Title: The Education Reform Act 20 years on
1The Education Reform Act 20 years on
- Dylan Wiliam
- www.dylanwiliam.net
2Overview of presentation
- The key components of the Education Reform Act
- The two big myths about parental choice
- The effects of hyperaccountability
- Why this matters
3The 1988 Education Reform Act
- An extremely coherent piece of legislation
- Main assumption markets are the best way to
improve schools - To create a market, you need
- Choice parental choice
- Accountability formula funding
- Diversity grant-maintained schools, local
management - Standardization national curriculum
- Information national tests at 7, 11, 14 and 16
4Apart from that, Mrs. Lincoln
- The potentially positive features of ERA
- National curriculum (the idea, not the particular
curriculum) - Local management of schools
- Formula funding (again, the idea, not the current
policy) - have been largely negated by tragic shortcomings
- The myth of parental choice
- fuelled by misleading information
5How to judge school quality?
- There is always an easy solution to every human
problem - neat, plausible, and wrong. (Mencken, 1917)
- Raw outcome data
- Useful when inputs are equal
- Completely misleading when they are not (e.g.,
surgical survival rates)
6OECD
7Raw results vs. value-added
- Examination success rates combine two effects
- The quality of the teaching
- The quality of the intake
- The second dominates the first
- Contextualized value-added (CVA) is by far the
best measure of the contribution that a school
has made to the achievement of its students
8Differences in CVA are often insignificant
Middle 50 differences not significantly
different from average
(Wilson Piebalga, 2008)
9and are usually small
- 7 of the variability in secondary school GCSE
grades are attributable to the school - 93 of the variability in secondary school GCSE
grades are nothing to do with the school - A student who gets eight grade Ds at an average
school will get - five Ds and three Cs at one of the best schools
(1sd above mean CVA) - five Ds and three Es at one of the worst schools
(1sd below mean CVA)
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11but some schools are amazingly good
- Moreton Community School
- 5A-C 30
- CVA 1090
- A student who gets eight Ds at an average school
will get seven Bs and a C here
12The effects of hyperaccountability
13Effects of test preparation
14Literacy
Children receiving
years of the Literacy Strategy
1
2
3
15Numeracy
Children receiving
years of the Numeracy Strategy
1
2
3
16Standards at key stage 2
17Standards at key stage 4
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19Why does it matter?
20The changing demand for skills (USA)
(Levy Murnane, 2005)
21Conclusion
- Attempts by successive governments to raise
student achievement have - Produced only marginal improvements in student
achievement - that are primarily in skills that are
increasingly irrelevant in work - while performance on the skills that matter has
declined - thus threatening our future prosperity
- and alienating a generation of students.