An Open Letter to Nicky Morgan – UK Education Secretary

unhappy

Dear Nicky Morgan MP,

Thank you.

A heartfelt thank you from a parent of a current Year 6 class in the UK.

Why am I thanking you?

Well, for the timely manner in which your Education Committee have provided the new Standards that teachers need to use to grade their pupils.

Not only do they now have just barely 3 months to act on these standards before the SATS, but they now also have to let the majority of a whole year group know that apparently, they are not actually good enough.

Thank you.

Many thanks for being the reason my child will be setting himself up to fail.

Thank you.

Let me show my gratitude in advance, for the flood of Year 6 teaching vacancies that will be about to appear, as many talented professionals feel they have failed, because they couldn’t get the vast majority of children to reach these new standards.

Oh let’s just cut to the chase, shall we?

The new National Curriculum, rolled out last academic year, was a tough one. Most children were working, apparently, at least a year behind where the new Curriculum felt they should be.

Even so, I saw, with the support of the wonderful staff at my son’s school, that for the first time in his academic life, my son was ‘meeting’ the National Standards.  You don’t know the confidence boost that gave to him.  I could see him visibly grow taller, so to speak, as he felt that he was actually alright in his studies.

And for the first half of this year, he has been working on this premise, and all the work he has done, has been pointing him in the ‘meeting’ direction. (Maths may be a wobbly one, but hey, I was never great at maths either!)

Then your announcement.

Wonderful.

What a great start to the holidays for a child, eh. The teachers regretfully had to let him know, along with many other children, that according to someone sat up in a bubble, their work was apparently not good enough.

I am sorry, but have you seen some of the new things they have to learn?  I have sat with Google to hand to work out what some of the grammar actually means.  This is not the work of a primary school aged child, but more that of your 13 year old secondary school pupil!

And the new SATS.

So you are testing with the new Curriculum in mind.  But this year of children have only been studying the new Curriculum for 2 years… effectively, they may have missed 2 years of subject matter that you are meant to be testing them on.  Where is the fairness in that?

(Let’s not mention the fact that you are seemingly not willing to sit the test yourself…)

Surely you could have held the new SATS for the year group that had actually studied the whole curriculum, as it stands, like the current Year 3 children?

All this barely weeks before they are about to find out where they are going to Secondary School too…

So many teachers have been trying their hardest to get their pupils to reach these unrealistic goals that you have set, and when it all comes back to bite you in the butt, a lot of them will have given up trying.  And you know what is even worse?  Those same teachers are the ones who have to face the flack of the parents, whose seemingly genius child is now apparently just average, or those happily average children, who now are deemed lacking in their intelligence.  It’s not their teaching that is at fault, it is you, changing goal posts at such a late stage in the academic year, and placing them so far away.

So again, I say thank you.

My child may just end up feeling like he’s stupid. He may lose the confidence that he had finally built up. He might feel that trying his best is just not good enough, so may end up not even trying.

I have worked hard with my children, to instil the importance of education into them.  I just hope that all our hard work at home, and all the hours and hard work of his teachers has not been in vain.

Kind Regards,

A concerned mum

P.S. Did I mention that I am an Early Years teacher…? Don’t get me started on Baseline, and what you think 3-5 year old’s should be able to do!

Dunce

Images courtesy of Google.

71 Comments (+add yours?)

  1. Trackback: My Picks Of The Week #22 | A Momma's View
  2. amommasview's avatar amommasview
    May 10, 2016 @ 06:34:38

    Yep, naughty corner it is! Well said, Ritu! I wish he would take the test!!!

    Liked by 1 person

    Reply

  3. Trackback: Can’t Get No SATs-isfaction | But I Smile Anyway...
  4. reocochran's avatar reocochran
    Mar 05, 2016 @ 23:17:58

    I am very sympathetic to your son who is close to my oldest grandson’s age. He is in 5th grade, 11 years old. I do believe we need to have standards which represent learning levels. I was surprised as a special ed preschool teacher, I logged on to our state (Ohio) and after 3 different tests given 3 x annually let them know how 3 to 5 year olds, were meeting standards. It actually helped those who were working with these students in the therapies, occupational (fine motor), physical (gross motor), and speech. They could help set individual goals using these for the children. Hoping that your child will excel as a student, finding out about the test may help next time. Or maybe surprise you. Crossing my fingers! 🙂

    Liked by 1 person

    Reply

    • Ritu's avatar Ritu
      Mar 05, 2016 @ 23:39:43

      Thank you!
      I think the problem is not neccessarily in the testing, but in the inflated expectations… they are so not what children of that age would realistically be able to do, so that is what is really worrying. And if they are not achieving these pie in the sky goals, what will it do for these children’s self esteem??

