Monday 29 November 2010

China

Extracts only


(Non-italicised script was contemporary; italicised script is added in subsequent editing)

Visit to China: Beijing and Chongqing: 2 – 9th May 2000



A DIARY

Iain Smith and Rae Stark


(This trip was about setting up a jointly taught Masters programme for Chinese teachers, to be delivered by a combination of the South West China Normal University in Chongqing and the University of Strathclyde in Glasgow)

Monday 1st May 2000

Here we are: not on holiday and in the familiar narrow cell of a Fokker 100, en route to Amsterdam and then Beijing. Amsterdam for a few hours on a holiday afternoon is pleasant enough; and we have some champagne and sushi before we board the evening 747 for Beijing. We are lucky enough to have 3 seats for the two of us and there is a good evening meal as we head over Scandinavia and the Baltic Sea and into Russian airspace.
…………………………………………………………………….......……………………………………….
Thursday 4th May 2000
.

We meet the President and are ushered in to a banquet feast (with him, his wife, Professor Cui Yanqiang, Mr Li Yuanhu and Wu Xin). The private dining room (in a restaurant of the Foreign Affairs Office) may not be as impressive as our Principal’s, but the food beats it: chicken feet, duck tongue, meat dumplings with a fiery chilli sauce, exquisite sweet and sour chicken, fried river fish, pakchoi and giant mushrooms, prawns with mushrooms and fish fins; fish soup; green bean salad; Chinese roast pork; barbecued ribs; a pineapple stuffed with warm sweet rice and fruit; tripe and egg; sticky rice with sesame seeds; spring rolls of a wonderful sweetish flavour; and several others, all washed down with tea, local beer and red wine.

…………………………………………………………
Sunday 7 May 2000

After lunch, we are taken on a spectacular 3-hour car tour of the various parts of Chongqing (central district population 3-4 million, with another 30 million living in the surrounding districts- then, as today, the single biggest conurbation in the world ). We see the Yangstze River with massive bridges across it at various points and spectacular high rise office blocks perched on the various hillsides of the city. Interestingly, in the middle of a grim business area, there is a Christian church with an open advertisement for what it is. Construction work – buildings, roads and bridges- seems to happen everywhere. The massive industrial expansion of the area (confirmed by British Council the following day) is self-evident………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………

Monday 8th May 2000
Then off to dinner in a local restaurant for a ceremonial banquet. There are two Deans; the President and his wife; Mr Li; Wu Xin; the driver; and the two of us. (At the round banquet table, the driver joins us an equal). The President presents us with two silk presents. Rae responds and gives him a picture book of Scotland.

The menu is impressive: duck’s tongue, three kinds of lobster, one raw, one as a porridge; hot fish in chilli fish; green vegetables; shredded carrot with spring onions; crab with spring onions and ginger; tripe dried as strips; tripe with peppers; water-melon and oranges; squid and red and green peppers; green pancakes; rice cakes with chestnuts; beef and noodles; green beans; shredded chicken with roasted skin; razor clams and garlic. There is plenty of wine and beer and tea. We debate Greek words about education and there are numerous mini-toasts. The President is abstemious; his deans are not. His wife reprimands the Deans. He laughs when I tell him all of this is a world-wide phenomenon in universities. (One of the Deans has a PhD from Edinburgh - on the philosophy of David Hume)


Tuesday 9th May 2000


Up over Beijing, and the river plain soon vanishes beneath cloud. But an hour later, the skies below us clear and we have magnificent views of the Gobi Desert below us, a barren grey interspersed with the white of occasional saltflats. There are however a surprising number of indicators of the effect of man: long straight roads, small hamlets, occasional signs of cultivation. At the conjunction between the desert plain and the mountain uplands, Ulan Bator swims into view, a substantial city with industrial buildings at the core and housing on the periphery, spiking out along the different valleys which head north-west out of the city. The mountains are interesting, green with arboreal vegetation on the damper west-facing slopes and arid and brown on the east. In two or three places, plumes of smoke rise into the skies, perhaps the spring firing of old vegetation. As we head further east, there is snow on the higher peaks and plateaux.

Secure at 11000 metres, fortified by the lift of our RB-211 engines and of some KLM brandy, we fly serenely on. And so into Siberia, heading towards Irkutsk, St Petersburg, Copenhagen and Amsterdam.

Sushi and wine in Amsterdam; eventually home.

