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From Tripartite to Comprehensive Secondary Education

 Page last Edited: 14/04/2010:

  1. Click here for my new PowerPoint Presentation on Tripartism and Comprehensivisation
  2. Click here for a very thorough recently updated [2007] article on the History of Education in England : [Gillard D (2007) Education in England: a brief history www.dg.dial.pipex.com/history/ ]
  3. Click here for BBC coverage of  recent research on Grammar Schools
  4. Click here for BBC coverage of change in Conservative  attitude to Grammar Schools
  5. Click here for BBC coverage of analysis of Grammar School pupil intakes.
  6. Click here for BBC coverage of Sutton Trust Report: top comprehensives more socially exclusive than grammar schools

 Document Contents 

 Introduction

 Education Prior to the 1944 Education Act

 The 1944 Education Act and the Introduction of Tripartite Secondary Education

 Sociological Criticisms of the System of Tripartite Secondary Education

 The Transition to Comprehensive Secondary Education

 Advantages Claimed For Comprehensive Secondary Education

 Criticisms Made of Comprehensive Secondary Education.

 Conclusions

 Introduction: An Examination Health Warning

This is are rather long document and AS level Sociology students will not require detailed familiarity with the organisation of the UK education system prior to the 1944 Education Act. However I hope that you will find the later sections of the document useful especially as providing a  historical context  for the consideration of examination questions related to more recent education policies from the 1970s and especially from the 1990s onwards. I shall be providing information on more recent education policy issues in a subsequent document.

 Education Prior to the 1944 Education Act

Prior to 1944 several important government reports were published which recommended the expansion of state secondary education and led eventually to the passing of the 1944 Education.

  1. Thus the Hadow Report[1926] recommended that the concept of elementary education should be replaced by a system of primary education ending at age 11+ to be followed by secondary education in separate selective and non-selective schools. It also recommended the raising of the school leaving age to 15.
  2. The 1938 Spens Report confirmed the necessity for secondary education but recommended the expansion of technical high schools thereby clearly helping to lay the foundations for the eventual introduction of the Tripartite system.
  3. The Norwood Report of 1943 was, if anything, more significant in that although the Norwood committee did receive some submissions in support of "multilateral schools" [in which secondary pupils of all abilities would be educated in a system which approximated to comprehensivisation] it opted for Tripartite Secondary education on the grounds that children basically fall into three categories of ability and that consequently three different types of secondary school were required.

In the words of the Norwood Report Grammar schools were suitable for pupils who "were interested in learning for its own sake", could "grasp an argument" and would ultimately "enter the learned professions" or take up "higher business and administrative posts". Meanwhile the technical schools would be for pupils whose abilities "lie markedly in the fields of applied science or applied art...to prepare boys and girls for taking up certain crafts-engineering, agriculture and the like" and the secondary modern was for pupils who "may have much ability but it will in the realm of facts... and...because he is interested only in the moment he may be incapable of along series of interconnected steps; relevance to present concerns is the only way of awakening his interest: abstractions mean little to him."

Between 1900 and 1944 although many pupils continued to be educated in all age elementary schools between the ages of 5-14, opportunities for secondary education were gradually extended although it is important to note the geographical variation in the nature of secondary school provision.  Prior to the 1944 Act [which was devised under the auspices Conservative Education Minister in the Wartime Coalition government R. A. Butler but actually implemented by the Labour government when it come to power in 1945] several types of school were in existence in England and Wales. They are listed below.

