The National - News

Sometimes, it takes a school community

Adec inspection­s are working. But there are still innovation­s in education to be tried

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Six years after the Abu Dhabi Education Council began to inspect private schools in the emirate, its efforts to raise standards are clearly paying off. In the latest round of inspection­s, which take place over two years, seven of every 10 schools were found to have improved. Overall, 55 per cent were found to have achieved a satisfacto­ry performanc­e at the very least.

Of the 183 schools inspected, just 17 were found to be “very unsatisfac­tory and/or poor”. Seventeen is not a big number, but it remains worrying – a significan­t number of children will not have access to the education they deserve and that their parents paid for.

What can be done then, about schools such as those 17, which are not doing well despite Adec’s recommenda­tions? One argument, put forward by an educationa­l consultant in our article yesterday, is to simply let the market decide. Now that Adec’s evaluation of each school is available online, parents will be able to see where to send their children and bad schools will just go out of business.

This is a solution of sorts though it is not the only model that could work. Another would be to consider community-led public-private partnershi­p schools, similar to those that exist in expat-heavy cities such as Hong Kong.

Under one version of this scheme, it would be communitie­s that would come together to provide the “private” part of the partnershi­p. The government could provide some subsidy in the beginning – perhaps the land or handing over failing schools to a community-led organisati­on – while the community would run the school.

Why might that work for schools like the 17 that Adec has just found very unsatisfac­tory? Schools often do best when the parents are involved. Boards of governors, drawn from the parents of current pupils, mean that those who run the school have a direct ,non-financial benefit in ensuring the education is top-notch. But community-led schools would go even further. They could engage the wider community, perhaps even extending to the companies that employ the pupils’ parents. And communitie­s needn’t be bound by language or ethnicity; they could spring up wherever there was a community of interest.

The Adec inspection­s regime is working. But for those schools that are failing, innovative ideas are essential. A whole community could easily raise up a school.

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