Prime Numbers and Prime Ministers

I occasionally watch University Challenge. Unlike many people, I do not think it is simply based on recall of facts.  But was really fascinated and humbled by this little episode 5 weeks ago:-

 A team successfully answered the question "Name three 20th British Prime Ministers and the year in which they were either elected or re-elected - in which the year of election or re-election is a prime number". Now I am sufficiently numerate (just) and sufficiently knowledgeable about 20th century general elections (1902(Balfour), 1906(Campbell-Bannerman), 1910(Asquith)...1929 (Ramsay Mac), 1931 (Ramsay Mac),.... 1945(Atlee), 1950(Atlee),1951(Churchill), 1955 (Eden),1959(Macmillan),1964 (Wilson).... etc.) to answer that question given 30 minutes notice and access to a calculator or even to paper and pencil; but they got three right answers almost instantly. ( I knew the numbers ending in an even number or in 5 cannot be prime)

I showed this to a prof of maths in my place - who said:-

"Dear Iain,
Thanks for this curious question. I'm quite hot on my prime numbers but not so hot on prime ministers !
Of the dates you mention, only 1931 and 1951 are prime and after that the only candidates are 1973, 1979 ( Thatcher ? ) 1987, 1993, 1997 ( Blair ? ) and 1999."

To which I replied
"Adam
Indeed.
1931(Ramsay Mac) 1951(Churchill) 1979 (Thatcher) 1987 (Thatcher again) 1997 (Blair).

1973, 1993 and 1999 had no general elections.
A truly inter-disciplinary question."

Iain

Evidence given to the Donaldson inquiry on teacher education in Scotland

 (Individual response) (Note: I was formerly Dean of the Faculty of Education, University of Strathclyde, 2001-2007; but I am now retired, and write in a personal capacity)






Section A – Teacher Education Today




A4) When thinking specifically about continuing professional development in Scotland today what do you believe are the MAIN strengths and areas for improvement and why?


Continuing Professional Development (CPD)

1.                  Introduction
This submission takes a view on which factors are important in good CPD. This evidence is based on analytical, literature- and theory-based study, on practical experience and on lessons learned from ex-colleagues in many places in the world. My thanks go to ex- colleagues for comments on earlier drafts. Errors, whether of omission or commission, are my personal responsibility.



2.      Effectiveness of CPD
The following issues are worth noting in relation to effectiveness in CPD strategies:-

2.1  How extensive and dispersed over time the nature of the training is 
With some exceptions, e.g. Chartered Teacher training (Kirk et al, 2003) and SQH courses, CPD experiences for most teachers in Scotland are comparatively brief single events. But the relative ineffectiveness of short self-contained experiences, for example of  isolated day conferences or of one-off school events, has been well-established for many decades (Joyce and Showers, 1980).


2.2 The importance of a high degree of management commitment at all levels: national, regional and school.
Little et al (1994) include administrative commitment and the provision of support and monitoring systems in what they identify as important issues in teacher development.

This was also seen as a key success factor in one positively evaluated project:

"The most important factor in the success of ALPS is that it is seen to meet the real needs of teachers. Inservice training in the 1970's failed to accomplish this because of its ad-hoc nature. Learning from this experience the ALPS training programmes are school and district based ..... a sense of belonging is created through the involvement of teachers, headteachers and inspectors at the preparation, implementation and evaluation stages" (Moegiadi & Gardner, 1994).

Scotland’s CPD record is patchy in this respect. National follow-up evaluation of the Management Training of Head Teachers (MTHT) initiative in the 1990’s suggested that the high degree of national commitment to it was not always mirrored at education authority or school level. More recently, we have seen little of the sustained CPD efforts at national and local authority level that characterised, for example, the implementation strategies of Standard Grade and of the 5-14 guidelines.

2.3  Multiple numbers of personnel from any one school participating in the same CPD experience.
Joyce and Showers (1980) long ago produced compelling and exceedingly well-researched evidence that one-off external training events have limited developmental potential for the school, especially when only single participants attend them from each school. As one commentator (on an earlier draft of this document) said, with a vivid imagery which shows little regard to 21st century political correctness, “Single Indians get scalped when they return to the reservation”. The current Scottish experience in this respect is probably better than it was 20 years ago i.e. with less reliance on single participant attendance at external CPD events. But it is far from perfect.

2.4 School-based mentoring built into the overall course design.
Providing a knowledge of (and actively modelling) a variety of teaching methods is a factor which McGinn and Borden (1995) cite as related to teacher effectiveness.

But some of the most persuasive and influential research-based evidence comes again from Joyce and Showers (1980): this has been described as "the paper on inservice; all you need to know about the design of inservice courses in six pages" (p.201, Hopkins, 1989). In the context of school improvement and institutional development, Joyce and Showers argue cogently for a model which puts heavy emphasis on school-focused activities and on school-focused development, providing opportunities for:-

1) the modelling and demonstration of new teaching techniques;
2) concrete suggestions on how to apply new teaching techniques;
3) practice in non-evaluative environments;
4) the provision of immediate classroom feedback.



