El ministro se burló por los profesores sobre pruebas y tamaños de la clase
Las escuelas ministran, caballero de Jim, fueron dadas a público que viste abajo por los profesores ayer como él intentó defender tamaños grandes de la clase y el régimen de prueba del gobierno.
Él fue burlado por los delegados en la asociación conferencia de los profesores y de los conferenciantes de la' después de ser pedido si una clase de 38 pupilas para ocho y del nueve-año-olds en una escuela primaria era aceptable. Sr. Knight contestó tal clase que los tamaños eran “manejables” si a las ayudantes de la sala de clase apoyó al profesor. Then, in what was supposed to be a vote of thanks to Mr Knight for his speech, one of the ATL’s executive members, Phil Jacques, tore into the Government’s education policies – criticising ministers for their lack of trust in teachers.
Mr Jacques, a science teacher from Mr Knight’s constituency in Dorset, was cheered by teachers at the conference in Torquay when he said: “Class sizes of 38 shouldn’t be made more manageable. They simply shouldn’t exist.”
He won further applause as he attacked “the ridiculous amount of over-testing of English schoolchildren” and told the minister that the national curriculum was “dismal, tedious and over-prescriptive” and “of very little value”.
Mr Jacques, from Shaftesbury school, Wiltshire, said: “It’s no wonder there are large numbers of disaffected children in these schools. In some schools, disaffection results in violence.”
He went on to attack the Government for its lack of trust in the teaching profession, saying: “How can you speak of trust when you tell us what to teach, how to teach it and when to teach it? Then you tell us how to assess it.”
Mr Knight, who described his reception as a “friendly disagreement”, later told journalists he had recently visited a school in Telford where there were 70 pupils in class with a teacher and three other adults which was “perfectly manageable”.
He said that Mr Jacques “may have had a point” about the over-prescriptive curriculum and said that a new secondary school curriculum to be introduced in September would give teachers more freedom. He said the Government had also initiated a review of the primary school curriculum, which was being carried out by Sir Jim Rose, former head of inspections at Ofsted, the education standards watchdog.
However, he made it clear that national curriculum tests for 11 and 14-year-olds were here to stay.
Mr Knight also attacked the British culture whereby it was “acceptable, fashionable even, to declare that you are useless at maths”.
He was speaking as the Government published the interim report of an inquiry into primary school maths, which suggested parents should be encouraged to join in lessons with their toddlers at nursery school so they could learn alongside their children. The report called for a maths specialist to be appointed to every primary school so that struggling children could be given tuition to help them catch up.
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