Coalition Policies 2010 Flashcards
What policies did the Conservative Coalition introduce?
English BaccalaureateChanges to academiesIncreased tuition feesFree schoolsInequality policies
What is the English Baccalaureate?
Schools had to show what percentage of students achieved A-C in ‘core’ subjects: English literature and language, maths, science, humanities (history or geography), and a language
What is positive about the English Baccalaureate?
Encourages schools to focus on important subjects
What is negative about the English Baccalaurate?
Head Teachers said this might disinterest less academic studentsNew Labour made languages optional because students would skip it anywayDidn’t include RE as a humanity, disadvantaging faith schoolsWho says these are the most important subjects?
What changes did the coalition make to academies?
All schools were encouraged to become academies, not just failing onesGave more schools freedom from local authority control
What is positive about the changes to academies?
Gives schools freedom to act in their own interest
What is negative about the changes to academies?
Ofsted doesn’t check them as often, meaning standards could drop
What changes did the Coalition make to tuition fees?
New Labour introduced tuition fees: £3,290 per yearCoalition tuition fees: £9,000 per year
What is positive about the changes to tuition fees?
Allows the government to reclaim some of the costs involved with education
What is negative about the changes to tuition fees?
Discourages working class students from going to university (fear of debt)
What are free schools?
Swedish policy, allowing anyone (e.g. businesses, parents, faith groups) to set up and run schools how they like with government funding
What is positive about free schools?
Improves education standards by giving power to parents
What is negative about free schools?
Allen (2010): in Sweden, where 20% of schools are free schools, mainly the middle class benefit from thisSweden’s international education ranking has declined since free schools
What inequality policies did the coalition introduce?
Free Schools Meals - giving cost-free meals to low-income Reception-Year 2 childrenPupil Premium - extra school funding for disadvantaged students (e.g. poverty, disability)
What is positive about the coalition’s inequality policies?
Directly benefits the working class and disadvantaged students