In January 1996, the Birmingham Post ran an article
entitled 'Labour MPs are living proof grammar schools help children get to the top'.
As an ex-grammar school pupil myself, I did not believe that I constituted 'living
proof' of the superiority of the grammar school system, and I wrote the following letter
to the Editor, which was published a few days later.
Dear Sir,
I note that I am omitted from the list of Labour MPs
that attended grammar schools, although I have never sought to hide this fact. But what
relevance is this to present day debate on the best education policies to ensure that all
the nation's children achieve to the best of their ability? The grammar school I attended
is now a comprehensive school. Yet the results achieved from a mixed-ability intake are at
least as good, if not better, than in my day.
I have every confidence that my own children will
achieve as good, if not better, results than their parents at the local, non-selective
schools they attend. Equally importantly to me, their fellow class mates will be
encouraged to achieve their maximum potential. Our country cannot prosper in today's
technological age if we have a two-tier educational system that writes off three-quarters
of our youngsters at the age of eleven. Solihull parents realised this when they reacted
angrily against the then Tory Council's attempt to return to a selective system. The
sooner Birmingham follows Solihull's example and adopts a fully comprehensive system, the
better for all our children.
An article from the New Statesman (6 September 1999) entitled 'How to Scrap
Grammar Schools' makes interesting further reading
How to scrap grammar schools
If Anthony Crosland had never tried to carry out his famous (and obscenely expressed)
threat to close every grammar school in England, it is likely that 11-plus selection would
have quietly passed away long ago. In the 1960s the arguments against grammar schools
seemed overwhelming and they were increasingly evident to parents. It was becoming widely
accepted, even by those sympathetic to elitism, that 11 was just too early an age at which
to consign three-quarters of the nation's children to the academic dustbin and that vast
quantities of talent, mostly working class, was going to waste. What was most startling
was the evidence that secondary modern schools actually depressed children's IQ, so that
their charges came out stupider than when they went in. Many of the local councils that
pioneered comprehensives were Tory-controlled, such as Leicestershire and Hertfordshire.
Indeed, most of the early pressure for comprehensives came from the middle classes, who
could not bear the idea that any of their children might fail. The issue was not hugely
controversial in the party political sense. Crosland made it so, putting the grammar
schools at the top of his agenda and seeming to pit a dictatorial Whitehall against the
town and county halls.
Today the arguments against grammar schools are as strong as they ever were, particularly
since the unskilled manual jobs, for which the secondary moderns largely prepared their
pupils, have all but disappeared. Those who suggest that a revived grammar school sector
would bring affluent, influential parents back to the state system, thus giving them an
interest in its success, talk nonsense. If such parents came back at all, they would
simply have an interest in the grammar schools as they did in the 1950s and 1960s, when
the secondary moderns suffered inferior funding to a quite scandalous extent. It is equal
nonsense to argue that grammars would give chances to poor children that are denied them
by comprehensives, since the large majority of the poor wouldn't get to them in the first
place. (If you doubt this, consider the wealth of evidence that many children from poor
homes have fallen hopelessly behind their classmates as early as seven, never mind 11.)
Far better, as David Blunkett, the Secretary of State for Education, proposes, to bribe
the inner-city comprehensives to make special provision for their brightest children.
But Mr Blunkett is right also not to repeat the Crosland mistake. He will not try to
enforce the abolition of the 164 grammar schools remaining in England (one in 20 of all
secondary schools). Instead each school will continue to select unless a ballot of local
parents decides otherwise. Here, expediency - placating the Daily Mail - usefully
coincides with principle - accepting the autonomy of local decision-making. Mr Blunkett
may well be criticised for leaning too far towards the first, since his legislation makes
it extraordinarily difficult for comprehensive supporters to trigger a ballot (they have
first to organise a petition signed by 20 per cent of local parents). But there is simply
no point in allowing the government's educational programme to be dominated by localised
wrangles over an issue that can still arouse raw ideological passions. (The Tories took a
similar view and restrained themselves from a widespread reintroduction of grammar
schools, while doing everything possible to rig the system in favour of ambitious
middle-class parents.) The challenge is to restore public confidence in the
comprehensives, attended by 90 per cent of our children. Once this is done, parental
demand to do away with the remaining grammar schools will be irresistible.
The big issue, then, is not the fate of grammar schools in Kent and Ripon - which are
among the areas where ballots are likely to be triggered - but the Blunkett vision for
comprehensives. Central to this is the idea of specialist schools, in the arts,
technology, languages and sports, which would be able to select up to 10 per cent of their
entrants by aptitude in the relevant specialist area. The intention is that, by 2003, as
many as one in four secondary schools will specialise. Old Labour, dedicated to the idea
that a comprehensive system means covering the country with identical 11-18 schools (it
even, for a time, opposed sixth-form colleges), will argue that this is just wicked old
selection by the back door. A more optimistic view is that it will create a genuine
diversity in schooling, open to parents of all classes and incomes, for an age that
expects choice in public as well as private services. Either way, the debate, so far
almost ignored by politicians and press in favour of the dreary old ding-dong about
grammar schools, ought to begin.
New Statesman
September 6, 1999 |