12 Aralık 2013 Perşembe

More than 4% of primary schools fail to meet basic maths and English levels

Michael Gove at Durand Academy primary school, south London

The education secretary Michael Gove, at Durand Academy main school in Stockwell, south London earlier this year. Photograph: Stefan Rousseau/PA




Much more than 4% of England’s almost 17,000 main colleges failed to meet the government’s tougher new specifications in the fundamentals of maths and English, according to new college league tables published on Thursday


Some 767 schools failed to achieve the government’s mandated floor of at least 60% of pupils attaining “secondary-ready” ranges in reading, creating and maths, and have been under progress measures in all 3 subjects.


The tests taken by pupils at the end of the 2012-13 academic year had been far more tough soon after the government raised the floor degree. Utilizing the new measure, 834 primaries would have failed to meet the tougher specifications in their 2011-12 outcomes.


A spokesman for the Division of Education (DfE) stated: “This government brought in increased primary school floor targets with 1 aim in thoughts – to drive up standards with instant impact to finish many years of entrenched failure.


“Schools respond to this challenge. The floor requirements we launched had been tougher and efficiency is enhancing. Heads, teachers and pupils deserve credit for meeting the challenge head-on.”


The slight improvement was expected right after the 2013 benefits of the essential stage two (KS2) tests of 11-yr-olds – on which the major tables are based mostly – showed a better functionality nationally.


Overall, the proportion of pupils achieving a level 4 end result in reading through, writing and maths at KS2 rose to 76% this year from 75% in 2012.


A single of the greatest doing colleges in the league tables was Litton principal, a small Church of England voluntary-aided school with just two classrooms and 45 pupils in complete, in a village near Buxton, Derbyshire.


Litton – which was rated outstanding by Ofsted inspectors last year – was just 1 of eight primary schools in the nation to achieve common levels of 5A for its pupils. Litton’s typical point score was marginally bested by St Oswald’s major college in Chester.


St Joseph’s Roman Catholic principal school, another tiny college near Clitheroe in Lancashire, was close behind.


There were 94 major schools in which every youngster attained at least “secondary-prepared” levels in reading through and maths tests, and in the teacher assessments of writing, as effectively as generating expected progress in all 3 subjects.


The worst doing nearby authorities included Poole in Dorset, exactly where five of the authority’s 15 primary colleges failed to meet the floor. Norfolk had 25 primaries that missed the mark, Bradford had 22 and Suffolk 21.


The DfE explained sponsored academies enhanced their overall performance in the key measure by 3 percentage points compared with 2012, even though nearby authority mainstream schools rose by one particular percentage stage.


“Some of the improvements seen at new sponsored main academies are remarkable – ending years of continual underneath-functionality,” the DfE spokesman explained.


“The skills and powerful leadership supplied by sponsors is the ideal way to turn about weak colleges and give pupils there the ideal opportunity of a initial-class education.”




More than 4% of primary schools fail to meet basic maths and English levels

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