Europe needs to get real on defence; Britain needs to get real on Europe
13 February 2025
Post
27 August 2010
4 minute(s) read
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There is one piece of evidence missing from this and from the original piece. Not all A levels are GCSEs are regarded by universities aqs of equivalent academic difficulty and value (one of the reasosn why, as you say, foreign lanaguage study is in decline). To make a fair comparison between sectors we need to see subjects as well as overall grades.
You say state school A’s/A*s up by 0.9% and C or better by 2.2% but then just say private schools “fell” without quantifying. You should also give absolute values. Off a low base, 2.2% may be very little and “fell” by a small amount could mean statistically irrelevant. I have no pre conceived idea, I’m genuinely interested on what is happening but I just can’t tell from here. I suppose I could read the report but then I’d have no reason to read your blog…..
The only language that seemed to have an increase in take-up was Polish, for fairly obvious reasons. I agree it is wrong thaf GCSE no longer includes a language. English may be number 1 in the world but it won’t always be so. Also a good discipline to learn languages. If Mandarin becomes the language of the future kids from those countries who have a habit of learning languages – the rest of Europe for example – will have an advantage
All I know is my son (state school) got all As and A stars and I am proud as punch. Also know he did it cos he worked hard and we helped him.
I agree with everything in this article except the bit about forcing a language. Loads of kids aren’t interested in learning a language, especially in the environment of a hot cramped classroom a thousand miles away from the actual place, culture and people. I remember being in the middle set at my comprehensive for French, most students didn’t care and treated it as a “mess about” lesson (a bit like how many students apparently treat learning Welsh in Wales). Half the students in my class got poor grades and it was hell for the teacher, and that was just in the middle sets. Was probably even worse in the lower sets. I think learning a language is definitely good and important but not for everyone, especially at GCSE level
My eldest two both went to excellent primary and secondary schools, number one son just passed his 4th year medical exams and number one daughter is studying French and IR at St Andrews.
I hope your daughter is getting better (number one son broke his leg two years ago playing that tarts game, rugby so I know how how uncomfortable it is for her).
Back on to politics, it seems the coalition will severly impact the aerospace industry if press reports are to be belived re defence cuts. The coalition which wants to rebalance the economy by helping manufacturing, to help private industry pull out out of the recession and to build a skills base will have the death of the UK aircraft industry on their plate. Cameron assured me personally on BBC GMR that Typhoon would be safe under the tories, we shall see. If you can help us Ally, I’d be grateful.
A State School with a top notch HM can shit all over private boarding perv factory.
The poorest kids in my school were the most driven
Let us look forward to the day when the two systems’ results coincide.
In the meantime your malice should be turned on the “Jeremy Kylers” who cost us all tens of billions a year, are unemployable and educationally have done nothing….apart from drag down the other members of their classes, who may have had a desire to learn. You were a party to the introduction of the system whereby the decision to exclude the yobs could be overridden and the rest of the pupils would suffer.
You also arranged a system where over 40% of some “Uni” entrants were slung out by some “Unis” for failing first year exams, having incurred great debt.
You need to join up your thinking on education, and be less spiteful.
It really does frustrate me when newsreaders do interviews after exam results come out, they always seem to say it is because of exams being dumbed down. The results don’t come easy, they really do have to work hard. My daughter goes to the local Comprehensive School, and is on target to get A’s and A stars next year. I find it really insulting and demoralizing for the kids who really do work hard.
My daughter goes to the local secondary school, she works really hard, she’s now on target to achieve As and A stars next summer. I think it is really demoralizing and insulting to keep insisting that the exams have been dumbed down
Whilst I agree with the blog on foreign languages, I feel it is far more important to mandate, at least GCSE, in sign language to create a truly inclusive society. The deaf should not be 2nd class, and of course many other non-deaf people sign to communicate.
I studied English, Swedish and German at school. And I have learned some French and Italian on my own for trips abroad.
This has served me well. I have, for example, about 700 books in English – most of them have not been translated to Finnish.
It is also good for business that many people here have command of foreign languages.
And when you are abroad, it is polite to know at least a bit of the language.
“So the media (did I tell you that virtually all national editors and senior commentators send their own kids to private school, in Mailgruppe Obergruppenfuhrer Dacre’s case to Eton,”
And in Polly Toynbee’s case?
And in Diane Abbott’s?
A further point about state school pupils who go on to university. Private school parents bleat that comprehensive students are benefiting from positive discrimination at University and gaining admission with lower grades than those obtained by private/public school pupils. In fact, many universities are discovering that comprehensive students with lower grades actually cope better and get better final results than private school pupils with higher grades, who, once out of the hot-housing, cotton-wool wrapping, hand-holding atmosphere of their public schools, simply don’t do as well as their comprehensive school counterparts at university, where self-reliance comes into play. So it’s not ‘positive discrimination’, it’s picking those likely to perform best at university.