  1. Many pupils between ages of 5-14 still attended a single state elementary school usually with no separation according to age such as nowadays exists although such schools were often organised in separate primary and secondary sections. {I can remember that even in the early 1950s my own Primary school also had a secondary section "next door".}
  2. However Local Education authorities built an increasing number of Central schools providing secondary education often of a technical nature which resulted in the increasing separation of primary and secondary pupils into separate schools and this process continued especially after the 1926 Hadow report which recommended the ending of elementary education and the transition from primary to secondary school at the age of 11.[In Norwich for example Central Schools were designed for pupils who had been unable to gain a grammar school place but were considered especially suitable for secondary education]
  3. A relatively small proportion of students from richer families attended private fee-paying primary preparatory schools. [These schools were preparatory in the sense that they were preparing pupils for entry to prestigious public {i.e. private} schools at age 13.]
  4. Among Private secondary schools it is important to distinguish between the small number of prestigious so-called "Public Schools" which provided a high level[ if traditional] education and the rest of the private secondary schools, many of which educated comfortably off pupils who had been unable to gain places at independent or local authority grammar schools.
  5. Other comfortably off middle class students might transfer at age 11 from private primary schools to independent fee paying secondary grammar schools some of which had existed for hundreds of years. These schools did also offer a small number of free scholarship places
  6. Additional secondary grammar schools had been introduced by Local Education Authorities under the terms of the 1902 Education Act. These schools also charged fees but provided more free places than did the independent grammar schools
  7. After 1902 even more pupils from private primary schools and some from state elementary schools could transfer at age 11 to the newly introduced LEA secondary grammar schools.
  8. Although the LEA grammar schools were also obliged to provide some free places to pupils who passed the Special Places examination, the vast majority of these free places were awarded to middle class pupils who ,for a variety of reasons, were more likely to pass the Special Places examination and, indeed, some working class pupils [my father included] who passed the examination could not take up their places because of the additional financial costs involved [ such as the costs of the compulsory school uniform].
  9. By the late 1930s the "Public Schools" were attracting increased criticism even within the "Establishment" because of their elitism and because the education which they were providing was seen as in some respects out of touch with the growing democratic sentiments of the age. It was widely believed that any reform of the educational system should include reform of the public schools but it was not lost on PM Churchill [and on Butler] that reform of the Public Schools would cause political controversy especially in the Conservative Party and, in the event, no such reforms were introduced.
  10. Also in 1938 one half of elementary schools, catering for just under one third of children were voluntary schools organised primarily by the churches with some financial assistance from the government. One problem for R. A. Butler was that if the school leaving age was to be raised to 15, the Church schools would need additional financial help because many lacked the resources to provide an adequate education even for 5-14 year olds. Eventually these difficulties were more or less resolved.

 The 1944 Education Act and the Introduction of Tripartite Secondary Education.

The main provisions of the 1944 Education  Act are listed below

  1. The Board of Education was to become a Ministry of Education and the Minister was given greater powers "not just to superintend but to control and direct Local education authorities."
  2. The number of LEAs was reduced from to so as to facilitate more effective planning
  3. There were significant reforms to the voluntary education sector.
  4. Bearing in mind the geographical diversity of education provision a nation-wide system of primary and secondary education was now to be introduced.
  5. Parents who wished to educate their children at home would be allowed to do so.
  6. It was recognised that some children were late developers and there were provisions in the Act for the reallocation of pupils to different schools at age 13.However such reallocations would occur very rarely in practice.
  7. The school leaving age was to be raised from 14 to 15.However this reform was not actually introduced until 1947.
  8. Provisions were made for the expansion of further education.
  9. There was to be increased provision of nursery education, free school meals and medical inspection of school children.

The 1944 Education Act provided for free secondary education for all although those parents who chose to pay for their children's education at private or direct grant grammar schools could still do so. Local authorities were not compelled by the Act to organise secondary education on a tripartite system containing Grammar, Technical and Secondary Modern Schools although the majority of LEAs did opt for Tripartism. Also although the act did not envisage that selection within the tripartite system would be based only upon an 11+ examination, the fact that the availability of grammar school places exceeded the demand for them meant that an 11+ examination containing an IQ tests and English and mathematics tests was introduced essentially as a rationing device.

The following arguments were used in support of the provisions of the 1944 Education Act

  1. Regional variations in the availability of separate secondary education and the stigma of the term "elementary education" would be ended.
  2. Different kinds of secondary education would be developed [as it transpired mainly in different types of secondary schools] to meet what were believed to be the different abilities, aptitudes and interests of different types of pupil.
  3. Allocation to selective state grammar schools would now be determined only by the pupils' academic ability and not by parental financial ability to pay. Thus although there were huge geographical variations it was estimated that in 1938 only 48% of LEA Grammar school places were free places gained via success in entrance examinations. As a result of the introduction of the 1944 Act all such places would be free.
  4. Any selection process was presented not as a matter of success or failure but as facilitating  the allocation of pupils to schools assumed to be suitable for them.
  5. Although Grammar, Secondary Modern and Technical schools were clearly different they were to be accorded parity of esteem by government in terms of the financial resources devoted to each type of school .

