The Communist Party's pamphlet 'Education for the People' has been reviewed in Education for Tomorrow (EFT) a journal which will be familiar to many in the teaching unions. You can read EFTs review in the latest edition here.
You can download and share the pamphlet on this site here
Showing posts with label NUT. Show all posts
Showing posts with label NUT. Show all posts
Thursday, 10 April 2014
Thursday, 27 March 2014
M26: What happened and what happens next?
NUT activist Gawain Little looks back at the strike and
stresses the importance of the strategy of building alliances between unions, parents
and communities…
In spite of attempts by the government to say otherwise,
yesterday’s national strike by the NUT was a huge display of strength. Not only was there a fantastic response from
teachers across the country but the NUT clearly won over a huge proportion of parents
and the public.
Part of this is to do with the fact that we won the
arguments with government in the media.
Interview after interview showed the NUT come out positively in the face
of government intransigence.
But this itself, is due in large part to the fact that we
picked the right ground from which to fight.
For possibly the first time in this long-running dispute, we managed to
successfully broaden our message from pay, pensions and conditions and to link
it with the quality of education. This
is not to say we haven’t tried to do so before.
We have always made the link between pay and pensions and the
recruitment and retention of teachers.
More specifically, on pensions, we have argued that forcing teachers to
work to 68 will have a real impact on children’s education. But previously, there has been a large
section of the population who have dismissed this as simply ‘dressing up’
teachers’ demands in ‘educational clothing’.
No-one could have made this accusation yesterday.
So what were the defining differences in approach? Well, the focus on workload helped. The NUT ran a successful campaign to force
the government to publish its 2013 workload survey. The results were impossible to ignore. When the government’s own figures show
secondary teachers working an average of 56 hours a week, and primary teachers
an average of 60 hours, the ground on which they can attack us is significantly
narrowed. Especially since both figures
are up from an average of 50 hours when this government took power.
This was a great tactical move by the NUT but it cannot
wholly account for the shift in attitudes.
The key difference is of course the Stand Up for Education campaign, launched by the Union in
the weeks running up to the strike.
Obviously, the campaign is separate from our industrial action. We could not legally take action over
questions such as a child’s right to be taught by a qualified teacher due to
Britain’s restrictive anti-Trade Union legislation. But we know that the threat this government
poses to children’s education motivates many more teachers, parents and others
than concerns over pay and pensions. And
when it comes to pay and pensions, it is the damage that a deregulated
education system will do that is forefront in teachers’ minds, not narrow
financial concerns.
The power of these issues to bring people together is easy
to understand when you apply the framework of Mobilisation Theory to them. Central to encouraging collective action is
an attributable injustice and an organisation to challenge that injustice with
a reasonable prospect of having an impact.
This is clearly all there.
But it is not just the mobilising power of this campaign
which makes a difference. It is the fact
that it addresses the core of the government’s programme in a way that a
campaign on one aspect, such as pay or pensions, does not.
The dominant trend in education – which has been referred to
as the Global Education Reform Movement or GERM – is towards a deregulated,
privatised, for-profit, state-funded education system. Schools operating as businesses, accountable
to no-one but their shareholders, would hire whoever they want, regardless of
experience or qualification, to provide a commercial service paid for by the
state. The only regulator would be the
market and consumer choice. The purpose
of education would be to attract consumers so as to draw in income, cut costs
in order to maximise profits and to meet the narrow needs of the labour market
by providing “human capital” for the economy.This is not simply a British phenomenon. On 24th May, the NUT will be hosting an international conference with academics and activists from five different continents to discuss developing resistance to GERM. This will be a hugely important conference in sharing international experience of the drive to privatisation and building an understanding of GERM amongst our activist base.
Neither is it a recent phenomenon. The DfE referred to schooling as being the
creation of human capital as early as 1996, under John Major’s government. The academies programme was created by New
Labour. The key moves towards
marketization were made in the 1988 Education Reform Act under the Thatcher
government.
This is why a focus on the quality of education, and its
purpose in the 21st Century, is such a powerful argument – because
it is the core of the question. If we
are able to build our campaigns against pension cuts, pay deregulation and
excessive workload in this context, with an understanding of what the end
product of these processes looks like, we are much better equipped to win.
It will also mean expanding the campaign on other
fronts. Firstly, building on the five
key demands of the Stand Up for Education
campaign, but then also looking at key issue like accountability which are used
by the Right to force change. We have a
potential opening on the question of accountability with the recent criticism
of OFSTED and the scrapping of levels.
But we also know, given where those moves come from, that the intention
is not to replace the current accountability system with something more
conducive to the development of a broad and balanced education. We must ensure that we have a clear approach
to accountability, drawn from our broader approach to education, around which
we can begin to build wide support both amongst teacher unions and teachers,
and amongst parents and policy-makers.
There is the potential for many of these ideas to be drawn
together into a national education conference on Education in the Next
Parliament to be held before the 2015 General Election. This would be an opportunity to build further
support for our vision of education and to pressure political parties to adopt,
or respond to, our proposals.
However, there is one important aspect of mobilisation
theory I left out earlier and that is the existence of local leaders who can
give cohesion to a group and begin to build a movement. We have a great opportunity, building on the
success of this strike, and of the Stand
Up for Education campaign so far, to start to recruit these local leaders,
amongst our members and in the wider community.
There is real enthusiasm and engagement around this campaign, we now
need to make that sustainable.
I hope that local activists will continue to build the Stand Up for Education campaign with the
same energy we did in the run up to the strike and that the national Union will
support them to do this. Over the coming
weeks and months, this campaign needs to develop a coherence and deeper roots
in local communities and we can all play a part in that.Thursday, 27 February 2014
Everything To Win - Or Lose - In Education
GAWAIN LITTLE says next week's professional unity conference
is vital for education's future. First featured in the Morning Star on 22
February
On February 13 the drive to privatise and deregulate our education system suffered a significant setback. This was the day the School Teachers' Review Body (STRB), the "independent" body which makes recommendations to government on teachers' pay and conditions, released its 23rd report.
