Tuesday, June 16, 2026
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

    MH17 victim found wearing oxygen mask: Dutch minister

    MH17 victim found wearing oxygen mask: Dutch minister
    Dutch Foreign Minister Frans Timmermans has said that one of the passengers on the crashed Malaysia Airlines flight MH17 had an oxygen....

    MH17 victim found wearing oxygen mask: Dutch minister

    Imran Khan asks Sharif to speak up against border firing

    Imran Khan asks Sharif to speak up against border firing
     Pakistani cricketer turned politician Imran Khan has asked Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif why he is not speaking up against Indian "aggression" along the frontier...

    Imran Khan asks Sharif to speak up against border firing

    WHO: Spain's Ebola case won't be last in Europe

    WHO: Spain's Ebola case won't be last in Europe
    MADRID - A Spanish nursing assistant may be the first person in the ongoing epidemic to catch Ebola outside of Africa, but she probably won't be the last, experts warn.

    WHO: Spain's Ebola case won't be last in Europe

    Pakistan again raises Kashmir in UN

    Pakistan again raises Kashmir in UN
    Raising the Kashmir issue yet again at the UN, Pakistan dragged the UN Military Observer Group (UNMOGIP) into the current situation along the Line of Control where cross-border shelling has flared up....

    Pakistan again raises Kashmir in UN

    Twitter sues US government over surveillance rights

    Twitter sues US government over surveillance rights
    Twitter has sued the US government for restricting the microblogging site from sharing online government surveillance reports with its users....

    Twitter sues US government over surveillance rights

    Teacher banned for sending topless selfie to student

    Teacher banned for sending topless selfie to student
    A British teacher has been banned from teaching for five years for sending her bare-breasted pictures to a 16-year-old student....

    Teacher banned for sending topless selfie to student