education Flashcards

1
Q

who provided most education for children in Britain during 1918?

A

LEA’s which had been created in 1902 - local education authorities:

  • paid for teachers
  • and provided free school meals for children
  • ensured the upkeep of school buildings
  • monitored teachers standards.
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2
Q

what was the first act of reform in education?

A

1918 - education act based on the Lewis report which:

  • changed the school leaving age to 14
  • new range of county colleges providing vocational courses, employers were obliged to release their young employee’s to attend at least once a week.
  • divided the ciriculum into practical instruction ( less able ) and advanced instruction (more able.)

most of the costs were transfered from the LEA’s to the central government making education centralised and the 1918 act a watershed moment in history.

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3
Q

what did the Hadow committee suggest?

A

1926
- they suggested to get rid of elementary schools and dividing it into primary and secondary schools with children transfering at age 11
- raise the school leaving age to 15.
these suggestions however were not implemented due to the cost.

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4
Q

what was the % of children in school in 1931?

A

only 20%

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5
Q

what was the impact of WW2 to education?

A
  • armed forces had to teach basic literacy and numbers to lower ranks
  • the technological complexity of modern warfare meant that education soldiers were needed.
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6
Q

what was the Butler act and when was it made?

A

1944 - Education act ( Butler Act ) and the later Scottish education act 1945:

  • created a Tripartite system which matched closely to Britain’s class system.
  • Grammar schools, intended to make an academic Curriculum and was open to all children who could pass the 11+
  • secondary moderns, educated lower classes, had fewer resources and less qualified teachers.
  • Secondary Technical schools, this was intended to educate middle classes for a life in science or engineering.
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7
Q

what was the impact of the Butler act?

A

for the first time millions of working class children had free and compulsory education and girls who had previously been excluded from secondary education.

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8
Q

what type of school grew through out the late 50’s and early 60’s?

A

comprehensive schools - they included all children regardless of their ability this was to prevent kids from feeling stigmitised at age 11.

  • grew under labour
  • offered more places
  • more diversified.
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9
Q

what was the crowther report?

A

1959 - this was put through due to governement being concerned about social and industrial needs. it made a series of recommendations including:

  • raising the school leaving age to 16
  • creating county colleges / and more technichal colleges for post 16
  • sixth form teachers of high intellectual calibre
  • widening the course options
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10
Q

what was the Newsom Report?

A

1963 - created more practical and vocational subjects

  • sex ed was made essential
  • helped less able children as more attention was paid
  • research into methods to help struggling kids or kids with mental difficulties.
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11
Q

what were comprehensive’s like under Heaths government?

A

Margaret Thatcher was Heath’s education secretary and she encouraged the merging of secondary moderns with grammar schools.

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12
Q

what was the 1976 education act?

A
  • left labour wanted to abolish selection funding
  • Wilson new this would be popular however instead he ended direct grant schools
  • teachers supported the government suggesting that this would take the elitism out of education
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13
Q

why did the 1976 act not help stop elitism but instead encourage it ?

A

because the direct grant school couldn’t afford to keep running so turned into private schools.

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14
Q

what was progressive education?

A

during the 60’s and 70’s older priciples of teaching such a rote learning changed to “child-centred learning “ this was a result of the Plowden repport.

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15
Q

what was the Plowden report?

A

1967 - recommended:

  • end to corporal punishment
  • giving children more freedom
  • encouraging teachers to help and advise rather than lecture children.
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16
Q

what were the Black papers?

A

1969 this was published against the use of progressive education by Brian Cox and Tony Dyson who released a series of papers criticising the lack of authority held by teachers.

17
Q

what was the Yellow book?

A

1976 - James Callaghan became prime minister and ordered a report into Britain’s education system (the Yellow book) this report stated that:

  • discipline had declined
  • many school ciriculum had not prepared people for the outside world
  • gov and public had too little say in what goes on in schools.
18
Q

what was the Ruskin speech?

A

mid 70’s - based on the Yellow book Callaghan delivered a speech at Ruskin College due to it being founded for working class men and Callaghan thought that they were the worst effected he suggested:

  • he did not wish to return to rote learning
  • there should be a national curriculum
  • teachers should be inspected
19
Q

uni’s during the 20’s - 30’s ?

A

mainly for the middle and upper classes however some grants and scholarships were given out by LEA’s and charities however these were highly competitive.

20
Q

what was the Percy and Barlow report ?

A

1945 clement Attlee should become centres for science and engineering

  • changed arts and Latin subjects to engineering and sciences.
  • expanded to cater to larger numbers of students
21
Q

what was the Robbins committee?

A

1961

  • it was produced because Britain had been overtaken by other countries in terms of university performance and the only option was to guarantee everyone a place who was eligible to attend
  • recommended a goal of 5 times more student places by 1980
  • unis must give instruction in skills to make sure the country had a competent workforce
  • develop students general powers of the mind to make them broadly well-educated
  • teaching academics should continue to carry out research
  • teaching also had a social role to produce a common culture and good citizenship.
22
Q

how were the conservatives and the labour party’s divided over the education systems between 1944 - 1976?

A
  • conservatives and the right of labour believed the tripartite system provided the economy with what they needed.
  • where as the left of the labour party believed it caused social division.
23
Q

what trend in politics began to decline by the early 60’s?

A
  • the thirteen years of conservative rule came to an end and popular anti-elitism began to spread in politics and the media
  • the Etonian backgrounds of Harold Macmillan and Alec Douglas-Home was seen by voters as hopeless.
  • an era of deference was long gone .
24
Q

what happened across developed countries regarding education during the 60’s?

A

Japan, Australia, Canada and Europe began to end their selection process leaving Britain lagging behind.

25
Q

what did Harold Wilson believe in 1964 regarding the education system?

A
  • that if grammar schools were so good then they should be available for all
  • “grammar schools for all.”
26
Q

what was the first ever comprehensive school?

A
  • first comprehensive was in Kidbrook in 1954