My tuppence worth on the education debate.the pinky/lefty/socialist elite who run education (and most other things)in this country,have for years refused to accept that not all children have the same acedemic ability. so they are all taught the same things in large groups .this results in the more naturally academic pupils losing out terribly. The less academically able do at times recieve help (special needs) to try to bring them up to the level of the average,but the more able are ignored (why cant they have tuiton for their special needs)so they often fall to the level of the average.they are effectively dumbed down.
This of course fills the socialist idea of utopia. i.e.-everyone is the same.
here in Essex we are fortunate that we still have a few Grammar schools and I would like to see them re-introduced across the nation.
they could be called speciaal needs colleges for the more academicaly inclined if need be. we could also have similar colleges for more practically inclined pupils, but we would be educating children according to their talents rather than a leftist political dogma.
both of my children passed the 11 plus ,the first one in the last year of the old corruption ridden system ,and the second in the first year of the new fairer system.
Despite the fact that their dad was a concrete shoveller,they both had the opportunity to go to uni , but neither of them wanted to go.
my daughter in particular said it was a waste of time as degrees arent worth much more than the paper they are written on these days,as the socialists are well on the way to doing to the worlds greatest universities what they have done to the countries schools.
She decided thar she wanted to be a city trader and that she would do it by dogged determination and sheer hard graft.
she got a back office job with Bank of America in Bromley and had to travel on god knows how many trains ,there and back,getting up at 4.50 a.m. and often getting home at 10.30p.m.
She is now a fully fledged trader in the city and loves every minute of it.
Forgive me if I sound boastful,but I cant deny that I am very proud of her,and the fact is that if she can do it from humble beginnings,then with the right attitude and hard work ,so could others.
you have to want it badly enough and work hard enough, and not think that the country owes you a living/computer/degree etc;
btw-In my 20,s I was a devout socialist.tgwu shop steward,thought Neil Kinnock was going to be a great prime minister.
someone once said -he who has not been a socialist before he is 40 has no heart.
he who is still a socialist after he is 40,has no head.
Hell of a lot of common sense there Albitz, which is always a good base for debate in my humble opinion!

However, the basis of my argument is that we still need a true meritocracy within our education system, so that all children have a
level playing field of opportunity, with equal resources available to them from the age of five years.
This does not mean an
absolute desire to obtain paper qualifications and eventually degrees;
no, this does
NOT fit all children and all the comment on many needing practical training is absolutely correct in my humble opinion.

It is that just too many children never reach their full potential due to their social circumstances, which we should always attempt to address.
Yes, this is a utopian aim, but like all others that would make our society better is it not worth aiming for?
Remember many Victorians had the then 'utopian' aims of free, compulsary, education for all children, that only commenced with Foster's Education Act of 1870 to make available elementary education to all children, then the 1880 Act made it compulsary for all children to receive free education up to the age of 10, the 1902 Education Act abolished the old school boards and replaced them with LEA's to orginise better funding, and at last the 1918 Education Act finally made it compulsary for children up to the age of 14 to receive full, free, education.

So some form of 'utopia' does take a long time to transpire, and indeed it was not until the 1944 Butler Education Act that created the tripartite system did the teaching finally
start to meet the needs of the country's children and begin to help them reach their full potential.
However it is, in my opinion only of course, that it still has a long way to go in the manner I originally touched upon.
