Michael “Oiky”
Gove may have been shunted off to the Whips’ Office to continue the theme of
crashing ineptitude that he began while at the Department for Education (DfE),
but his cheerleaders just keep on cheering, and spinning the same old baloney:
Gove, in their retelling, was a Great Reformer. One of those spinning longest
and loudest is Spectator editor Fraser Nelson.
Fraser Nelson
Nelson, who is a highly intelligent man, must know that the
substance of what Gove actually did is not unadjacent to Sweet Jack, yet on he
spins. Free Schools are lauded, despite the programme going well over £1 billion over budget.
Schools converting to Academy status are also praised, despite this being
someone else’s idea, and despite the reality not matching his latest Telegraph article.
“The Blob gobbled up Michael Gove
– now it’s coming for David Cameron ... The Prime Minister treats school
reform like a dirty secret, but it is by far his greatest triumph” asserts
Nelson. Yes, readers are still sold on the Strawman “Blob”, which is the stuff of invention, a mythical presence which
is opposed to improving children’s education, while in the real world, it does
not exist.
All those who are
deemed by Gove’s disciples to be part of this “Blob” – teachers, educationalists, civil servants and
administrators – want to improve education as much as Nelson and his fellow
spinners. The characterisation is made purely in order to have something to
blame, which at least makes a change from eastern European migrants. And Nelson’s
example is deeply flawed.
After telling “‘If the Blob scents weakness, they exploit
it,’ one school governor tells me. ‘That’s what’s happening now’”, which
means he is still on speaking terms with the loathsome Toby Young, Nelson tells
of “Inspiration Trust, a Norfolk-based
group with a track record of turning around failing schools. It ... has now
been dragged into something of a spurious row about having advance notice of
Ofsted inspections”.
For “spurious”,
read “reported in the Observer”.
Inspiration Trust appeared
to be rather well-informed as to when Ofsted would be calling by. Their
excuse, that they were on some kind of long-term heightened inspection
readiness, is interesting, but the emails seen by the paper suggest prior
knowledge. Inspiration has made a legal complaint; tellingly, Ofsted has not.
And that is Nelson’s only evidence in support of his “Blob” Strawman. He makes no mention of
all the Free School and Academy failures, and while enthusing over how many
schools have converted to Academy status, says nothing about many of those
conversions being urged by the DfE, or even forced on the schools concerned.
Instead, he issues the usual right-wing prattle.
Education could be discussed rationally and impartially. But not
by Fraser Nelson.
1 comment:
having been a teacher across university/Vi form range, I have always found 'oiky''s condescenion gross but what really infuriates me is the idea you privatise education for the profit of companies like (Murdoch's) Amplify in the name of progress. Time to row back and think again. Murdoch and 'oiky' would have opened their own 'free' school but for circumstances.
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