The historian Rodney Lowe has stated that on the one hand the 1944 Education Act "enjoyed enormous popular support" and that it was once described as "the greatest measure of educational advance since 1870 and probably the greatest ever known" but that on the other hand "one educational historian [H.C Dent 1988} has gone so far as to attack the Act as " a clever exercise in manipulative politics by a past master in the art [of the possible] with the aid of a state bureaucracy devoted to highly conservative objectives."  [Politics has sometimes been defined as " the art of the possible" and R. A. Butler  chose this same phrase for the   title of his autobiography.] It is certainly the case that sociologists have been quick to criticise the Act and it is to these sociological criticisms that we now turn.

 

 Sociological Criticisms of Tripartite Secondary Education.

  1. It was argued that the existence of the 11+ reduced the flexibility of primary schools to determine their own curricula by forcing them to gear their teaching to the demands of the 11+ examination. Of course it was also argued conversely that examination pressures were " a good thing."
  2. At the time of sitting the 11+ examination the age of children varied from approximately 10.5 to 11.5 and this must presumably have given older children a relative advantage. However it is difficult to see how this problem could be resolved.
  3. In order to allocate children within the tripartite system it was deemed necessary to assess their intelligence but many doubtwhether the concept of intelligence can be defined with precision.
  4. It is doubtful also whether children can be classified as "academic", "technical" or "practical" as suggested in the Norwood Report so that the basic rationale for tripartism may well have been s flawed.
  5. Children were to be allocated to secondary schools on the basis of an 11+ examination involving a so-called IQ test and English and Mathematics tests. It was argued by psychologist Cyril Burt and his supporters that IQ tests could provide an accurate, objective measure of intelligence but this view was called into question on the grounds that some children might be unable to do themselves justice because of "examination nerves": that the tests might contain cultural biases; that some children might be given greater opportunities to practise IQ tests because they were in higher streams of primary schools and /or because they had private coaching and practice could be shown to improve IQ test performance very significantly.
  6. [Considerable controversy has surrounded the work of Cyril Burt in that he has been accused of fabricating parts of his research .There have been some attempts to restore his academic reputation in recent years although these attempts have also been hotly contested. I shall not pursue this controversy here.]
  7. It transpired that, for whatever reasons, girls were likely to score considerably higher marks in the 11+, so much so that it was considered necessary to set the pass mark higher for girls than for boys to prevent girls from gaining a disproportionate share of grammar school places. Policy makers claimed that girls had developed more quickly and that boys would soon catch up!
  8. More Grammar school places were available in some regions than in others and there were also more places in middle class areas than in working class areas.
  9. Consequently it came to be argued that as many as 10% of pupils may have been allocated to the "wrong" schools via the 11+ and very few of these mistakes were corrected by subsequent reallocation at age 13.
  10. The Act stressed that different types of secondary school were to receive parity of esteem in terms of provision of financial resources but in practice LEAs often allocated more funds to grammar schools and, in any case, since it was clear that grammar school pupils would, as a result of the education they received, enjoy far better career prospects, it was inconceivable that the different types of secondary school would have parity of esteem in society as a whole and secondary modern pupils were as a result likely to be stigmatised at an early age as 11+ failures.
  11. Despite the provisions of the Act few new technical schools were built so that in many areas the system of secondary education was virtually bipartite rather than tripartite. Also it was the pupils who had narrowly failed to gain a grammar school place who were allocated to Technical schools but without any specific assessment of their technical abilities
  12. Neither were any reforms of the private sector of education introduced.
  13. Researchers such as Heath, Halsey and Ridge concluded in their 1980 study Origins and Destinations that the 1944 Education Act did not increase the degree of meritocracy of the UK system but even by the early 1950s increasing recognition of the limitations of tripartism began to increase support for a transition to Comprehensive Secondary Education

There had been opposition to Tripartism and support for comprehensivisation in some more radical sections of the Labour Party even prior to the 1944 Act but the new Labour Government which was elected to power in 1945 was content to see secondary education organised primarily on Tripartite lines in the belief that the abolition of fee paying in Local Authority controlled Grammar schools would result in increased equality of educational opportunity as more talented working class pupils would now be enabled to enter Grammar schools on the basis of their success in a competitive examination.

