Cronus wrote:As a side story, a good friend of mine is a teacher at a local college. He's fantastic with kids and has worked damn hard to get where he is.
However, after a few years securing his dream job at the college (fairly local, etc), he's being driven mad.
He regularly tells me about kids simply not cut out for further education - whether due to lack of application, ability, whatever - kids who would be better going out getting an apprenticeship or going straight into work. Or kids who simply don't care and see college just as an extension to school, something they have to do but don't want to.
Several times he's gone out of his way to help some of these kids yet they still fail their courses, some badly. He's later been called to meetings and grilled as to why he's failed them, and instructed to re-test, re-mark, whatever. When they fail for a second, or third time the issue has been taken out of his hands and he's later found out the kid has been given a pass. It's happened to him quite a few times, and to other teachers across the college.
Why? Very simply, the college gets paid a lump sum for every pass. He mentioned £6k. Seems high to me but could be correct?
I've no idea whether the figure is correct but I know the principal is correct. A target culture combined with the increasing privatisation of education.
A friend of mine was recently unemployed for just about 18 months, after a year she was put on the Work Programme. Sounds nice but it's just a privatisation of the job centre's functions. Instead of going to the job centre she went to a private provider who did whatever they could to get her off their books so they could get their money. They forced her to go to interviews for cleaning jobs, despite having no experience and being totally unsuitable for her (she's partially sighted).
When that didn't work they put her on every training course possible including Functional Skills courses. Which are basic English and Maths courses to less than GCSE standard. Courses run by, IIRC, Barnsley College.
My friend got A*'s in both English & Maths A-Level and has a degree in English Language. Yet was put through several weeks of courses simply so that the private Work Programme provider and Barnsley College can get paid.
The target culture is the bane of the economy at the moment in my opinion, in both the public and private sectors. It massively distorts the industries, businesses and organisations in which its used.
Whether it's the welfare sector in putting people through unsuitable courses or trying to get them into unsuitable jobs or get them off disability benefit.
Or the Education sector which has been turned into an exam-passing factory.