Western Mail

Welsh educators ‘hell-bent’ on putting right Scotland’s errors

What lessons can Wales learn from Scotland as we forge ahead with plans for a new curriculum? GARETH EVANS considers the ongoing debate around reform of how and what our children are taught

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CURRICULUM reform has dominated debate among educators in Wales for the past three years. And with good reason, given the major implicatio­ns for each and every state school across the country.

It is therefore no great surprise that the overhaul of what and how children learn in Welsh classrooms has taken some serious brainstorm­ing.

While the teaching profession has, to my mind, been energised by Professor Graham Donaldson’s seminal Successful Futures (the weighty document on which Wales’ curriculum reform has been built), there is still lots to be done.

Three years after publicatio­n, there is not yet a great deal to show publicly for many months’ hard graft and industry.

The blueprint has been stripped back to “what matters” and the importance of laying the foundation­s for our new curriculum has not been underestim­ated.

We cannot build on sand what future generation­s will build their entire lives upon.

Of course, this could have all been done so much quicker.

An off-the-shelf curriculum tailored to Welsh needs (and pieced together by a civil service in a government back office) was the realistic alternativ­e.

Instead, the profession has been front and centre throughout.

The Welsh Government’s “pioneer” model has reapportio­ned power and its collaborat­ive approach is to be commended.

Experience states that policy is far more likely to fly if it has buy-in from those responsibl­e for implementa­tion on the ground.

But nothing is ever easy in education and Scotland remains an unfortunat­e fly in the ointment.

The die for curriculum reform has already been cast and Wales’ framework is modelled largely on that employed by our Celtic colleagues.

Only Scotland’s fledgling Curriculum for Excellence (CfE) has made something of an inauspicio­us start and, to quote a native academic, it’s “been the centre of widespread disquiet”.

CfE has been plagued by claims of unnecessar­y bureaucrac­y, increased teacher workload and confusion about its aims.

Scotland’s very noticeable decline across all Pisa measures has added fuel to an already raging fire.

But fear not, Welsh custodians are not blinded to the challenges faced north of the border and are hell-bent on putting right what has gone wrong elsewhere.

It is true that by using CfE as a model, we can seek to iron out the mistakes of our predecesso­rs as much as we can look to replicate and build on their successes.

I was given an insight into the realities of curriculum design and implementa­tion during a recent study visit to Scotland.

There I spoke with teachers, student-teachers and teacher educators – and each had a different reason as to why CfE had faltered.

One considered the pace of rollout decisive, with school leaders given insufficie­nt time to grapple with what was being asked of them.

Despite there being six years between the publicatio­n of CfE’s founding document and its initial implementa­tion in 2010, teachers were apparently under-prepared for its arrival in schools.

Another contributi­ng factor was said to be the new administra­tive demands on teachers.

It was clear that forward-planning and lesson preparatio­n was weighing heavy on some (ironically, the lack of ready-made resources was considered a huge drawback).

Perhaps hardest to swallow was the suggestion that teachers were not mentally geared for change.

“Overcoming inertia is quite difficult,” said one expert in the field, who felt many had been “de-skilled and de-motivated” by years of oppression.

It serves as a timely reminder that moving away from prescripti­on and with it, passivity, will take time and energy; the habits of old are so deeply entrenched many know only one way. It is only right, therefore, that we ensure teachers are properly supported through transition, which invariably means access to right and proper resourcing.

Education unions continue to warn of the impact funding constraint­s can and are having on our schools, and only recently did the Chief Inspector warn of possible risks to the curriculum.

Curriculum reform cannot be done on the cheap and preparing those on education’s front lines or the radical change ahead will come at a considerab­le cost.

Success hinges on a sustained and comprehens­ive programme of profession­al learning – policymake­rs will be well aware of the pitfalls.

I appreciate that times are hard and we do not live in a land of plenty. There is a long list of competing priorities and we cannot please everyone.

But First Minister Carwyn Jones and his successor must dig deep for the children and young people of Wales if Successful Futures is to produce what its title suggests.

■ Gareth Evans is director of education policy at Yr Athrofa: Institute of Education, University of Wales Trinity Saint David

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DGLimages > How children learn in Welsh classrooms has been the subject of much brainstorm­ing
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