The successive Conservative governments of  1951-1964 were also in favour of the Tripartite system and when  a series of government reports pointed to the weaknesses of the secondary education system Conservative Ministers tended to respond by arguing that it was therefore necessary to make the Tripartite system work as had originally been intended rather than to recommend transition to Comprehensivisation although by the early 1960s Conservative Secretary of State for Education Edward Boyle did express more sympathy for Comprehensivisation. He did, not, however, remain in that post for long.

The Crowther Report of 1959 demonstrated that the organisation of secondary education was leading to a waste of talent which undermined economic and social progress. The report pointed out that only 12% of pupils were continuing their education until the age of 17 and that early leaving was especially likely for working class pupils even when they had the ability to benefit from further schooling.

The 1963 Newsom Report entitled "Half Our Future" investigated the education of secondary modern pupil and while recognising the high quality of some secondary modern schools, also provided severe criticisms. It was clear that many pupils, even if they had been classified as11+ failures  were not given sufficient opportunities to develop their talents in secondary modern schools. W. Kenneth Richmond [1979] wrote as follows in relation to the Newsom Report: "It revealed that nearly 80% of Secondary Modern school buildings were seriously deficient, that the qualifications of Secondary Modern school teachers were often "below average" as their pupils were said to be, that the rapid turnover of staff vitiated the work of schools in the poorer districts---in short that more than half the nation's children were getting a raw deal."

Meanwhile, however, increasing numbers [from 5,500 in 1954 to about 55,000 in 1964]of Secondary Modern school pupils were remaining in school until age 16 in order to take GCSE O level examinations and the trend toward leaving at age 16 could be expected to increase as a result of the introduction of the CSE in 1963 which could be expected to give Secondary Modern pupils a greater sense of direction and may also have acted as a safety net for pupils who attempted but failed the O level examinations. While increasing numbers of Secondary Modern school pupils were attempting O levels sociological studies such as Education and the Working Class and Hightown Grammar demonstrated the wastage of mainly working class talent at grammar schools as many mainly working class grammar school pupils actually left school at age 15 prior to taking O levels.

The Robbins Report of 1963 was not specifically concerned with secondary education but with the necessity  for the mass expansion of higher education as a means of increasing economic growth [although the precise relationships between the expansion of higher education and economic growth are difficult/impossible to quantify exactly.] The report recommended that access to higher education should be increased from 216,000 students in 1963 to 560,00 in 1980-81 which resulted in the founding of several new universities and the expansion of the then Polytechnics which were enabled to introduce more degree level courses under the auspices of the newly introduced Council for National Academic Awards. However the significant implication of the Robbins Report for Secondary Education was that it criticised the fundamental ideas that academic abilities were mainly innate rather than culturally determined and that there existed only a very limited pool of talent containing those individuals with the abilities necessary to benefit from Higher Education.

It is clear therefore that in various ways, the Crowther, Newsom and Robbins Reports all helped indirectly to undermine the rationale for Tripartite Secondary Education.   

 

 The Transition to Comprehensive Secondary Education

The Labour Party in opposition decided from 1951 to support comprehensive secondary education although the precise meaning of and rationale for comprehensive education was not always made clear by senior Labour leaders  who sometimes attempted to popularise the misleading but nevertheless attractive slogan that comprehensivisation would guarantee  a grammar school education for every secondary school child. By the early 1960s  some senior Conservatives also were giving tentative support to comprehensivisation again without clarification of its precise meaning.

It seemed very unlikely in the early 1960s that all Local Education Authorities would wish to abolish their Grammar schools and unlikely also that the central government would force them to do so but where grammar schools continued to exist  any secondary modern schools in these areas which were designated "comprehensive" would be "comprehensive" in name only because they would not contain sufficient numbers of "high ability" children to qualify as "all ability schools." The continued existence of a relatively small number of state grammar schools and private secondary schools  still compromises the comprehensive principle [as perhaps do some aspects of recent governments 'education policies to be discussed later]. More uncertainties arose as some educationalists emphasised that comprehensives should and would rely more heavily on mixed ability teaching rather than upon rigid streaming, banding or setting and that as well as providing a more effective academic education, they could also foster social cohesion and reduce class antagonisms via the greater interaction of children from different social backgrounds.

