Sunday, December 28, 2025
ADVT 
International

UK Education Reforms Spark Debate On Class And The Classroom

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 09 Sep, 2016 11:15 AM
    LONDON — In Britain, the class system and the classroom are intertwined, and education reforms inevitably cause political controversy.
     
    Prime Minister Theresa May made a bold move Friday by announcing plans to let more schools select children based on academic results.
     
    In her first major domestic policy speech since taking office in July, May said she would ease restrictions on new selective schools — and give existing ones 50 million pounds ($67 million) to expand — to help make Britain "a place where advantage is based on merit not privilege."
     
    The issue of academic selection is highly controversial, and May's plan is sure to face strong opposition. For decades British children were tested at age 11, with those who did best going to academically focused grammar schools, and the rest to "secondary moderns" which gave them little chance of getting to university.
     
    The two streams were largely merged by the 1970s, and nowadays most children attend state secondary institutions known as comprehensive schools. Many educators say creating new grammar schools will lower standards in comprehensives by siphoning off the brightest and most ambitious pupils.
     
     
    They also say well-off parents can pay for private tutors before selection exams.
     
    Chief schools inspector Michael Wilshaw said Britain "will fail as a nation if we only get the top 15 to 20 per cent of our children achieving well."
     
    Others argue that comprehensives fail the brightest children, and say grammar schools improve social mobility because they select pupils on academic ability rather than parental income, as private schools do.
     
    May said that "the debate over selective schools has raged for years."
     
    "But the only place it has got us to is a place where selection exists if you're wealthy — if you can afford to go private — but doesn't exist if you're not," she said.
     
    She said new grammar schools would have to take a portion of children from lower-income households.
     
    May's plans face a fight from opposition parties in Parliament, as well as some members of her own Conservative Party. May's Conservative predecessor, David Cameron, opposed expanding grammar schools, saying parents "don't want children divided into successes and failures at 11."

    MORE International ARTICLES

    NRIs hail Modi's UK trip

    NRIs hail Modi's UK trip
    Prominent NRIs based in Britain have welcomed Prime Minister Narendra Modi's three-day visit to that country beginning Thursday, a statement issued here said on Wednesday.

    NRIs hail Modi's UK trip

    Asked In An Email Whether He'd Kill Baby Adolf Hitler, Republican Jeb Bush Says, 'Hell, Yeah'

    Asked In An Email Whether He'd Kill Baby Adolf Hitler, Republican Jeb Bush Says, 'Hell, Yeah'
    Presidential candidate Jeb Bush says he once got an email asking if he would go back in time, if it were possible, and kill the baby Adolf Hitler.

    Asked In An Email Whether He'd Kill Baby Adolf Hitler, Republican Jeb Bush Says, 'Hell, Yeah'

    Rare Blue Diamond Expected To Fetch Up To $55 Million In 2 Days Of Jewelry Auctions In Geneva

    Rare Blue Diamond Expected To Fetch Up To $55 Million In 2 Days Of Jewelry Auctions In Geneva
     Two rare colored diamonds go under the auction hammer this week in Geneva, with one standout blue diamond discovered in a South African mine last year expected to fetch up to $55 million — which would set a world record for any gemstone.

    Rare Blue Diamond Expected To Fetch Up To $55 Million In 2 Days Of Jewelry Auctions In Geneva

    Swraj Paul's Son Angad Falls To Death In Britain As The Family Business Collapses

    Swraj Paul's Son Angad Falls To Death In Britain As The Family Business Collapses
    Angad Paul was the CEO of Caparo Industries steel firm situated on Baker Street in London.

    Swraj Paul's Son Angad Falls To Death In Britain As The Family Business Collapses

    American India Foundation Raises $200,000 For India's Maternal and Newborn Survival Initiative

    American India Foundation Raises $200,000 For India's Maternal and Newborn Survival Initiative
    Founded in 2001 at the initiative of then US President Bill Clinton, the community organisation engaged in catalysing social and economic change in India, raised the amount at its annual Washington DC gala Friday.

    American India Foundation Raises $200,000 For India's Maternal and Newborn Survival Initiative

    Indian-Origin Men Booked, Face New Zealand's First Human Trafficking Trial

    Indian-Origin Men Booked, Face New Zealand's First Human Trafficking Trial
    Satnam Singh, Jaswinder Singh Sangha, and a third man with name suppressed are the first people in New Zealand to be charged with people trafficking

    Indian-Origin Men Booked, Face New Zealand's First Human Trafficking Trial