Yorkshire Post

‘Education is what remains after school learning is forgotten’

- From: David Leyshon, Wakefield.

AS an ex- college lecturer and schoolteac­her, I sympathise with those young people who’ve been upset by the downgradin­g of their exam results, but surely some reality – and honesty – is permitted ( Rachel Reeves, The Yorkshire Post, September 5) to counter the naïve politicisi­ng of this issue?

Of course, government policies on education have an influence, but teachers are responsibl­e too.

First, marking exams is rarely an exact science, particular­ly in subjects such as English or history where opinions, rather than just brute facts, influence the exam markers’ judgements.

An element of subjectivi­ty cannot always be eliminated, and that applies to course assessment as well as exams – even in mathematic­s and science!

Those at the very top and those at the opposite end are not the real victims, but those near the borderline.

I remember, when marking

GCSE work, being told to mark “a bit more generously” one year.

That came directly from the examinatio­n board, concerned that nationally our regional marks were lower that they should be.

That wasn’t a political decision, but one taken by teachers – and I can’t remember anyone objecting at all.

League tables have only made a fragile situation even worse.

The recent cases have sent out shockwaves, because it’s been about lowering – rather than raising – grades.

Also, one gets the impression that everyone is desperate to go to university.

As usual, further education, and vocational training, are downgraded, as if schools and universiti­es are essentiall­y the real deliverers of ‘ education’ while FE colleges are only about getting jobs, acquiring life skills, etc.

I know that FE is where many students study A- levels but, as someone who did most of his teaching in Further Education, I can remember comments from school teachers, implying that lecturers were not “real” teachers.

Finally, it’s an easy equation – that education equals what goes on ( mainly) in schools, forgetting those words of Albert Einstein: Education is what remains after one has forgotten what one has learnt while in school.

That might have been said in jest, but Churchill and Einstein only really ‘ shone’ after they’d left school.

Schools are important, but let’s not exaggerate that importance.

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