However despite all the uncertainties surrounding comprehensivisation, it came as no surprise, bearing in mind the above mentioned criticisms of the tripartite system, when support for comprehensivisation began to increase in the country as a whole especially as the vast majority of secondary school pupils were being educated in secondary modern schools which were widely unpopular. However the parents of children who had achieved  prestigious Grammar school places were usually rather less keen to support the transition to comprehensivisation. 

Clyde Chitty and the late Caroline Benn[1996] quote the brief official definition provided in 1995 by the then DfE [now DfCFS] of comprehensive schools as "schools which cater for all children irrespective of ability" and provide the following data on the expansion of Comprehensive Secondary Education. [The authors do provide several explanatory footnotes which clarify in detail the coverage of these statistics {see "Thirty Years On" p88} but I have omitted these since I wish only to show the extension in broad terms of Comprehensivisation.]

Secondary Schools in England and Wales 1950-1994:The Expansion of Comprehensivisation.

Year % of Pupils No. of Pupils % of Schools No. of Schools
1950 0.4 7988 0.2 10
1965 8.5 239,619 4.5 262
1977 78.6 2,982,441 70 3083
1994 86.9 2,715,013 80 3095

More recent official data may be found by clicking here.

It should be noted that although the official definition of   "Comprehensive" does enable schools to be classified into Grammar, Secondary Modern and Comprehensive more or less accurately in terms of the official definition , the ability ranges of many schools which are officially defined as Comprehensive may be such that they approximate more to Secondary Modern schools or in some cases to Grammar schools rather than to Comprehensive schools . For example imagine the possible differences in intake between former Grammar schools in middle class areas and former Secondary Modern schools in working class areas. It has been argued especially by Ball, Bowe and Gerwitz in their study "Markets, Choice and Equity in Education [1995] that social class differences in school intakes have increased noticeably as a result of Conservative government education policies  from the late 1980s onwards several of which have been retained by subsequent Labour governments since 1997.

 The Case For Comprehensive Secondary Education.

The strength  of the support for comprehensive secondary education derived from the widely perceived defects of the Tripartite system and from the belief that the Comprehensive system would be able to overcome them.

