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Delivering Shared Education
Vani Borooah and Colin Knox
Knowledge Exchange Seminar
1st November 2012
Challenges for Education ‘Pattern of provision that is both unsustainable
educationally or financially’. 85,000 spare places or the equivalent of 150
excess schools Public spending cuts
Further challenges ETI Chief Inspector’s Report: two (of three)
themes: achieving value and transforming communities.
Achieving value: FSM pupils – ‘low level of achievement and the widening gap in outcomes are unacceptable’
Improving the quality of leadership and management across all sectors
Further challenges Transforming communities: closing the
achievement gap – ‘all schools need to work as united community…to improve standards and outcomes for all learners.’
‘More cohesive planning and closer collaboration are required to serve the best interests of the learners..’
We have a hugely segregated system
In summary There are 3 key challenges facing education
system:Education outcomes are too variableSignificant access and performance inequalitiesHigh level of segregation
Proposals for change ‘Ensure that every learner fulfils his/her potential
at each stage of development’ Viability audits to identify stress:
Quality of educational experienceEnrolment trendsFinancial standing of schools.
Proposals for change Viability audits used to develop strategic plans
leading to network of viable and sustainable schools.
Drive up educational standards and address social needs
Promote principles of equality of opportunity and good relations throughout the process.
Consistent with DE policies
Progress to date Guidance from DE to ELBs: ‘realistic, innovative
and creative solutions’ – where are they? Evidence from draft area plans does not suggest
serious commitment so far.
Underpinning assumptions Factors driving reform agenda:Excess demand (85,000 empty desks)Need to save moneyTrend towards larger schools
• Is the current premise of education reform flawed?
Two Red Herrings
1.Big Schools are “Cost-Saving” and “Educationally Beneficial”
2. There are 85,000 “empty desks in NI’s educational system
Three Neglected Issues1. Why are schools Struggling financially?
88% of schools were either not in any budgetary difficulty not in any serious budgetary difficulty.So, essentially 25 schools out of 217 post-primary schools were in financial difficulty.The unasked question is: Is it structural or is lack of training and competence in financial management?
2. Why do FSM pupils not get access to grammar schools? They constitute 17% of post-primary pupils but only 7% of grammar school enrolment
3. Why are Protestant grammars worse than Catholic grammars at enrolling FSM pupils? 4.2% versus 9.9% of enrolment were FSM
Another Neglected Issue4. Why is there so much inequality in performance between secondary
schools?
If two secondary schools were chosen at random, the difference between their respective proportions of pupils achieving 5+ A*-C grades, including English and Mathematics, in their GCSE examinations 18 points.
If two grammar schools were chosen at random, the difference between their respective proportions of pupils achieving 5+ A*-C grades, including English and Mathematics, in their GCSE examinations 6 points
Grammar School Secondary Schools Total
FSM Pupils 4,150 22,419 26,569
SEN Pupils 4,147 20,615 24,762
Other Pupils 53,836 42,735 96,571
Total Pupils 62,133 85,769 147,902
Table 1: Distribution of FSM and SEN pupils by type of SchoolSource: Borooah, V.K. and Knox, C. (2012) Educational Performance and Post-Primary Schools in Northern Ireland. University of Ulster.
Number of Schools
Enrolment 2011/12(years 8-12)
Average Total Enrolment
Free school meal pupils
SEN pupils Year 12 pupils
5+ GCSE, A*-C
5+ GCSE, A*-C including E & M
Grammar Schools
68 663 914 61 61 137 133 128
Secondary Schools
149 478 576 150 138 98 58 35
Table 2: Average Educational Performance of Schools by Type of School, 2010Source: Borooah, V.K. and Knox, C. (2012) Educational Performance and Post-Primary Schools in Northern Ireland. University of Ulster.
Two More Neglected Issues5. Why do some schools have such poor attendance? There are schools where over 40% of pupils are “poor attenders”.What effect does poor attendance have on school educational performance?What does it say about leadership in schools? The quality of teaching and education provided?
6. How to raise school performance in terms of the proportion of GCSE passes at A*-C grades including English and Mathematics?Although this features large in educational policy aspiration, there is no strategy to deal with it.In this seminar we will propose a solution.
Large Schools will Save Money?They will not reduce the Department’s budget significantly.
Considering primary and post-primary school closures in their entirety, if all schools with enrolments below the threshold number of pupils were to be closed, the Department of Education would cut the Northern Ireland Aggregate Schools Budget by 3.1% (£35 million out of a budget of £1.126 billion) but simultaneously displace nearly 50,000 school pupils.
This is because under AWPU, money follows the pupil. The saving in school closures will come from: Premises Factor, Small Schools Factor, the Principals' Release Factor, and the Foundation Schools Factor.
The additional travel costs and opportunity costs of time on pupils will be large. Our study for Fermanagh showed that they would swallow up most of the budgetary saving made by the WELB in closing schools that were “too small”.And there are community costs!!
