The real vandals are the ones who have wrecked the country!

Are they being held to account?

A Political song about Tory policy.

Cuts Cuts Cuts Cuts

Take from the poor and give to the rich

Cuts Cuts Cuts Cuts

Leave them naked without a stitch

Cuts Cuts Cuts Cuts

Take from the schools the NHS too

Cuts Cuts Cuts Cuts

Who needs those when private will do?

Cuts Cuts Cuts Cuts

The social care we’ll slash to bits

Cuts Cuts Cuts Cuts

Disabled and elderly can stew in their pits

Cuts Cuts Cuts Cuts

For the rich need the lot, they really do

Cuts Cuts Cuts Cuts

They’re worth it you see – unlike you!

A Passion for Education – A memoir, a revelation, an angry exposure – the story of how a maverick Headteacher created an outstanding school.

A passion for education

I taught in Secondary Schools in England and America for thirty six years. I focussed on the child. I concentrated on fun, exploration, wonder, awe and investigating all that was incredible. It was a journey of adventure.

My school was based on respect, responsibility, empathy, and relationship. Tolerance, happiness and equality was the basis for our huge success. We became the best in the country with three successive Outstanding Ofsted’s.

This is my story. It doesn’t pull punches.

If you want to read all about it you can buy it here:

Public Services are not unproductive. They perform an essential service that promotes the economy.

The Tories have an attitude towards Public Services: they regard them in the same way as they look at parasites – unwelcome.

The Tories regard Public Services as an unproductive drain on resources. They wish to reduce them to a minimum and curb pay for public servants.

The Tory ethos is that it is the Private sector that generates wealth. That is where the money should go. We can do without the Public sector.

This is short-sighted. While the Public sector does not generate the wealth directly it is essential to enabling the wealth generators to function. I would make the analogy to the army. The soldier may be the effective force at the front-line but without a munitions industry making the bullets, a transport industry to get them to the front, food, water and information they are helpless.

The Public services provide essential back-up.

We need our teachers, nurses, doctors, road workers, social workers, fire-fighters, police and council workers.

If you look in the field of education (that I happen to know something about) this is obvious. The workforce who are going to power the country and create the wealth are only able to do so because they have been properly educated. Every parent wants their sons and daughters to receive a first-rate education. They want nice schools which are properly equipped, excellent teachers who are well-motivated and a curriculum that stimulates their children.

If you don’t put the money into the system it falls apart. If you don’t pay properly then you do not attract the best. If you have poor work conditions and pension schemes you end up with demotivated staff. If you do not have the money to buy equipment lessons become substandard and boring. If you do not repair buildings they rapidly become dilapidated. You end up with a poor quality service.

The Tory answer is to introduce competition and threat. They deploy Ofsted as a weapon bring in business and use the big stick.

Result – the best teachers leave. The ones left are depressed. The children suffer.

I’ve witnessed it first hand.

The same is true for the Health Service, the Police, The Council Workers, The Fire Service, Social Services and the rest. They are all being paid less, have worsening conditions, reduced numbers, poorer pensions and expected to perform at the same standard. If I get ill I want to be operated on by one of the best. If I get mugged I want the police to sort it out. If my house catches on fire ……..

The rich buy in private to ensure they get the best. The rest of us have to make do with what’s left.

The infrastructure and support provided by the Public Services is a crucial part of the economy. They contribute!

Don’t believe the lies! We should have the best education, health care, policing, fire service, road maintenance, social care and environmental standards. You cannot do that on the cheap!

Lessons We Can Learn From the Rafe Esquith Suspension

We need common sense, flair and imagination in our classrooms. We can’t keep crucifying teachers for indiscretions. We need to be realistic!

Education – My book on Headship – A Passion for Education – you don’t have to be in education to love the rebelliousness of this book.

Education is fundamental to all of us, our children and the society we live in.

In this book I have given my views, anecdotes and feelings from an inside point of view. It is highly readable and you don’t have to be a teacher to enjoy it. It is controversial and real!

Here’s the foreword:

Foreword

 

I am a survivor of a concentration camp. My eyes saw what no person should witness. Gas chambers built by learned engineers. Children poisoned by educated physicians. Infants killed by trained nurses. Women and babies shot and killed by high school and college graduates. So I’m suspicious of education. My request is: help your students to be human. Your efforts must never produce learned monsters, skilled psychopaths, or educated Eichmanns. Reading and Writing and spelling and history and arithmetic are only important if they serve to make our students more human.

Haim Ginott

 

 

Leadership is about empowerment. If a leader doesn’t empower their staff to take risks and grow they aren’t worth their salt. For a leader to succeed all those working with them should reach their potential. That is good leadership.

