Ignorance

By (author) Sally Tomlinson

Publication date:

20 October 2022

Publisher

Agenda Publishing

Dimensions:

198x129mm
5x8"

ISBN-13: 9781788213943

As a universal experience school provokes strongly-held opinions. The views of teachers, parents, pupils compete with those of educational theorists, social engineers and ideologues. Although undoubtedly much improved since the time of Beveridge, the provision of education remains beset with challenges. Sally Tomlinson’s engaging, and at times personal, journey through Britain’s postwar experience of schooling and education reform draws on her many years of working in the sector. She explains how legacies of different systems and countless policy initiatives have led to the persistence of social inequalities, entrenching them in society and perpetuated by the power dynamics that they create between class, race and gender. Furthermore, she shows how the increasing mania for testing, targets, choice and competition, which has made schools into a marketplace and young people into consumers, threatens to undermine schools as a place where citizens can share learning and the democratic values that are needed as much today as they were in Beveridge’s time.

Published to mark 80 years since William Beveridge’s report on impediments to social progress, this brisk history of English education charts eight dizzying decades of policy initiatives and events, from the 1944 Education Act to the “examinations shambles” of the Covid years. Tomlinson’s even-handed account and incisive analysis of where and how successive governments have failed in tackling inadequate schooling - or, as Beveridge had it, “ignorance” - is spliced with personal accounts from her remarkable career and family life. Written with authority and wit, it’s an expertly sharp and coherent diagnosis of the persistent problems that undermine education as much in 2024 as they did in Beveridge’s time.