background and disadvantage.
• School leaders should be made accountable to local communities for progress and improvement; and school self-evaluation should be based on agreed local plans, not a national inspection template.”
Bernard Barker is emeritus Professor of Educational Leadership and Management at the University of Leicester. He is available for comment and interview and is willing to write articles on the themes raised in his work.