 

A school is like an ocean liner. It builds up a head of steam and gets carried along by its own momentum. It cannot stop or change course abruptly. You have to guide it and plan each change of course well in advance. It takes all the sailors working as a team to run smoothly.

 

A Headship is like a race down a steep snow run on an old tin tray. You have limited control and your journey is perilously at the mercy of events and obstructions that cannot all be foreseen.

 

A Head sets the tone for everything that happens in the school.

 

The art of Headship is to sell your vision so that the whole community is pulling in the same direction.

 

Paradoxically a Head is largely impotent. As a Head you have far-reaching responsibilities and limited power. There are good things about this. Many Heads have proceeded to Headship out of a desire for power, control and money. They are ambitious and can be overbearing, ruthless, vicious and self-centred. At least the system prevents them exerting their regimes of fear and control to such a huge extent. The downside is that it stops you dealing properly with poor teaching. The kids deserve better but on the whole having restraints is better than tyranny.

 

You always find when you reach the top that you’re actually in the middle. A Head is in the middle of everything.

 

It is said that the fact that someone wants to be a politician should automatically ban them from standing; the same thing is true of Headships. Those that think they know what they are doing are usually the worst. If a Head starts their Headship by asking for more power or money they can be guaranteed to be doing the job for the wrong reasons.

 

The only reason to become a Head is that you have a passion for trying to make the world a better place, to make people happier and to see education as the only way of achieving this. After all, it has to be better than war, religious hatred and sectarian violence.

 

Then we approach the thorny subject of the purpose of ‘Education’. Education is all things to all men. To politicians it is a way of maintaining social order, reinforcing class or enabling mobility and addressing the economic needs of the country. To many it is purely about careers while to others it is about expanding minds, opening horizons and creating wonder. I’m very much in the wonder and awe camp. I am also of the repairing damaged kid’s persuasion. All my students were equally important and equally valuable. I hope I succeeded in making some of their lives better. That’s what I set out to do. Their chosen career and economic value was secondary to their self-esteem and happiness.

 

Before starting this I checked on ‘Rate my Teacher’, a scurrilous website that has given a voice to some rather dubious individuals, but one which reflects a series of views of how some others see you. It offers a modicum of objectivity. It was a little unsettling to see oneself described as an obese penguin from the CIA but on the other side there was the recognition of the care and respect. It showed a career that was not entirely wasted.

 

I worked in Education for thirty six years and prior to that I was largely a victim of it for twenty years. My experience of schooling gave me the impetus to get involved and work to change it. My disgust at Gove and the Tory attempt to belittle all the achievements of recent decades and drag education back to the appalling 1950s is my main reason for writing this. Children should be valued as human beings and not economic units. Education that is not developing all aspects of humanity and expanding minds is not only wrong it is disgusting. Most leading fascists have been highly educated after a fashion. It was their empathy, compassion and warmth of spirit that was allowed to atrophy. Any education system that fosters elitism and the smug arrogance that stems from it should be resisted by all caring people. A system that ignores the promotional of human feeling, sound moral and ethical values in order to focus on exam league tables and economic performance is flawed. The society created would be cold and bitter. It is a vision I have fought against all my life. I am for the warmth and light.

 

In my teaching experience I have known students with little intelligence, destined for poor grades, but possessing such a range of immense qualities that they are humbling. I have known highly intelligent individuals, destined for top jobs, who were vicious and mean spirited and likely to create misery. My job was to bring out the best in both and my hope that both types left school better equipped to make a positive contribution to society.

 

Education is a nebulous thing. We are building the future and the future is not only concerned with careers and wealth; it is also about families, societies, relationships and supporting those less fortunate. How to build a better world should be our curriculum. How we repair damaged children should be our imperative. How we foster positive human values should be our main aim. Teaching and Learning, Exam results and league tables are superfluous in the face of such paramount challenges.

 

This is why I believe the most important subject, and the most difficult to teach, is PSHE. All too often it is poorly taught, pushed to the shadows and taught by reluctant exponents who happen to have some free space in their timetable. This is a travesty. PSHE is about life, about preparing students for a better world, dealing with the big issues of responsibility, respect, tolerance and empathy. PSHE, like the Pastoral system, is about guidance, interaction and development of those qualities that raise the sensibilities. It should be given centre stage, pride of place and only taught by the very best of teachers with the most advanced skills. Anything less is short-changing the future.

 

The only way to address the world’s problems is good education.

 

As a probationary teacher I set about taking on the hierarchy of the school and changing the beast. I wanted a revolution. You don’t have to be in Senior Management to have a power base to promote positive change. I fought and managed to bring in a number of improvements. However, after twenty years of influential input from a lowly position, I realised that the best way of changing the beast was from the top and seized my opportunity to move into Senior Management.

