Read the letter from Douglas Mitchell, the Principal of the Ashcroft Technology Academy, to Education Secretary Bridget Phillipson regarding her department’s inappropriate social media video starring Gemma Collins @bphillipsonMP@missgemcollins@AshcroftAcademy@Keir_Starmer
@kelvmackenzie Foster has to go too but to make matters for Guildford he brings wider policing into disrepute....He is the National Police Chiefs’ Lead for Professional Standards and Ethics, and Complaints and Misconduct...you couldn't make it up!
@jonsopel All of the above but to make matters worse he is also:
"The National Police Chiefs’ Lead for Professional Standards and Ethics, and Complaints and Misconduct"
Labour’s budget is already unravelling and these are significantly worse cuts for schools. OBR is now forecasting 4.9% per pupil cut, rather than the 1.7% they said early today. The Rachel Reeves effect is engulfing DfE.
@JamesCleverly Careful what you wish for - inept and clueless he may be but he is by far the least worst option of their front bench...by far. Chance of a GE if he does go are zero (sadly!).
@afneil She gets no credit for jumping before being pushed - that window closed days ago. Starmer also no credit for no sacking or at least suspending her!
@SkyNews@BethRigby What has the media putting pictures up of your children (which I agree they should not) have to do with deliberately avoiding paying £40,000 in tax? Indefensible. How would HMRC treat me if I did the same??
All of your assertions are wrong.
If it were true that independent schooling entrenches economic and social divides, everyone who could afford it would send their children to independent schools to obtain the supposed advantages that you’ve mentioned and the independent sector would be much larger than 7% that it currently represents.
The reality is that very many families who can afford independent school fees prefer to use the state system because state schools can and do in many cases deliver a superb education comparable to, or even better than, some independent schools and (crucially) they’re also free at the point of delivery.
For those families, the perceived advantages of independent schooling are outweighed by the cost. They would rather keep the money (on average £195,000 over 13 years of schooling at £15,000 per year) and all of the economic and social advantages that such large sums of disposable wealth offer.
It’s no good arguing that independent schools entrench economic and social divides in isolation without considering the counterfactual position. You have to allow for the fact that families who could pay for private education but choose not to could, for example, buy a home for each child when they leave school, or pay all of that money into their pensions (plus tax relief), delivering dramatic social and economic advantage in a very tangible way. The inequality exists already; the only question is how it manifests.
So, it isn’t independent education that entrenches social and economic divides; those issues are pre-existing and self-perpetuating regardless of the existence of independent education and they would still exist even if we abandoned any notion that parents get to decide what’s best for their own children and abolished independent schooling altogether. The only reasonable way to address the inequalities that concern you is by doing what we can to raise standards generally, which we already do via the state system, rather than attacking those who are already achieving success independently.
However, the state system delivers a wide range of standards and outcomes. For some, outcomes are directly comparable with the best independent schools. For others, outcomes are significantly worse. That is not because of the existence of independent schools, but because of a whole range of historical social, cultural, economic and political factors that need to be addressed alongside improving state education. That is where your attention should be focused, rather than trying to undermine those who value education above other factors, to the extent that they’re willing to pay a premium for it on top of their tax liabilities.
Contrary to your assertion, independent schooling supports social mobility by offering opportunities to the talented students from lower-income backgrounds that you mention. Axiomatically, students from higher-income backgrounds don’t need support with social mobility; as discussed above, the wealthy can and do look after themselves, whether their children attend independent or state schools. Offering bursary places to talented students who would otherwise not have access to the resources, facilities and so on that independent schools – or the best state schools – can offer is undeniably a good thing and simultaneously demonstrates that ideas of class and elitism are worthless anachronisms in the presence of talent, hard work and merit. If you want to deliver the same level of investment to every state school pupil you would essentially have to double the state education budget. Focusing solely on schools, that means finding another £60billion or so every year.
The suggestion that independent schools divert resources and political will from state schools is manifest nonsense. Total DfE spending in England is already over £90billion. Far from taking resource away from the state sector, independent schooling reduces the state’s burden to educate about 550,000 pupils, saving approximately £4.5billion. The sector also delivers billions in tax revenue to HMRC, predominantly through the Income Tax and NIC paid by and on behalf of the staff it employs, and it attracts foreign investment into the UK. All of this helps to support state education and all of that would be lost if we implemented your proposals.