Large Schools Confer Educational BenefitsLarge Schools are neither necessary nor sufficient for a good educational performanceGood Small Schools: 1.St. Paul’s College in Kilrea/Coleraine (NEELB) with 317 pupils: 98% of its pupils obtained 5+ GCSEs at A*-C grades and 58% of its pupils obtained 5+ GCSEs at A*-C grades (including E&M).2.Rathfriland High School in Newry (SELB) with 296 pupils: 96% of its pupils obtained 5+ GCSEs at A*-C grades and 54% of its pupils obtained 5+ GCSEs at A*-C grades (including E&M). 3.Newtownhamilton High School in Newry (167 pupils)4. St. Mary’s College near Ballymena (278 pupils)5.Saintfield High School in Saintfield (369 pupils)
Poorly-Performing Large Schools
1.St. Brigid’s College in Londonderry with 687 pupils,
2.St. Patrick’s College in Belfast with 785 pupils, 3.Monkstown Community College in
Newtownabbey with 710 pupils, 4.Newtownbreda High School in Belfast with 682
pupils, and 5.Dunclug College in Ballymena with 639 pupils
What Affects School Educational Performance?Grammar school status: Largest effect on school performance was made by grammar school status. School size: the size of sixth form mattered significantly for performance at all levels (GSCEs and A levels) in both grammar and secondary schools.
SEN and FSM pupils: Presence of SEN pupils has no effect on educational performance. BUT the presence of FSM pupils adversely affecting GCSE performance of secondary schools, and affected the A level performance of both secondary and grammar schools.
Maintained Vs Controlled Schools: performance of maintained secondary and grammar schools was significantly better than controlled secondary and grammar schools.
Absenteeism has a much larger, and more significant, effect on school performance than school size – yet, as an issue, it is almost entirely neglected in NI’s education debate. Absenteeism lower in Maintained than in Controlled Schools
85,000 Empty Desks?First, the robustness of the methodology for calculating the “approved intake” for schools is open to question.Second, pupils in receipt of a statement of special educational needs and pupils admitted on appeal by the independent Appeals Tribunals, or by direction of the independent Exceptional Circumstances Body are excluded from the enrolment numbersThird the overfill in oversubscribed schools is set to zero.
So, if one corrects for this, instead of 85,000 empty desks we estimate that there are 63,000 empty desks – a 25% reduction.
Questions? Can institutional response via area planning raise
education standards? Exclusion of key criteria in area planning which are
core to school improvements? Support the implementation of DE’s policies? ALCs – do they raise education standards – what is
the evidence? Promote equality of opportunity and good relations?
What else should be considered? ‘Realistic, innovative and creative solutions’ may
be considered and may include options that increase sharing in education and infrastructure in line with Departmental commitments in PfG’
‘Light touch’ on shared education to date This should change
What is shared education? Shared Education refers to schools from different
sectors working together in a sustained process ranging from two or more schools making shared use of specialist facilities, through to coordinated timetabling, and pupils taking classes across a network of schools.
What is shared education?Shared education means the organisation and delivery of education so that it: •meets the needs of, and provides for the education together of, learners from all Section 75 categories and socio-economic status; •involves schools and other education providers of differing ownership, sectoral identity and ethos, management type or governance arrangements; and •delivers educational benefits to learners, promotes the efficient and effective use of resources, and promotes equality of opportunity, good relations, equality of identity, respect for diversity and community cohesion.
Collaboration and sharing Collaborative networks of schools Rationale for collaboration and sharing according
to Bain (2006) – 3 factors:Educational caseSocietal case (body of research work by Hughes
et al)Economic case
External Intervention Move schools from a model of competition and
isolation to one of collaboration centred on the needs of the learner within a collaborative network.
Atlantic Philanthropies and International Fund for Ireland (risk takers)
How does it work? Delivering shared education Supporting teacher development to deliver
shared education Ensuring organisational learning and inter-
community collaboration amongst partner schools
Political Support Party Manifestos Peter Robinson statement Minister’s recent statement Shared education part of the reform lexicon
Alignment with DE policies DE Strategic Objective on performance Programme for Government Commitments CRED CSI (OFMDFM)
Proposals: from the margins to mainstream
Shared education peer learning:more effective schools paired with less effective
schools to help them to improve, where leadership has been strong and supportive
of networking, where the number of schools involved is limited,external support
Proposals: from the margins to mainstream
Constituent elements:Generating positive relationshipsFocusing on teaching and learningUnderstanding, leading and managing changesCommitting to continuous professional developmentBuilding communityDrawing on external support.
Conclusions Two-tier system emerging from area plans:
-large single identity (‘we’re all right’) mainly grammar schools-the remainder: scramble to close, rationalise and amalgamate.
First group can become peer learners Second group explore shared education options Move away from ‘one-size-fits all solution’
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