  1. Supporters of Tripartism had claimed that there was only a "limited pool of talent" containing the minority of pupils with the abilities to benefit from an academic Grammar school education. However it came increasingly to be argued that many Secondary Modern pupils , some of whom were just as able as Grammar school pupils, were being denied an education suitable to their talents  which undermined their quality of life and economic efficiency as adults.
  2. Supporters of Comprehensivisation argued that pupils' academic talents were not heavily pre-determined at an early age and the talents of the vast majority of students who were failing the 11+ could be increased if they were given greater encouragement and better educational opportunities as was far more likely to occur in Comprehensive schools than in the Secondary Modern schools. Neither, it was claimed, was there any good reason why the   progress of the apparently more talented Grammar school pupils would be restricted if they were educated in Comprehensive schools.
  3. The 11+ examination had been presented by the supporters of Tripartism as an objective, accurate and fair method for the allocation of pupils to the three types of secondary school but critics argued that it was neither objective, nor accurate nor fair. In practice it discriminated in favour of middle class pupils who were more likely to be in the highest stream of "11+ oriented" primary school and whose parents could, if necessary, also afford additional private coaching; although the 11+ IQ test purported to measure abstract reasoning ability it also contained some cultural biases which favoured middle class children; and its existence inhibited the flexibility of primary schools to design curricula more relevant to the needs of their young pupils. Comprehensive schools were to be all-ability schools which at a stroke would remove any need for an examination to determine school allocation.
  4. Despite government claims that Grammar, Secondary Modern and Technical schools would receive parity of esteem in terms of the financial resources to be spent on the different types of school it became apparent that some LEAs were allocating disproportionate resources to Grammar schools and that in some , but certainly not all, Secondary Modern schools, teaching quality, resources and overall school atmosphere left much to be desired. Also the higher social status of Grammar schools and the better career prospects open to Grammar school pupils ensured that there would be no parity of esteem in society as a whole.
  5. Consequently pupils allocated to Secondary Modern schools were likely to feel that even at such an early age they had been classified as failures with adverse consequences for their future educational prospects as labelling theorists increasingly argued from the 1960s onwards.
  6. However since all comprehensives were in principle to educate pupils of all abilities who were not to be selected on the basis of a competitive examination, it was claimed that all comprehensives would have parity of esteem and the dangers of negative labelling would be much reduced especially if the new comprehensives opted mainly for mixed ability teaching which would reduce the negative impact on lower stream/band/set pupils of streaming/banding/setting.
  7. It had been recognised that under the Tripartite system there would be some "late developers" who although allocated to Secondary Modern schools at age 11, might show , say by the age of 13 that they should be reallocated to Grammar or Technical schools. Some provisions were made for reallocations between schools but they were rare in practice and it was` pointed out that  reallocations between streams/bands/sets within individual comprehensive schools would be far simpler than reallocation between schools as under the Tripartite System.
  8. Comprehensive schools, especially those in urban areas, were to be relatively large which would enable them to provide economically a wider range of courses than was available in the smaller Secondary Modern schools. It was argued that relatively large size would be necessary to ensure that there would be sufficient numbers of high ability students in the schools to differentiate them from Secondary Modern schools and to positively affect their overall ethos . Most Comprehensive schools [again, especially those in urban areas] would also provide Sixth Form facilities and it was hoped that the Comprehensive system would ,via more effective teaching, enable a greater proportion of students to complete A level courses and move on to Higher Education than had been the case under the Tripartite System in which very few Secondary Modern pupils had remained in school beyond the then compulsory school leaving age of 15 although from the late 1950s increasing numbers did so..
  9. It was hoped also that because Comprehensives were to offer A level courses this would enable them to attract more highly qualified staff who would be attracted by the possibility of teaching such courses.
  10. As has briefly been mentioned it was hoped by many supporters of comprehensivisation that if the vast majority of secondary school pupils were educated in similar comprehensive schools  more regular social interaction among pupils of different academic abilities and social backgrounds could help to drive up academic standards and make for greater social cohesion which would be socially beneficial in the long term
  11.  In summary, therefore ,it was hoped that the new comprehensive schools would be popular with pupils and parents alike and that all pupils would now have a  fairer chance in a more effective teaching environment to develop their talents to the full thus reducing the inequalities of opportunity and the wastage of talent [especially among working class pupils] which occurred under the Tripartite system.  

 

 

 Opposition to Comprehensive Secondary School Education.

Supporters of Comprehensivisation  continue to accept most of the above arguments and to believe that it has provided far better educational opportunities for pupils who would otherwise have been educated in Secondary Modern schools while simultaneously enabling pupils who would otherwise have been educated in Grammar schools to continue to reach high academic standards.

However several important criticisms have been made of Comprehensive Secondary Education.

