(Note, however, that despite this unanimity there are no academies or
free schools in Wales,
where education policy is devolved.
Welsh Labour and UK Labour are increasingly different parties. The choices offered therefore are not
determined by what the party is called but by the milieu in which it operates, in
Labour’s case by whether it has a nationalist rival to keep it true to its
roots. An interesting lesson for Wessex!)
The parties are equally united in their enthusiasm for more taxpayer-funded
faith schools, notwithstanding the recent scandal in Mercia that was absolutely
predictable and irrespective of whether it is the faith element that is
actually key to standards. On Michael
Gove’s watch, a deal with the Church of England will allow it to incorporate
former community schools with no religious character into its Diocesan Academy
Chains, with bishops having the power to appoint governors. The non-religious choice is being squeezed
out as provision is outsourced. In our rural
areas, where the CofE dominates primary provision, choice doesn’t exist and
never has.
Does the faux-Maoist mantra of constant revolution in the classroom and
the abdication of any common responsibility chime with public opinion any more
than the similar churning of the NHS?
No, it doesn’t. According to a
YouGov poll recently, only a third of the adult population approves of State
funding for faith schools; nearly half actively disapproves. Meanwhile, free schools are being desperately
flogged. Planning rules have been ripped
up, to allow children to be herded into redundant cinemas, factories and prisons,
with local communities barred from commenting on anything besides noise and
traffic. All because local communities,
through their councils, might otherwise sabotage the Coalition’s flagship
policy. So if free schools can’t pass
the local democracy test, let’s not have local democracy.
Here’s a radical decentralist alternative. One, abolish Gove’s job, along with his
entire department. Two, devolve all
schools spending to councils. Three, let
them make every decision that cannot be made at the level of the school itself. Decisions such as planning and building new schools
in line with population changes, schools they are currently banned from initiating, as totalitarian liberalism
insists they be. Or making provision for
area-wide services, such as educational psychology, the music service and,
where cost-effective, school meals and transport. Heads should be able to find better things to
do than waste their time juggling budgets for outside contractors. Four, tell the evangelical bishops and the misogynist
imams to fund their own hobbies henceforth unless they can fairly win control
of their council first. Five, scrap
academies, free schools and all other experiments in segregationist child abuse
and reinstate community-accountable education.
Six, for a proper level playing field, give all schools the same
freedoms that these cotton-wooled cuckoos enjoy. And above all, seven, remind voters that the
way to get rid of a bad Labour council with destructive education policies
isn’t to transfer all its powers to a bad Tory minister in London.
It’s to vote for real change.
It was always predicted that centralisation would prove too unwieldy to
work and last week, with half of all secondary schools now rebranded as
academies, Gove had to fess up. The idea
of running tens of thousands of schools directly from Whitehall has been abandoned. It will be replaced by eight regional bodies,
to be known as ‘Headteacher Boards’ (HTBs).
What’s the betting that there’ll be a ‘South West’ and a ‘South East’? And what happens to the viability of each HTB
if the density of academies / free schools versus traditional arrangements varies
from region to region according to what’s popular locally? You know, that choice thing.
Two black marks for the price of one.
Not just an unaccountable, self-regulating firewall of a bureaucracy to
save the Education Secretary’s skin when the wheels finally come off the three-party
liberal bandwagon. Worse than that. One that is neither central nor local but,
yes, regional. How off-message can you be? Why, even readers of the Torygraph are bemused by the ramifications. What does the future now hold for Gove? Detention, or expulsion? We know what report we’d like to write.
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