Additionally, they and other authorities also emphasise the developmental value of groups of teachers working co-operatively together on developmental tasks, largely in the location of the school itself.

It is uncertain how much of this currently occurs in Scottish schools, although the approach has certainly been heavily promoted by the CPD Scotland Team and by organisations such as Tapestry.


2.5    A trainee-centred problem-solving CPD pedagogy.  
Lockheed (1993) suggests as a factor in effectiveness the degree of provision of active student (i.e. trainee) learning.  

Hawes and Stephen (1990) cite as quality factors the use of techniques such as demonstration, modelling and coaching in a trainee-centred manner.  They especially stress learner autonomy as an important factor in the quality of teacher education.

In other words, CPD which is about promoting more pupil autonomy and more pupil independence (as with a Curriculum for Excellence) has itself to mimic what it seeks to promote.


Tripp (1993) rationalises it as follows:-


1.      Members of a profession are valued for their ability to act in situations where a lack of knowledge (there not being a “the right answer”) demands sound judgement

2.      Professional judgement is a matter of expert guesses and has more to do with reflection, interpretation, opinion and wisdom, than with the mere acquisition of facts and prescribed right answers.

                                   
Many Scottish CPD programmes (but not all)  have therefore used the adult learner-centred ideas of Schön (1983), Kolb (1984) and Boud (1985) and explicitly introduced to participants the four phases of the Kolb cycle:


·        Do – concrete experience.
·        Review – reflective observation on the experience (sometimes on course-based experience, sometimes on the experiences which participants have already had back at work).
·        Learn – abstract conceptualisation (In this approach, the abstract conceptualisation is neither student-controlled nor trainer-controlled, but rather emerges through a process of dialogue and negotiation.)
·        Apply – active experimentation (notably in the school-based development work which is a central plank of the course design).

See, for example, the Leaning and Teaching Scotland website for CPD materials which have elements of this approach. Evidence however suggests that i) these materials are not widely used and ii) they are often promoted as materials for individual self-study rather than for group use. (See points 3.5. 3.6 and 3.7 on pages 8 and 9 as to why ii) is an important point.) 



 2.6 CPD course delivery modelling the behaviours it is intended to promote i.e. student-centred learning; collaborative managerial styles; the promotion of non-threatening and enjoyable learning environments.
We have already considered the issue of student- and trainee-centred learning. But broader issues related to leadership and management approaches to CPD and the compelling arguments for an inclusive leadership and management style are addressed in an exemplary, comprehensive and practical way by Hughes and Potter (2002); and also by HMIe in Dimension 7 of The Journey To Excellence (2006).
 the latter site also providing access to a host of related and excellent CPD resources.)

The work of Fullan (e.g. 1991; 1992) is also pre-eminent in this field, i.e. in giving insights into the management of school change and the need for collaborative and flexible management styles.

And useful Scottish-focused insights on these issues can be found in Boyd (2005).


2.7 A non-threatening and largely non-evaluative approach to assessment and follow-up tasks (even on award-bearing  and accredited CPD) and an approach which is focused more on real-life school collaborative development than on theory or on the assessment of individual competence. (Not that the latter are unimportant.)
Hughes and Potter (2002), HMIe (2006) and Joyce and Showers (1980) again provide reasoned and well-researched support for these views. And it is this approach which makes current discussions about proposed re-registration or “re-accreditation” procedures for teachers registered with the GTCS so complex and problematic. Were large numbers of Scottish teachers to be bound up in procedures which were i) compulsory; ii) focused on the individual; and iii) centred on pre-defined classroom competences, then it is indeed difficult to see how one could achieve buy-in to the approaches to CPD advocated elsewhere in this paper. There are however approaches in other professions (notably the medical profession) where evidence of engagement in CPD is a condition of continued professional registration; but where the emphasis is not on re-demonstrating basic professional competence but on showing that one has engaged on an ongoing basis in enhancing one’s professional competence. (See recommendation 4.6).






  1. Principles of CPD delivery.
We have also, over the years, codified what we see as the central elements of the pedagogy (or andragogy, to try a more recent word) to be used on CPD programmes; and often shared this explicitly with CPD participants, notably with those participants who were selected to become themselves adult (i.e. teacher) trainers. The list of such principles (unsurprisingly some, not all, overlap with points already made) is as follows:-



PRINCIPLES OF ADULT TRAINING 

3.1 The principle of relaxation i.e. creating an unthreatening learning environment, probably because adults in particular find it difficult to learn when their anxiety levels are high.