      Liked by 1 person

      Reply

      • reocochran's avatar reocochran
        Mar 09, 2016 @ 07:53:04

        Oh, I agree. I hope I didn’t sound like I didn’t care about the children’s feelings, Ritu. I do care. I think it is so hard to make tests which reflect the learning and knowledge children have. This was a great comment about their self esteem. . . 🙂

        Liked by 1 person

      • Ritu's avatar Ritu
        Mar 09, 2016 @ 08:01:37

        No, I understood what you meant! 😊
        We had to sit a SPAG (Spelling, Punctuation and Grammar) paper last night in our staff meeting… A year 6 one, so the teachers across the school were aware of the expectations.
        Got 48/50, but that was with three of us doing it together, and my team kept on looking to me as I am the ‘writer’!
        It wasn’t so much the actual grammar, as the wording of questions, and the fact that the basic grammar we learned seems to go have been remanded and broken down further, and given ridiculous long convoluted names that 10-11 year olds don’t really need to know!
        Then the head teacher said, “by the way, that’s last years paper… This year it’s even harder!”
        It made us question ourselves as teachers, and educators… If we are to teach this, we need to know it too, in the form the kids are being taught…
        Guess what, at 40, I will be going back to school to learn grammar! We are booked on a course in September, all the staff!!!!

        Liked by 1 person

      • reocochran's avatar reocochran
        May 28, 2016 @ 00:20:47

        I know this is sad, I am up at my Mom’s and reading old comments. I am excited to hear of your learning grammar. This means you will find an easier, newer way to teach this, Ritu. I apologize for tardy response!

        Liked by 1 person

      • Ritu's avatar Ritu
        May 28, 2016 @ 07:15:11

        No worries! !!

        Like

  5. New Journey's avatar New Journey
    Feb 21, 2016 @ 17:36:39

    BRAVO I am sitting up straight and clapping…..go get em…..hope this makes them sit and listen….great letter…..xxkat

    Liked by 1 person

    Reply

  6. itsgoodtobecrazysometimes's avatar itsgoodtobecrazysometimes
    Feb 21, 2016 @ 16:03:11

    Reblogged this on itsgoodtobecrazysometimes and commented:

    So many of my friends with children in school think just this

    Like

    Reply

  7. itsgoodtobecrazysometimes's avatar itsgoodtobecrazysometimes
    Feb 20, 2016 @ 20:26:03

    I really fear what my son is going to have to do, when he starts school and I am in an argument with my partner about home schooling him

    Liked by 1 person

    Reply

  8. Trackback: The Fallout from Curriculum Changes – How It Affects Real People | But I Smile Anyway...
  9. Chris White's avatar Chris White
    Feb 15, 2016 @ 11:05:29

    Also, have a read of Nicky Morgan’s entry on Wikipedia. She really does seem to inhabit a different universe. https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nicky_Morgan_(politician)

    Liked by 1 person

    Reply

  10. Wafflemethis's avatar wafflemethis
    Feb 15, 2016 @ 01:51:40

    Well said Sis. You give em hell 😘

    Liked by 1 person

    Reply

  11. Marie's avatar syllabubsea
    Feb 14, 2016 @ 17:11:48

    Well said! Marie

    Liked by 1 person

    Reply

  12. Judy E Martin's avatar Judy Martin
    Feb 14, 2016 @ 08:29:54

    It makes me sick that they are forever changing their standards and expecting every child to be able to meet them after not being given the chance to!
    It must be hard enough being a teacher/teaching assistant at the moment without all this added pressure (my SIL is a year 6 Teaching Assistant).
    As for the poor children struggling to understand what is expected of them and why are they one minute doing well, and the next needed to work harder to achieve some unrealistic standard set by someone that does not have a clue what actually goes on in the classroom.
    I applaud you Sis for speaking out.

    Liked by 1 person

    Reply

  13. Erika's avatar Erika Kind
    Feb 13, 2016 @ 22:42:45

    Oh, Sis! I can totally feel with you and understand your anger and frustration about this short-thought (if that is a word) decision. What you say sounds like absolute nonsense with the effect of destroying the work of the teachers and the joy of learning and motivation for the pupils. I understand your worries about your sons’s self-confidence…. I would feel the same!

