In the lead-up to the 2007 election the opposition leader, Kevin
Rudd, argued that if elected he would champion an education revolution directed
at raising standards and making Australian students more internationally
competitive.
Six years later the Australian Council for Educational
Research's analysis of national and international test results prove what a
failure this Labor government has been under Julia Gillard and Rudd. Finally, the penny has dropped and the education establishment
is admitting that our students, especially talented ones, underperform and that
something urgent needs to be done.
But don't expect things to improve. Rudd's Better Schools Plan
and National Education Reform Agreement, compulsory for all schools, enforce a
cultural-left, lowest-common-denominator view of education.
Funding and resources are directed at the usual victim groups,
in the mistaken belief such groups are always disadvantaged and that
disadvantage is the main cause of students underperforming; while the needs of
gifted children are ignored.
The Better Schools Plan also discriminates financially against
independent and Catholic school students, the students who achieve the
strongest results and who are critical if we are to improve performance in
international maths and science tests.
Additional evidence of the government's pandering to a victim
mentality is the fact none of the millions of dollars wasted on the National
Partnership Agreements implemented by Rudd and Gillard has been spent on
improving the performance of more able students or fostering meritocracy in
education.
The reasons our students underperform and why standards have
declined or flatlined are not hard to find.
Those responsible for the education system, including teacher
educators, the Australian Education Union and subject associations such as the
Australian Association for the Teaching of English, have long argued against
competitive assessment, the rewarding of merit and a rigorous, academic
curriculum.
The philosophy is an egalitarian one, where all achieve success
and all are celebrated.
Cultural-left critics also argue that the traditional, academic
curriculum, where not all can do as well, is elitist, socially unjust and
guilty of reinforcing capitalist hierarchies.
As a result, the overwhelming majority of students at Year 12
are given a pass grade, regardless of the fact their level of ability may be
substandard. No wonder most of our universities have bridging courses and
remedial classes in basic algebra and essay writing.
Unlike in the US, where the National Assessment of Educational
Progress testing ranks students as basic, proficient and advanced, Australia's
National Assessment Program - Literacy and Numeracy at years 3, 5, 7 and 9
tests students only to a basic level. This ethos also means that, unlike in
Singapore, where classes are streamed in terms of ability and students face
high-risk tests and examinations, Australian schools embrace mixed-ability
classrooms.
It impossible for teachers to cope with the range of students in
the ability spectrum; more gifted students are ignored as teachers concentrate
on those less able.
It's also common at school speech nights for every student to
receive a prize, on the basis that all must be winners.
No wonder Australian students, even though they are beaten by
Asian students who believe they can always do better, feel they are doing well
and that there is no need to work harder.
Even worse, instead of ranking students against one other or
against explicit, concise standards, the belief is that learning is
developmental.
This means that because children learn at different rates it
doesn't matter if they are a bit slow; the expectation is they will eventually
master what needs to be learned, no matter how long it takes. Many children
float through primary school and enter secondary school without the required
mastery of the basics.
That problem is compounded by the fact they are assessed against
vague and generalised descriptors that make it impossible to identify with any
precision what constitutes the required level of ability.
One needs only to see the consternation and public outpourings
of recrimination when we lose to New Zealand in rugby or the English in cricket
to appreciate the significance Australians place on success in sport.
It's an indictment of our cultural-left education system and
Rudd's education revolution, now rebadged as the Better Schools Plan, that the
same intensity to win and to support and reward excellence is not given to our
education system.
Kevin Donnelly is director of Education Standards Institute and
author of Educating Your Child: It's Not Rocket Science.
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