  1. Supporters of the selective Grammar schools argued that these schools provided an excellent academic education for the limited pool of higher ability pupils who would benefit from the academic stimulation and competition which derived from the concentration of higher ability , ambitious[ and disproportionately middle class] pupils in the Grammar schools. Brighter pupils, it was claimed, were more likely to drift rather than to excel in the less challenging atmosphere of comprehensive schools.
  2. It was clear also that many supporters of Grammar school opposed the greater social mixing of pupils which was likely to occur under comprehensivisation on the grounds that such social mixing might undermine the high standards of behaviour and positive attitudes to learning which themselves contributed to high academic standards in the Grammar schools. 
  3. Supporters of comprehensivisation had often argued that insofar as comprehensive school would be larger than the Secondary moderns that they replaced this would enable them to offer a wider range of courses in a cost-effective manner. However critics argued that large comprehensives would become impersonal institutions in which pupils' individuality would be lost with adverse consequences for them.
  4. It was rapidly argued by some critics of Comprehensivisation that overall examination results were worse than had been achieved under the Tripartite system, a view rejected by supporters of comprehensivisation. This so-called standards debate [which has become even more complex amid claims and counterclaims as to trends in the degree of difficulty of GCE O level, GCSE and A level examinations] is according to many experts impossible to resolve with any certainty while the well known supporter of comprehensivisation Clyde Chitty has pointed out that any such debate in any case ignores the impacts of the different systems on the very large numbers of pupils who have in any case never been able to achieve the 5 Olevel/A*-C GCSE standard and that one argument in support of Comprehensivisation is that it can provide better educational opportunities for these children. {I shall not attempt to summarise the conclusions of this complex statistical  debate and interested leaders will have to consult the more specialist literature for themselves!]
  5. There have also been important disputes surrounding the use of mixed ability teaching within Comprehensive schools. Some critics opposed Comprehensive schools on the grounds that the widespread use of mixed ability teaching  would hamper the progress of high ability pupils whose learning speed would be restricted by the necessity for mixed ability classes to be taught at a pace which could be followed by the slower learners. It was also sometimes claimed that the slower learners would actually be demoralised by too frequent comparison with their apparently much cleverer peers.
  6. Against this, however, some supporters of comprehensivisation argued that greater reliance on mixed ability teaching would improve the standards of the weaker students as a result of the decline of negative labelling without reducing the progress of the cleverer pupils.
  7. Many sociologists have produced studies pointing to the adverse consequences of streaming /banding/setting operating via negative labelling but many Comprehensive school teachers continue to see merit in streaming/banding/setting.
  8. Some radical supporters of comprehensivisation criticised the practices of actual comprehensive schools which in their support for streaming/banding/setting were doing little more than retaining the system of tripartism under one roof.
  9. There were and remain very significant differences among Comprehensive schools with the result that parity of esteem among comprehensive schools is unlikely to be achieved just as was the case under the Tripartite system.  A glance at the GCSE  examination statistics shown in the following table will show why comprehensive schools re unlikely to be given parity of esteem by parents, pupils and employers.
  10. The following table on GCSE examination results in different types of school show some very interesting comparisons. [Source DCSF: GCSE and Equivalent Results in England 2007/8. 
Years: 2003/04 - 2007/083 (Revised)4                      
Coverage: England                          
                         
  Total number of schools1 Percentage of pupils achieving 5+ A*-C grades at GCSE and equivalents5
                       Less than  30
School Type Less than 15 15 to less than 20 20 to less than 25 25 to less than 30 30 to less than 40 40 to less than 50 50 to less than 60 60 to less than 70 70 to less than 80 80 to less than 90  90 plus
                         
Comprehensive Schools6                        
2007/08 2,747 0 1 11 15 111 339 597 710 618 254 91 27
2006/07 2,711 1 3 12 41 220 454 632 643 460 177 68 57
2005/06 2,728 6 6 29 76 321 528 563 609 398 138 54 117
2004/05 2,752 8 27 62 106 401 530 589 525 349 109 46 203
2003/04 2,751 20 39 95 142 473 535 544 497 275 98 33 296
                         
Selective Schools                          
2007/08 164 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 164 0
2006/07 164 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 164 0
2005/06 164 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 164 0
2004/05 164 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 163 0
2003/04 164 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 162 0
                         
Modern Schools7                          
2007/08 173 0 0 2 0 13 37 45 48 16 11 1 2
2006/07 170 0 0 1 6 23 37 50 31 18 4 0 7
2005/06 180 1 2 3 11 32 60 32 25 12 2 0 17
2004/05 179 3 2 8 14 43 42 38 16 11 2 0 27
2003/04 180 7 6 19 15 43 31 33 19 6 1 0 47
                         
All Maintained Mainstream schools1,8                          
2007/08 3,094 1 1 13 15 126 377 644 761 634 266 256 30
2006/07 3,045 1 3 13 47 243 491 682 674 478 181 232 64
2005/06 3,072 7 8 32 87 353 588 595 634 410 140 218 134
2004/05 3,095 11 29 70 120 444 572 627 541 360 112 209 230
2003/04 3,095 27 45 114 157 516 566 577 516 281 101 195 343
                         

 

In relation to the above table you might like to note the following main points.

The data apply to only to the State sector of secondary education. No results for private schools are presented

GCSE examination results vary very considerably among different comprehensive schools but since results depend to a considerable extent upon the social circumstances of the pupils as well as on the effectiveness of the schools themselves we cannot automatically assume that the schools with the best results are the most effective schools. It is for this reason that governments attempt to assess school effectiveness in terms of value added to their pupils' attainment levels. You may wish to discuss the value added concept with your teachers.