 

I did things my way. I did not follow the rules. I was the grit in the Vaseline. The Senior Team found me a major problem. I refused to compromise. I did it the way I felt was right for the students and my own philosophy. Yet the method was highly successful. In the whole of my time in teaching I did not have a single report or inspection putting me below excellent. On the schools first Ofsted inspection, in which it achieved Satisfactory, all my areas were Outstanding. Over the next three Ofsted inspections, two as Deputy Head and one as Head, all my areas of responsibility were deemed outstanding. Being a maverick and not following the rules does not necessarily mean you cannot gain recognition. Risk Taking is a big part of the game. Covering your back is a weakness and a flaw. Doing what is right, even in defiance of the orders from above, is an imperative.

 

Duke Ellington supposedly first said that there were only two kinds of music: good and bad. The same is true of education. Bad education is destructive to minds, spirits and society. It should be banished even when it seemingly produces results. My Maths teacher always got 100% pass rate. I passed Maths from his class. Yet nobody was more successful at destroying a subject. To a man we came out of there hating Maths.

 

I have always questioned the education system. It seems crazy to put groups of people together grouped by age. That never happens in normal social interaction. It is asking for trouble, particularly during teenage years when hormones are rampant and brains are melting and becoming rewired. It reinforces lots of negative behaviour patterns. It is almost as bad as grouping people according to ability, but not quite. I think we need to bring our best minds to bear to find a better way forward. What Mr Gove proposes, a plunge back to the dark days of the 1950s emotionally challenged society would be a disaster. It has to be better than that.

 

I only served five years as a Head. It is something I regret. I was never personally ambitious and was severely lacking in self-confidence when it came to formal situations. One thing that was obvious was that there were going to be many formal situations and they came with the post. Consequently I came to Headship too late. I got used to the formal situations, overcame my anxiety attacks, and grew into them. One thing I have learned from life is that you should always push yourself and try to extend your reach. To not do so is to leave yourself with an unsatisfied life. You’d never know what you could have achieved. I guess I’ll never know. I would have liked to have served as a Head for longer and really got things going as I would have liked. The school was motoring. My cherished beliefs, that I had spent thirty six years establishing, were bearing fruit. The atmosphere inside the school was warm, friendly and buzzing with energy. We were a positive, can-do, all inclusive community. There was a lot of love.

 

If you review the full panoply of responsibilities involved with Headship, as with many other jobs, it becomes obvious that it is not possible to carry out the role successfully. You are responsible for everything twenty four hours a day, seven days a week. You have to know every rule and regulation inside out. You are expected to represent yourself without legal representation. To achieve this you would need to be in ten places at once, have a myriad of skills, be super intelligent and be able to read and hold in your memory a mass of legal documentation sufficient to fill a library. As with all such roles you learn to prioritise, deal with the pressing, delegate and relax into the knowledge that you are always exposed and could flounder at any moment from circumstances largely beyond your control. The stress is enormous. I was threatened with prison three times during my short stint. You can go two ways. You can become anal and try to nail everything down, creating a bureaucratic mediocrity or you can hold on tight, guide the tin can over the bumps and away from the trees, experience a spectacular journey and enjoy the adrenaline rush.

 

Outstanding can only come as a result of going for it and reaching as far as your spirit will allow. All the checklists in the world cannot create a single spark of originality or flash of genius. Inspiration comes from passion.

 

Headship is a lonely place but it can be exhilarating when you have the support of the community you have helped create. Sometimes it all comes together and is transcendental. Those are the moments we live for.

 

As far as I was concerned mediocrity should never be an option.

 

What follows are my views on education and the mechanics of how the school came to become Outstanding while prospering as a friendly, supportive community in which everyone was loved and valued.

 

I believe with all my heart that we can mend broken kids, soften the arrogant and aggressive, and use education to change the world into a tolerant, peaceful place that works in harmony with nature.

 

When education is done properly it soars. It should work to take humanity out of the morass of war, poverty and religious intolerance into a new age.

 

I look forward to a new world, risen like a phoenix from the ashes of the old, where selfishness, greed and violence have been banished.

 

This is no idle dream of a helpless romantic idealist. This is the true product of education.

 

Chris Goodwin 16.11.2012

Ofsted Inspections fail our children! They are too narrow! They are too political!

Ofsted has become a vehicle for Tory Education dogma. They are too narrow and are failing our children. They are channelling schools into having to teach to the test, created a strait-jacket of teaching methods, downgraded all our creative subjects (Art, Music, Drama), reduced the curriculum to a skeleton, taken all the social skills out, reduced child-centred education, made teaching an overly bureaucratic nightmare and driven our best teachers out.