3.2 The principle of activity i.e. promoting active expression rather than passive listening. Much research suggests that adults find it difficult to learn from lectures as single unsupported activities and many adults are limited in how much they learn from reading on its own. (See Schön (1983); Boud (1985); Kolb (1984); and many others).


3.3 The principle of reflection i.e. adults can learn by consciously reflecting on their experience. Experience is a teacher, but only when we are encouraged or challenged to think about what the experience can teach us. (See also, as with the previous principle, Schön (1983); Boud (1985); Kolb (1984); and many others).

3.4 The principle of relevance i.e. adults learn when they are allowed to address problems which have a real life significance for them. It is this principle which leads to the importance of training and upgrading programmes being based on needs analysis and on workplace tasks. 

3.5 The principle of discussion i.e. adults can learn a great deal from discussion with each other, not least because they are drawing on each other’s experience; testing out each other’s theories; challenging each other’s assumptions.

3.6 The principle of presentation i.e. adults can learn by being asked to present analyses and conclusions to each other (i.e. mini-teaching to a small group of other teachers is itself a learning activity, probably because it makes us reformulate our ideas, check our own logic, anticipate objections from the audience, etc.).

3.7 The principle of action planning i.e. adults can learn by being encouraged to draw up action points for their real life situation, probably because they can see the relevance of this and because it therefore provides a motivational focus for their learning. It also begins to build links between individual development and institutional development.


3.8 The principle of work-based learning

(See Joyce & Showers 1980; Joyce, Calhoun & Hopkins 1999; Joyce, Calhoun & Hopkins 2002; and earlier discussion above.)


3.9 The principle of work-based mentoring and coaching

(See Joyce & Showers 1980; and earlier discussion above.)








4. Recommendations

On the above analysis, one might tentatively conclude that the following recommendations regarding CPD in Scottish teacher education are worth considering.

4.1  CPD should be primarily, although not exclusively, a continuous process of school-based or workplace-based activity, focused on collective analysis and action by communities of teachers i.e. whole-school communities, departmental-based communities, phase-based communities (and in some cases inter-school communities).

4.2  The role of external consultants, of external conferences and of external award-bearing courses, while important, should be a second-order activity i.e. on tap where needed, but not on top. Although some degree of external input can often provide a useful stimulus and starting point  for internal improvement.

4.3  CPD activities should be central to, generated from and anchored to the process of school development and school improvement; individual development of teachers should primarily flow from corporate development, and not the other way round. (For a good synthesis of the compelling US and UK evidence to support this proposition, see Joyce, Calhoun & Hopkins 1999; or Joyce, Calhoun & Hopkins 2002).

4.4 While all teachers should have a responsibility for, and accept a role in, improving their own learning and for assisting the learning of their colleagues, there should be teachers who additionally have specific mentoring and training responsibilities for their colleagues as part of their wider school role. The 1000 or so chartered teachers in the Scottish teaching force are one possible source of such mentors (but not the only one).This would not be a line management post; but it would be a distinct responsibility (just as many university professors are expected to accept a responsibility to provide research mentoring for colleagues without ever becoming line managers as heads of department or deans or vice-principals).

4.5  Such school-based mentors should be supplemented and supported from a national register of “critical friends” (e.g. from sources such as Tapestry) maintained by the CPD Scotland Team. That team should also organise national events to develop and support those who will work (as part of their role) as school mentors and trainers, i.e. CPD Scotland should be a source for training and supporting school mentors. The central aims would be to build within schools a CPD capacity which is generic rather than specific, process- rather than product-oriented and embedded in a collaborative approach to school development. (See Appendix 1 for an expansion of this point.)

4.6  Recommendations about re-registration and re-accreditation with GTCS should take account of the (difficult) issues raised in 2.7 above. An extension of the GTCS’s present scheme for Professional Recognition (already used by about 500 of the Scottish teaching workforce) might be a way forward, e.g. it might be a professional expectation that one goes through this scheme (or something equivalent) once every x years and/or that such a professional profile becomes part of the normal expectation when an experienced teacher applies for a new post.

4.7 Award-bearing CPD work by teachers which is supported (with financial or other assistance) should normally be focused on in-school development. External inputs which take place outside the school are to support in-school development, not the other way round.  The BA (Childhood Practice), the Scottish Qualification for Headship and the Chartered Teacher degrees already have substantial elements of this.  The present dichotomy between an award-bearing route and a non-award-bearing but experiential route (as in the SQH) is a false dichotomy: professional awards at certificate, diploma and degree level should routinely be centred on experiential and action-based approaches. At least some Scottish universities are sympathetic towards this approach and have expertise in how to support it.

