by Virgil Tibbs » Wed Jan 12, 2011 5:08 pm
The so called English bacc results were released today. Michael Gove pushed for these to be included in the annual league tables as a counter point to the vocational subjects many students were steered towards to skew school rankings upwards. Some students may well prefer the vocational route but until today any students who would like to pursue a more traditional timetable would not be able to tell from the league tables which local schools could offer that. Introduced this year, the English bacc is the % of pupils in a school achieving A*-C GCSE passes in English, maths, two science subjects, a language and history or geography. The Eng bacc will not be compulsory in schools.
Here are some of the Eng bacc results for our local schools:
Chestnut Grove 2%
Battersea Park 6%
Elliot 4%
Southfields 4%
Graveney 38%
Emanuel (indy) 66%
So light the blue touch paper and stand back. Much of the educational sector will (and are) up in arms about this for obvious reasons. For parents and children however it at long last adds some sanity and balance when trying to figure out which school is right for them. So for example, if you want a traditional education, then avoid Chestnut Grove, where 98 out of 100 kids fail to achieve this. If however a more vocational route is right for your child, then Chestnut Grove gets a 43% pass rate against this benchmark (inc english and maths).
For the achievement gap to close, and for lower income kids who want to go to a Russell Group university for example, the Eng bacc results can only be a good thing moving forwards. Gove may not be getting everything right, but he is the quiet revolutionary of the coalition and should be thanked for this one.
The so called English bacc results were released today. Michael Gove pushed for these to be included in the annual league tables as a counter point to the vocational subjects many students were steered towards to skew school rankings upwards. Some students may well prefer the vocational route but until today any students who would like to pursue a more traditional timetable would not be able to tell from the league tables which local schools could offer that. Introduced this year, the English bacc is the % of pupils in a school achieving A*-C GCSE passes in English, maths, two science subjects, a language and history or geography. The Eng bacc will not be compulsory in schools.
Here are some of the Eng bacc results for our local schools:
Chestnut Grove 2%
Battersea Park 6%
Elliot 4%
Southfields 4%
Graveney 38%
Emanuel (indy) 66%
So light the blue touch paper and stand back. Much of the educational sector will (and are) up in arms about this for obvious reasons. For parents and children however it at long last adds some sanity and balance when trying to figure out which school is right for them. So for example, if you want a traditional education, then avoid Chestnut Grove, where 98 out of 100 kids fail to achieve this. If however a more vocational route is right for your child, then Chestnut Grove gets a 43% pass rate against this benchmark (inc english and maths).
For the achievement gap to close, and for lower income kids who want to go to a Russell Group university for example, the Eng bacc results can only be a good thing moving forwards. Gove may not be getting everything right, but he is the quiet revolutionary of the coalition and should be thanked for this one.