The international PISA tests are used as an excuse. The PISA tests are a disaster. They are narrow and pointless. Japan and Korea may cram their kids to the point of suicide in order to get to the top but they are not educating them. Education is so much more than knowledge. Proper education inspires students, enables them to think, encourages lateral thinking and problem solving, induces social skills, self-esteem and caring attitudes. Education should be child centred, nurturing and expansive.

You do not educate for the 21st century by returning to the 1950s.

You do not have schools run like businesses.

You do not pit school against school in competitive folly.

You do not create factories of learning with teachers performing like machines.

You do not drive the best, most inspired teachers out of the profession.

You do not work your staff into the ground, terrify and castigate them.

You do not treat students like consumer products, statistics in a table or gradees.

You don’t get a pig to put on weight by weighing it every minute.

You don’t do any of that if you want o create a good education system.

You replace Ofsted, who have failed, with an inspection system that is less draconian and ore supportive. You produce a broader, more varied and skill based education system.

Gove has created a nightmare – the fruits will damage our children for years to come.

Read more on how to do it right. I was a Headteacher who got it right!  – Buy my book:

 

Education under the Tories – Tickbox heaven – Statistic nightmare!

failed-student failure school-privatization-cartoon  soldiers in classroom Free-schools_2085870c streamingTired%20Teacher%20(smallest)_4 ofstedLines-cartoon-19_05_09-001 Ofsted 0511-1009-2115-2533_Cartoon_of_a_Gloomy_Guy_Standing_in_the_Rain_with_Tears_on_His_Face_clipart_image

Under the Tories it is teaching by numbers.

All that matters is the results, the league tables and the statistics.

Every lesson is slotted into the same mould.

Every teacher is battered into the routine of an automaton.

Heaven help you if you have a personality or flair.

One size fits all.

The children are drilled to become regurgitating zombies.

We must climb the league tables, remember the facts, pass the exams.

Every school has a big bonfire on which they pile the useless things to be burnt. Things like Fun, creativity, care, individuality, music, art, and culture.

This is the Tory concept of pass and fail. The bright ones are worthy; the rest are worthless.

Children are dumped on the rubbish heap.

This is the age of education on the cheap. We do not need qualified teachers. They are too expensive. The plebs can manage with anyone standing in front of a class.

This is education for free. Set up a ‘Free’ School – let the Creationists, Religious Right and Big Business pay to indoctrinate your kids. It won’t cost the State a penny.

We’ll get the big Academy groups in to cream off a profit off your kid.

And if your kid should complain that the stress is too much, the lessons are too boring, the curriculum is too narrow; we’ll get some soldiers in to keep discipline!

And if the teachers complain we’ll put them through a disciplinary and threaten them with capability.

And if the Management complain we’ll bring in Ofsted and have them kicked out.

This is the age of bullying, winners and losers.

Unless you are in the Public School system and can pay to send your child to a Private School – you can have teachers with flair, schools without bureaucracy, no ofsted breathing down your neck and lots of personal attention, interesting lessons, creativity and culture. Because you deserve it!

Education is not a business! Our children are not statistics – they are people!

PublicSchools assembly-lc4b1ne-learning-tg-ver

We are seeing the political dogma of business talk being applied to education.

Our children are being reduced to statistics. They are successes or failures in the exam grade rat-race and league tables.

Do we want the suicide rates of Japan?

the automatons of S Korea and China where thought is driven out by knowledge?

I want my children happy, well adjusted, full of self-esteem and cared for. I want them nurtured, creative and full of vim. I do not want to see frazzled, burnt-out wrecks who are being put through a sausage mincer!

Perhaps you would like to read what a highly successful ex-Secondary Headteacher has to say. I think I’m the only one making sense!

 

Abolish all Public Schools (Private Schools) – It’s the only way to ensure good funding.

bullingdon_club_at__417769a

Until such time as all the millionaire business-people, politicians and establishment have to send their children to the bog-standard comprehensive we will never get the level of funding necessary to create a brilliant education system.

While an elite can give their children advantage and privilege by means of a cheque-book there will never be a level playing field.

The establishment actually have a vested interest in keeping the rest of the people down. It reduces competition. Their children can prosper at the expense of ours.

There is no reason why our children should suffer inner-city deprivation, shoddy classrooms, over-crowding, political dogma, bureaucracy, poor teachers and unimaginative lessons. Down the road the Toffs Public Schools have plenty of funding, no political interference, Ofsted or National Curriculum and can buy in the best. If one of their students is floundering they target endless support and nurture them through. While in the State system where it is fraught, under-funded and over-controlled tyranny, redeployment, sacking and fear is the order of the day.

I bet if the rich had to go to a State School we’d soon find funding and standards shooting through the roof.

Read what a highly successful ex-Secondary Headteacher has to say. I’m the only one making sense!