Wednesday, 2 May 2012

I was asking questions, but not the right ones


It takes something unexpected to nudge you off the path you’re on

It was discovering Betty’s dyslexia, and then watching this famous TED talk, that made me start questioning everything about education.


And I realised we’ve been accepting a system none of us really supports. Because, despite apparently giving it lots of thought, we never stopped to ask the right questions

We’d chosen a good school. The girls are doing well. Everything seemed fine. Until this made us ask a simple question

What is a good school good at?

The answer is obvious. Good schools are good at getting good results.

But what does that mean? And why is that important?

The logic flow goes like this - Getting good grades now are important, because they’ll get you on track to get more As in more GCSEs. And that will help you get better A Levels, which will help you get to the university you want. And then you’ll be able to do what you want in life

But (setting aside happiness in the present), supposing we work back from that ultimate objective – being able to do what you want in life. What will best help them achieve that?

Getting great results at a great university?

Maybe that helps. 

But how much? If I think of all the interviews I’ve conducted, I doubt that everyone who made our hour together feel like 10 minutes had a dizzying first from somewhere with dreaming spires. And I know for sure that the ones that made me wish I had an ejector seat didn’t all have a 2:2 from somewhere a little disappointing

Being able to think, talk, create, collaborate, make and do have always been the things I valued most. They’re what I always tried to teach my students. They’re the reason I ran away from Oxford. And the reason I chose to work in the communications industry.

But that’s just about reflecting my values. More important is ensuring the next generation is fit for their future.  

In a world where google knows more than each of us ever can, it’s thinking, creating, questioning that becomes really valuable, not just knowing. 

But our school system often encourages knowledge and understanding rather than creativity and questioning, in its haste to get as many people through as many GCSE’s as soon as possible.

Hmmm...

Maths and English aside, and assuming you're over 21, when was the last time anyone asked you how many GCSEs you got? Or what your geography grade was?

Is the holy grail of 13 A* GCSE’s a currency with any real value? Are we chasing impressive sounding  numbers rather than meaningful, valuable outcomes?

And now I’ve started questioning, I just can’t stop

Why is it a good idea to try and take exams earlier than ever, when these kids will be working and living for years longer than previous generations?

Why don’t we create space to experiment, and fail, and learn from it?

Why do we split subjects up, separate them out, when often ideas develop through the connections between things?

What’s actually important vs just expected?

What do we really want to achieve?

Is the system set up to enable that to happen? And if not, what can we do about it?

They’re big questions. 

And most of them don’t just apply to schools.

So I’m busy exploring alternative education systems, ones that are built to deliver the results we find truly valuable

Of course, I desperately hope my girls will be happy with the decision we make. 

But any time they’re not, I at least expect them to be able to question my judgment incisively and confidently, and think creatively about alternatives

Because I’ll take active questioning over passive acceptance any day