Of course, the families who send their children to independent schools still pay all of the same taxes as everyone else, even though they don’t use the state school resources to which they’re entitled, and the money paid in fees is taken from net income which, if diverted into pensions or primary residences, would reduce Treasury tax receipts.
Independent schooling actively discourages a sense of entitlement because the families who use it are paying out of their own pockets for the service that they’re receiving. The idea that independent schools foster elitist attitudes is nonsense propagated by misguided class bigots who want to impose their own Marxist view of the world onto everyone else. As I’ve said to many people on this platform who make that argument, independent education is not responsible for your inferiority complex. You need to search elsewhere to understand why you think other people are looking down on you. It may simply be because your ideas are rubbish.
The ridiculous notion that the state delivers greater economic efficiency than the private sector barely deserves acknowledgment, let alone a response. The state is famous for being grotesquely inefficient in practice, despite the fact that it ought to be able to leverage its enormous scale to generate clear economic advantages.
We would all be much better off by adopting a voucher system for schooling, with the state making a contribution to school for every child and supporting parental choice for all families, dramatically improving the affordability of independent schooling. Indeed, encouraging more families to contribute towards independent education is the very best way of increasing overall investment in education, taking us some way towards that £60billion figure I mentioned earlier. Of course, the Marxists who believe that the state should control every aspect of a child’s education don’t like that idea, even though it immediately renders meaningless all of the hackneyed and unsustainable complaints that you’ve raised.
Ultimately, even if all of your concerns were valid (which they’re not), none of them would justify removing the freedom of families to make their own decisions about what is best for their own children because parental responsibility trumps all other concerns.
Again, how other people choose to educate their children according to the requirements of the law is absolutely none of your business.
By the way, your reference to “public schools” in the context of a discussion about British education reveals that you’re relying on American AI for your commentary and passing it off as your own work, which is lazy and pathetic. If you’re going to stick your oar in on this issue, try thinking for yourself for a change.
My plea to the JOURNALISTS…
We need to hold our politicians to account! 🙏🏽
The Ed Sec is pushing through a Bill that will destroy our schools.
Please ask her these questions BEFORE they vote on the Bill! https://t.co/U2K46ENG2F
Following my meeting on Monday with the Education Secretary @bphillipsonMP my open letter to her is below and here:
https://t.co/O9T19eJaXr
My first open letter to her on 17 Jan is here: https://t.co/phAiybzQFx
My open letter to the Education Secretary @bphillipsonMP
Many teachers and school leaders share my concerns with regard to her decisions but are scared to say.
If you can find it in you, please RT.
My letter is also here: https://t.co/phAiybAov5
@Sureena4WNE You rightly list the lack of adequate funding of State Schools. You wrongly imply Independent Schools are the reason for that, explain how. No other country taxes education. This is ideological and will leave both state and private the worse for it. #FindABetterWay
@LandRover why are your UK customer service lines closed during their operating hours and why is the live chat 'talk to us' been removed from the same page? https://t.co/7Irr3mUqN6
@easyJet Why would the details of the passengers solve the complete indifference of @easyJet staff to the passengers of the cancelled flight? 7 hrs at GTW. Transferred to BA via app (24hrs delay) not all details transferred, 3.5hrs of calls to BA & easyJet, £150+ extra charges to resolve
@easyJet what is happening with EZY8089? The app + website not updated, already delayed flight time passed, no updates from ground staff 45 mins+, no food onboard, no crew, told earlier flight boarding & gate closing when inbound not here. How many more lies until we fly?
@astrom0nkeyz@easyJet Update is that captain out of hours if we don’t take off shortly. No baggage handlers to load 3 hr aircraft, no idea when standby crew available or if flight going. No available flights for rest of weekend if cancelled
@astrom0nkeyz@easyJet It’s because they simply don‘t care…at least RyanAir are honest about that aspect of their service. Flight data updated but still incorrect, time passed again. Only got an update from ground staff because I asked them to make tannoy update to fellow sufferers