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The Tomlinson Report
In October 2004, Michael Tomlinson issued his proposals
for the 14-19 curriculum. The proposals were subsequently
rejected by the Government. The articles below sum up
reactions at the time.
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14-19 Education and Skills - the White Paper
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Ministers have failed in their promise to reform the 14-19
curriculum and created a "rag-bag" of changes by
rejecting the findings of the Tomlinson inquiry, England's
General Teaching Council said in April 2005. It said the Government
had missed an opportunity to revise the qualifications process,
in particular to make it more equitable for low-achievers.
In a draft response to the 14-19 education and skills white
paper, the council backed plans for greater support for key
stage 3 pupils performing below Level 5 in core subjects.
It was critical, however, of the failure to raise the status
of vocational qualifications, the "narrowness" of
the proposed new diploma and the lack of emphasis on teacher
assessment. There was also a lack of alignment with the Government's
Every Child Matters policy, which promoted greater cooperation
between education, health and social services, it said.
(TES, 22 April 2005)
More
on Every Child Matters
New vocational diplomas will be introduced in schools and
colleges from 2008 under plans to raise the "scandalously"
low proportion of English teenagers staying on in education
past the age of 16. The work-related qualification is the
central proposal in a White Paper, which ministers said would
transform secondary education, published in response to the
18-month Tomlinson inquiry. There will also be a new diploma
for 16-year-olds. To get it they will have to get five Cs
or better at GCSE, including at least a C in both English
and maths. This measure of success will also be used in league
tables next year.
GCSE English and maths will be redesigned to make it impossible
to get a C without having mastered "functional"
aspects of the subjects, said the paper. But there will be
no basic English or maths exams, as Tomlinson wanted. There
has been widespread dismay at ministers' decision to reject
Sir Mike Tomlinson's central recommendation: a diploma including
both vocational and academic courses. A-levels and GCSEs,
which he wanted scrapped, will continue alongside the new
vocational diploma.
Union leaders, educationalists and bodies including the Independent
Schools Council said the White Paper represented a missed
opportunity to put vocational and academic courses on an equal
footing. The Government's 2003 Green Paper, which set up the
Tomlinson review, said it should move to a "unified qualifications
structure suitable for all young people". But this has
been rejected. Instead, it focused on streamlining the current
3500 vocational courses for 14 to 19-year-olds to three-level
diplomas in 14 subjects by 2015.
(TES, 25 February 2005)
Chief inspector David Bell is on a collision course with
colleges over suggested reforms to the way 14 to 16-year-olds
are taught. Mr Bell has called for a new type of vocational
school to provide work-related teaching for teenagers. While
these schools should act in concern with schools and colleges
they eould have a specific brief to provide quality work-related
studies. However, colleges accuse Mr Bell of failing to fully
understand government initiatives already in place to get
more pupils onto college courses and workplace training from
14 as part of a wider share school programme.
(TES, 7 January 2005)
Read
the White Paper's key points
Tomlinson report
suggests radical changes
Report from the Financial Times:
Schools need to go back to basics
Secondary schools should put the core skills of reading, writing
and numeracy at the heart of the curriculum, according to
a far-reaching report. But the government rejected any rush
to overhaul the examinations systems as "foolhardy",
promising to publish its own plan for curriculum reform in
January 2005 (for more details see the link below).
Charles Clarke, education secretary, welcomed proposals for
the 14-19 age group from Mike Tomlinson, former chief inspector
for schools. He said that plans, which call for the biggest
overhaul of schools for more than 50 years were "a cogently
argued, challenging and compelling vision of the future."
But Mr Clarke fell well short of promising to adopt the radical
and potentially expensive package wholesale, leading to speculation
the Government would make some changes to the curriculum quickly,
leaving other reforms until well after the general election,
and abandon the most controversial. A-level courses, for example,
could soon involve fewer external exams, with the new AS level
abandoned as a compulsory staging post to the full qualification.
The greater emphasis on vocational learning will require
a dramatic increase in teachers with a relevant career background,
and better facilities, both of which will be expensive to
provide. Absorbing existing qualifications such as GCSEs and
A-levels into a new diploma structure could take as long as
a decade, and the Government has promised that the existing
examinations would not be abolished but provide the "building
blocks" of any new system.
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Tomlinson's proposed system - a broader range of
learning recorded on a new-look 'personal transcript'
held online
- Secondary school pupils would take fewer exams.
GCSEs and A-levels, along with their vocational equivalents,
would become part of a four-stage, graded diploma
- From the age of 14 onward, every pupil would study
core skills - 'functional' maths, English and IT,
and would only receive a diploma if mastery of these
skills had been proved
- Core skills and advanced qualifications would be
externally examined. GCSEs and vocational courses
at 16 would be assessed internally by teachers trained
and accredited as examiners
- Vocational training would be offered to all children
that want it, often in FE colleges
- More children would have the option of taking bonus
questions to earn an A+ or an A++ at A-level, and
some could even take university courses while still
at school
- Every pupil's achievement, including work experience,
community involvement, sport and arts, would be recorded
in detail in an online 'transcript'. Universities
and employers would use this to select students and
employees
- Schools would be held to account and measured on
the proportion of children achieving a pass, merit
or distinction diploma, and the numbers demonstrating
the required literacy, numeracy and IT skills.
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(FT, 19 October 2004)
Report from the TES:
Tomlinson proposes fewer external exams until 18
Under the proposals of the Tomlinson review of secondary
schools, GCSEs and A-levels will be replaced by a four-level
diploma qualification by 2014. The highest A-level equivalent
will be assessed mainly by external exams. But lower levels,
including that taken by 16-year-olds, will predominately be
graded by teachers based on pupils' work during the course.
The report will also propose:
- Teachers to be trained as chartered examiners to oversee
internal assessment in schools
- The diploma to be offered at pass, merit and distinction
levels
- All students to take compulsory courses in functional
maths, English and information technology
- Formal coursework to be scrapped in many subjects, replaced
by a single, cross-curricular project at advanced level
- Within the next three to four years, advanced extension
awards and a compulsory project to be incorporated into
A-levels, which would have A* and A** grades
- A-levels would be cut from six modules to four
A separate taskforce also proposes that from 2008 students
will apply to university after their A-level results are published.
A-levels would be brought forward by two weeks, and university
terms put back, to give an 11-week gap between the results
being released and the undergraduate courses starting.
The Tomlinson report is expected to call for changes to the
schools league table system. With an intermediate diploma
at 16 seen only as a progress check, and most pupils staying
in education until 18, the group believes it would make little
sense for tables of 16-year-olds' results to continue. A group
member said: "There are a lot of issues where change
will be needed, including league tables." One suggestion
is that the tables should include groups of schools in the
new system, encouraging collaboration.
Ministers have not yet agreed the details, however, and most
of the recommendations will undergo lengthy trials before
being implemented.
(TES, 16 October 2004)
The White Paper 14-19
Education and Skills was the Government's response to
the Tomlinson report.
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