    Liked by 1 person

    Reply

  14. Nick Verron's avatar Nick Verron
    Feb 13, 2016 @ 21:00:37

    Great use of sarcasm here!

    Liked by 1 person

    Reply

  15. Chris White's avatar Chris White
    Feb 13, 2016 @ 20:04:38

    I began teaching way back in 1975 and finished in 2003. So many changes within that time. All the teachers I worked with were just like all the teachers you now work with (yourself included) … BRILLIANT, AMAZINGLY HARD WORKING AND ABSOLUTELY DEDICATED. I saw the Guidelines come in sometime in the 1990’s.
    We were told they were only guidelines. We were absolutely assured that teachers would NEVER EVER be told WHAT TO TEACH OR HOW TO TEACH IT. We were told that we were the experts. Over the next 15 or so we all became swamped with curriculum files, paperwork … everything. And now look at how you so very rightly feel.
    I feel that all teachers, children and parents have been let down by successive waves of misguided politicians, so called research and government thinkers.
    Like you say … they are constantly shifting the goalposts. They are no longer on the same pitch even. Worst thing … most of them haven’t experienced a state education themselves.
    I started teaching in a small Norfolk village in 1975. 6-7 year olds class of 40.
    The headmaster said to me … just do some reading and writing and a few sums with them each day and you’ll be just fine. Guess what. We did. No files, minimum planning. I worked hard, learnt the job, made mistakes and developed my own strategies, shared them with other teachers. They were all doing the same.
    You are all wonderful Ritu.

    Liked by 2 people

    Reply

    • Ritu's avatar Ritu
      Feb 13, 2016 @ 20:07:18

      Thanks Chris. It is so frustrating that none of these decision makers are actually living the reality of education today. It’s easy to sit back and make suggestions and changes… but come see what you’re doing to the kids and the teachers with all this unnecessary change …

      Like

      Reply

  16. ellenbest24's avatar ellenbest24
    Feb 13, 2016 @ 19:40:54

    As a mother of a primary head mistress of not one but two schools! I say post it! do it now with everyone’s backing.

    Liked by 1 person

    Reply

    • Ritu's avatar Ritu
      Feb 13, 2016 @ 19:44:02

      Thanks Ellen. I bet your daughter is under immense stress. It’s is hard for our school already as we are a high EAL school so English is very much a second language for many of our pupils, but for your average school where the pupils are predominantly English, or British born, it is still far too hard! I did English as part of my degree and I still don’t understand some of the grammar… and I’m a writer too!

      Liked by 1 person

      Reply

      • ellenbest24's avatar ellenbest24
        Feb 13, 2016 @ 19:59:43

        One school has a vast array of non English speakers, special needs and difficult to place children, over and above the norm. How that School can ever attain the levels in comparison to a nice high achieving Cambridge school i don’t know. But mine is not to talk specifics but to support where i can, the hands that are neatly tied, along with tongues clamped from making a stand. 😢

        Liked by 1 person

      • Ritu's avatar Ritu
        Feb 13, 2016 @ 20:04:40

        Hear hear!

        Liked by 1 person

  17. Nancy's avatar Nancy
    Feb 13, 2016 @ 19:39:19

    Well said! We are facing a lot of the same nonsense here in the US. Very frustrating for parents and teachers as well as the poor kids who are expected to live up to unrealistic standards.

    Liked by 1 person

    Reply

  18. kim881's avatar kim881
    Feb 13, 2016 @ 19:30:52

    I couldn’t agree more!

    Liked by 1 person

    Reply

    • Ritu's avatar Ritu
      Feb 13, 2016 @ 19:33:33

      Thanks Kim! It is really frustrating, as a teacher, but more so as a parent, seeing what this does to our children. And after all, that is what they are, children, not robots that can just be programmed with all this information!

      Liked by 1 person

      Reply

      • kim881's avatar kim881
        Feb 13, 2016 @ 19:44:27

        I used to love secondary teaching but had to take early retirement, partly due to stress. I am so glad I didn’t have to go through this when my daughter was at school (she’s 35). I am a volunteer for the Norfolk Reading Project and go to local first schools to listen to year 1 and 2 children reading. My sister has been teaching nursery and first school for 30 years and she is at the end of her tether. I feel terrible for children these days as there us no room for fun, creativity or individuality.

        Liked by 1 person

      • Ritu's avatar Ritu
        Feb 13, 2016 @ 19:47:33

        No you are right… it has all slowly been stripped away…. right down in nursery all the way up the education ladder…

        Liked by 1 person

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