Whose School is it Anyway? Educational Change and Development Series Series Editors: Andy Hargreaves, Ontario Institute for Studies in Education, Canada and Ivor F Goodson, Warner Graduate School, University of Rochester, USA and Centre for Applied Research in Education, University of East Anglia, Norwich, UK Re-schooling Society David Hartley The Gender Politics of Educational Change Amanda Datnow The Rules of School Reform Max Angus Whose School is it Anyway? Power and Politics Kathryn Riley Whose School is it Anyway? Kathryn A.Riley UK Falmer Press, 1 Gunpowder Square, London, EC4A 3DE USA Falmer Press, Taylor & Francis Inc., 1900 Frost Road, Suite 101, Bristol, PA 19007 This edition published in the Taylor & Francis e-Library, 2004. © K.A.Riley 1998 All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without permission in writing from the Publisher. First published in 1998 A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library ISBN 0-203-20927-3 Master e-book ISBN ISBN 0-203-26746-X (Adobe eReader Format) ISBN 0 7507 07135 cased ISBN 0 7507 06716 paper Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data are available on request Jacket design by Caroline Archer Every effort has been made to contact copyright holders for their permission to reprint material in this book. The publishers would be grateful to hear from any copyright holder who is not here acknowledged and will undertake to rectify any errors or omissions in future editions of this book. Contents Preface and Acknowledgments vii Part I Constructing the Reform Agenda 1 Chapter 1 Your School or Mine? 3 Chapter 2 The End of an Era 9 Chapter 3 William Tyndale Junior School 21 Chapter 4 The Fallout from Tyndale 42 Chapter 5 The Ruskin Speech—Setting a New Agenda? 56 Chapter 6 Thatcher’s Legacy: Blair’s New World 72 Part II Reconstructing the Reform Agenda for the 21st Century 89 Chapter 7 Whose School—The Local Authority’s or the Governors’? 91 Chapter 8 Whose School—The Headteacher’s? 111 Chapter 9 Whose School—Teachers’, Pupils’ or Parents’? 125 Chapter 10 Whose School is it Anyway? It’s Ours 137 Appendix I List of interviewees 141 References 142 Index 153 v Preface and Acknowledgments If one is to believe in education at all, one must believe that something worth doing can be done. And if one is to believe in anything, one must believe in education… The moral for the educator is to be more ambitious. F.R.Leavis and Denys Thompson (1934, p. 4) The Labour Government of 1997 has an historic opportunity to lay the foundations of a new national education consensus, similar to that which prevailed for some thirty years after the Second World War. This book examines why that post-war consensus broke down in the mid-1970s, and how in the 1980s, the Thatcherite revolution transformed the educational landscape. It draws on a wide range of educational research from around the world to examine questions which teachers and educational reformers are struggling with in many countries besides the UK. Both historical and contemporary events are used to reflect on some of the possible elements of the new educational dispensation between central and local government, teachers, governors, parents and pupils. Some of the questions and events which I explore are, inevitably, those which have interested me through my journey in education as a teacher, elected local councillor, local government officer, governor, parent and most recently as an academic researcher. The book is not a polemic, nor is it prescriptive. But it poses many of the questions and some of my answers to the issues of the day. It represents a distillation of my work over recent years—work that has been influenced by many people. There are those who I interviewed for the book (see Appendix I). Conducting those interviews was a delight and it gave me the opportunity to venture into unusual places—my thanks to the interviewees, particularly Anne Page, for the extensive and rich source material, and Fred Jarvis and Peter Newsam for pointing me in the direction of a number of gems. I would also like to thank my research colleagues at the Centre for Educational Management at Roehampton, David Rowles and Jim Docking, with support from lan Monk, and colleagues from Scotland, Denmark and Australia who were part of the research team on school leadership (see Chapter 8). Particular thanks go to Pat Mahony and John vii Preface and Acknowledgment Denmark and Australia who were part of the research team on school leadership (see Chapter 8). Particular thanks go to Pat Mahony and John MacBeath. My work has also been influenced not just by the research I have undertaken but by the experiences and challenges of many of those teachers, headteachers, governors, pupils, LEA officers and politicians who have taken part in the various projects. Thanks to them. There are those who have contributed to my thinking over the years and who also commented on this book. I would particularly like to thank here Alan Ruby and Gerald Grace. I would also like to mention two friends who died recently, Desmond Nuttall and Kieron Walsh. Both in their different ways contributed to my thinking and development, as have Margaret Sandra, Judy White, Tanya Arroba and Vivien Lowndes. I would like to thank members of the Education Reform Group, educationalists who always offer challenging thinking on new developments in education, and those colleagues who attended the 1997 conference on teachers and professionalism (see Chapter 9). Finally, I would also like thank my family—near and far—who include my toughest critics and greatest supporters. My daughter Jo is a constant reminder of the spirited questioning of young people. My mother, Agnes Riley, was a teacher and although she died in 1988, she remains a strong influence on me. She exemplified the commitment and passion for teaching which today is so easily forgotten, and so rarely valued as the mainspring of all educational success. Kathryn Riley January 1998 viii Part I Constructing the Reform Agenda
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