The report by Dominic Cummings argues that our young people’s
educational performance is not about the quality of teaching, but about
genetics. Now I’m not so blind to
biology to doubt that someone’s genetic make-up clearly has a major impact on
the person they are.
I’d be unsurprised to learn that there are certain genes
that affect learning, and it stands to reason that there are some children more
naturally gifted in some areas of education than others. But Mr Cummings goes some way beyond
that. The implication of his 250-word
report is that a child’s educational attainment is almost pre-determined by
their DNA.
What a radical and bizarre claim.
Aside from the fact it conflicts with the views of just
about every education professional you are ever likely to meet, it somewhat
begs the question why Mr Cummings thinks anyone wants to bother trying to raise
teaching standards.
All of this reflects very badly on Mr Gove.
Most worryingly, it begs the question what other wild and
wonderful ideas have been bounced around in generating some of Mr Gove’s highly
controversial changes to education in the last three-and-a-half years.
If Mr Gove’s most trusted aide seems to believe the role of
teachers in shaping our young people’s minds is so minimal, does this explain
the Secretary of State’s total lack of respect for this vitally important
profession?
We in Derby have been on the receiving end of some of Mr
Gove’s attacks on education. We’ve seen
academies forced upon the city, and we’ve played host to the most controversial
example of Mr Gove’s Free School model, with the Al-Madinah establishment.
And as a city whose children have suffered because of Mr
Gove’s interventions, we’ve got every right to feel aggrieved if it now
transpires that even the most crackpot ideas are on the table when it comes to
the development of Tory education policy.
But what I find particularly worrying about Mr Cummings
report is how closely it represents Tory policy generally.
What does Mr Cummings suggest? Do we just abandon schooling
and instead put children in a room with the right textbooks and let the natural
talent just get on with it while the others flounder? Well that’s exactly the sort of mentality
reflected elsewhere by this Government – a protection of the minority and a
total disinterest in supporting, or even thinking about, the majority.
And it is that parallel which makes it very difficult to
discount Mr Cummings’ radical views as unconnected from other worrying policies
being churned out by Mr Gove and the Tories.
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