This seeming division masks an underlying unity of purpose. Members of all three unions, and of the headteachers' unions, are opposed to Gove's agenda and his disregard for the teaching profession. Members of all three unions are opposed to pay deregulation, pensions cuts and spiralling workloads. Members of all three unions are opposed to school privatisation and excessive testing and all three unions are affiliated to the Anti-Academies Alliance.
On February 13 the drive to privatise and deregulate our education system suffered a significant setback. This was the day the School Teachers' Review Body (STRB), the "independent" body which makes recommendations to government on teachers' pay and conditions, released its 23rd report.
Michael Gove had asked the STRB to remove significant
elements of the school teachers' pay and conditions document, including the
overall limit on hours a teacher can be directed to work, the length of the
school year, entitlement to planning, preparation and assessment time and the
protection which says teachers should not routinely be asked to cover for
colleagues.
These changes would have further damaged a profession which
has been hit with public-sector pension cuts, pay deregulation and mass
privatisation since 2010. Not only did the review body turn him down on 90 per cent of
what he was asking for - a move unprecedented for a secretary of state - but he
has also chosen to accept the recommendations.
This is a major sign of weakness on the part of the Education
Secretary and a real victory for the joint campaign mounted by the two largest
teacher unions NUT and NASUWT. It reflects not only the threat of further joint action by
these unions but also the growing unpopularity of Gove's "reforms"
with parents and others. A recent YouGov poll for the Sunday Times shows that 54 per
cent of voters believe he is doing badly as secretary of state.
Another poll last year showed only 8 per cent of parents
think this government has had a positive impact on the education system. The results on teachers' voting intentions are even more
stark. In the run-up to the 2010 general election the Tories had a narrow lead
among teachers with 33 per cent intending to vote Conservative and 32 per cent
to vote Labour. This has shifted significantly with just 16 per cent now
planning to vote Tory and 57 per cent to vote Labour. Most worryingly for Gove 40 per cent of those who voted Tory
in 2010 believe he is doing a bad job, compared to 42 per cent who believe he
is doing well.
However in spite of these positive signs, nothing has
improved for teachers or for education. While the report refused the majority of Gove's proposals,
it did remove guidance on administrative tasks and work-life balance. More importantly, its publication does nothing to address
teachers' ongoing concerns over pay, pensions and workload, or to halt the race
to privatise our schools.
The government's vision of state-funded, privately-run
academies and "free" schools, employing teachers who may or may not
be qualified and are paid according to "market" rates is still very
much on track. And if the Tories win the next election we can expect the
rules on profit-making to be "relaxed" as well.
As all the international evidence shows - from Sweden's
"free" school disaster to the low performance of Chile's for-profit
state sector - it is students and society who lose out. Introduce marketisation, privatisation and deregulation and
- surprise, surprise - schools hire fewer, less well-qualified teachers in
order to keep costs down and profits up. So right now there is everything to win in education and, if
we fail, everything to lose.
Where does that leave our teacher unions? Well,
unfortunately, not all on the same page. It will not have escaped the attention of Morning Star
readers that, of the three main classroom teacher unions, one is not in dispute
with government over pay, pensions and workload and two are. Of the two that are, one is taking national strike action on
March 26 and one isn't.
While the NUT is developing a comprehensive campaign based
on engaging parents, pressuring politicians and national strike action, NASUWT
has decided to wait on possible talks with government before deciding its next
move. This seeming division masks an underlying unity of purpose. Members of all three unions, and of the headteachers' unions, are opposed to Gove's agenda and his disregard for the teaching profession. Members of all three unions are opposed to pay deregulation, pensions cuts and spiralling workloads. Members of all three unions are opposed to school privatisation and excessive testing and all three unions are affiliated to the Anti-Academies Alliance.
On February 14, when the NASUWT executive voted not to call
national strike action on March 26, there were outpourings of anger across
social media from both NUT and NASUWT activists, but we must not fall into
believing that NASUWT is now somehow the enemy, or that it doesn't oppose
Gove's attacks on education. They have simply taken a different tactical position to
ours.
For the NUT, strike action is on - but if there is progress
in talks we will call it off. The NASUWT says it will assess talks, then strike if there
is no progress. To present this as an underlying division between NUT and
NASUWT members would only make Gove's work that much easier. The same applies to the ATL. The fact that it is not in formal dispute over pay deregulation
and workload does not mean that it accepts them. It is significant that in 2011 ATL took the first strike in
its 127-year history, alongside PCS and NUT, and thereby began the
public-sector pensions strikes which mobilised two million public-sector
workers in the largest strike since 1926 and the largest strike of women ever.
However, tactical differences between teacher unions do
weaken us. And, unfortunately, they are a natural consequence of having more
than one union organising teachers. If there is a lesson we should draw from this, it is that we
are stronger united and that the untenable situation where teachers are divided
between competing unions must be ended. It is now essential for all teacher union members to come
together and work in a concerted way towards the formation of a single union
for all teachers.
Next Saturday, a Professional Unity conference will be held
in Hotel Pullman London St Pancras on Euston Road, with speakers from ATL, NUT,
the National Association of Headteachers, Welsh teacher union UCAC and others. The conference will discuss the formation of a single union
for all teachers. This is a hugely significant development and should be
supported by anyone who cares about education.
Teachers can register for the conference at
www.teachers.org.uk/campaigns/unity. Gawain Little is NUT Oxfordshire secretary
and a member of the union's executive. He blogs at
www.uniting4education@blogspot.com.
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