In recent years in all selective schools 90% or more of pupils have achieved 5 or more A*-C grades at GCSE Level. Since these pupils will have undergone fairly rigorous selection procedures  and may also come mainly from relatively affluent social backgrounds these results are perhaps not entirely surprising.

Very few Secondary Modern schools contain large percentages of pupils gaining 5 or more A*C GCSE pass grades because they are located in areas where most pupils with high measured abilities at age 11 attend selective secondary schools.

 It has been argued convincingly that  especially in the current era of greater parental choice, middle class parents have greater knowledge than working class parents as to the relative examination success rates  of comprehensive schools and have used various strategies not available to working class parents [such as for example purchasing houses in the catchment areas of successful comprehensives] to gain access for their children to the more successful comprehensives. Consequently it is claimed the replacement of Tripartite Education by Comprehensivisation has resulted in the replacement of selection by ability by selection according to parental income.

 

 

  Conclusions.

  In this document I have attempted to list the main arguments which have been raised for and against Tripartite and Comprehensive systems of Secondary Education. The main points are summarised below followed by summaries from the Guardian and the BBC respectively of differing views upon the Tripartite- Comprehensivisation debate.

  1. Selective Grammar schools achieve better overall GCSE and A level examination results than Comprehensive schools and Secondary Modern schools but this is entirely to be expected given the different ability ranges and social class backgrounds  of these schools' intakes.
  2. Some Comprehensives achieve excellent GCSE and A Level results but one suspects that this may be explicable in terms of the relatively high ability ranges and privileged social backgrounds of these schools' intakes which effectively makes them "virtual Grammar schools" at least as regards  65% and upwards of their pupil intakes.
  3. Some Secondary Modern schools gain very creditable GCSE results and in some cases do offer A level courses. In 2004/5 for example approximately 3900 Secondary modern pupils were entered for A level examinations. Their overall results were slightly worse than in Comprehensive schools but 1.6% of Secondary modern school entrants actually gained 3 or more A grades. at A level.
  4. A substantial proportion of both Comprehensive and Secondary Modern schools achieve poor to moderate examination results. Schools effectiveness research tells us that this cannot be explained solely by socio-economic factors yet I would suggest tentatively that these results may be explained substantially in terms of the ability ranges and social class backgrounds of these schools' intakes.
  5. In any case these same schools may often be shown to be performing well in terms of "value added" measures of school performance and even if they are not performing well in terms of the value added measure they may still be doing well in the difficult circumstances which they face.
  6. The implications of the above points may be that it is impossible to evaluate the effectiveness of Comprehensive Secondary Education in the UK because in many areas of the country we have never had a system of Comprehensive Secondary Education if by that is meant a system of secondary schools with broadly similar intakes in terms of ability and social class background.
  7. Detailed statistical research by Anthony Heath and Peter Clifford {Class Inequalities and Educational Reform in 20th Century Britain 1996} relating to students born between 1910 and 1969  suggests that neither the Tripartite System nor the Comprehensive system succeeded in reducing relative social class inequalities in educational achievement thereby perhaps giving some support to Bernstein's view expressed in the 1970s that "Education cannot compensate for society".
  8. Successive governments' education policies from the 1970s to the present day will be reviewed in subsequent documents where it will be shown that such policies have had little success in reducing inequalities of educational opportunity. Let us therefore  hope for wider social and economic reforms and educational  policies which in the future will enable all of our students to reach their full potential. My belief for, what it is worth, is that this is most likely to be achieved  within a modernised education system which nevertheless fully reflects the principles of truly comprehensive education.

And finally :

For Guardian summaries of recent research  on selection and comprehensivisation click here for Professor Jesson's  research critical of selection and click here for Professor Whitty on support for comprehensivisation. Click here for BBC coverage of  recent research on Grammar Schools which suggests that clever pupils achieve higher educational standards in Grammar Schools . Click here  for BBC information indicating that pupils eligible for free school meals are very unlikely to attend grammar schools which undermines claims that a grammar school education is likely to be a route out of poverty. So where do you stand on this issue...and why? 

 

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