4.8  All CPD should be conducted according to the principles of adult training outlined above; and school-based trainers and mentors should themselves receive training and support in how to apply these principles.

4.9  The current implementation of CfE (particularly, but not exclusively,  in the secondary sector) would benefit from a focused, managed and resourced approach to whole school planning and to CPD which centrally develops the learning and teaching approaches, the teaching resources and the collegiate structures and processes required to implement CfE at school level.





Bibliography

Black H, Govinda R, Kiragu F & Devine M 1993 School Improvement in the Developing World Edinburgh: Scottish Council for Research in Education.

Boud D et al, 1985 Reflection:  Turning Experience into Learning.   Kogan Page.

Boyd B  2005 CPD: Improving Professional Practice: An Introduction To
Continuing Professional Development  Paisley: Hodder Gibson

Bude U 1993 'Strategies for using information to improve learning conditions and instructional practices at the school level' in Chapman DW & Mahlck LO 1993 From Data to Action: Information Systems in Educational Planning Oxford: Pergamon Press

Chapman DW & Mahlck LO 1993 From Data to Action: information Systems in Educational Planning Oxford: Pergamon Press

Chelu F & Mbulwe F, 1994 'The self-help action plan for primary education (SHAPE), Zambia' in Little A, Hoppers W & Gardner R 1994 Beyond Jomtiem: Implementing primary education for all London: Macmillan.

Fullan M 1991 The New Meaning of Educational Change  London: Cassell

Fullan M 1992  Successful School Improvement Buckingham: Open University Press

Fuller B 1987 'What school factors raise achievement in the 3rd World? Review of Educational Research, Vol. 57, No 3

Hawes H & Stephen D 1990 Questions of Quality: primary education and development London: Longman

HMIe 2006 The Journey To Excellence Part 2 at http://www.hmie.gov.uk/documents/publication/hgiosjte.pdf

Hopkins D (Ed) 1989 Improving the Quality of Schooling: Lessons from the OECD International School Improvement Project London: Falmer Press

Hughes M & Potter D 2002 Tweak to Transform:  Improving Teaching:
A Practical Handbook for School Leaders
London:
Network Educational Press Ltd

Joyce B, Calhoun E and Hopkins D 1999 The New Structure of School Improvement Buckingham: Open University Press.

Joyce, B, Calhoun E & Hopkins D 2002 Models of Learning-Tools for Teaching 2nd Edn Buckingham: Open University Press.

Joyce B & Showers B 1980 'Improving inservice training: the messages of research' Educational Leadership February pp. 379-385


Kirk, G, Beveridge, W & Smith I 2003 The Chartered Teacher Edinburgh: Dunedin Press

Kolb, D.A. 1984 Experiential Learning, Prentice Hall.

Levin HM & Lockheed ME 1993 Effective Schools in Developing Countries London: Falmer Press

Little A, Hoppers W & Gardner 1994 Beyond Jomtiem: Implementing primary education for all London: Macmillan

Lockheed ME 1993 'The condition of primary education in developing countries' in Levin HM & Lockheed ME (Eds.)1993 Effective Schools in Developing Countries  London: Falmer Press

McGinn NF & Borden AM 1995 Framing Questions, Constructing Answers Harvard Institute for International Development

Magnen A 1991 Education Projects: elaboration, financing and management UNESCO

Methi SN & Jain S, 1994 'The Shiskashi Karmi Project in Rajasthan, India' in Little A, Hoppers W & Gardner R 1994 Beyond Jomtiem: Implementing primary education for all London: Macmillan

Moegiadi AFT & Gardner R 1994 'The active learning through professional support (ALPS) project in Indonesia' in Little A, Hoppers W & Gardner R 1994 Beyond Jomtiem: Implementing primary education for all London: Macmillan

Schön D 1983 The Reflective Practitioner   New York: Basic Books

Shaeffer S 1994 'Collaborating for educational change' in Little A, Hoppers W & Gardner R 1994 Beyond Jomtiem: Implementing primary education for all London: Macmillan

Sivasithambarum R & Peiris K, 1994 'The plantation sector education development programme (PSEDP) in Sri Lanka' in Little A, Hoppers W & Gardner R 1994 Beyond Jomtiem: Implementing primary education for all London: Macmillan

Tripp, D, 1993, Critical Incidents in Teaching: Developing Professional Judgement.  Routledge

Warwick DP, Reimers F & McGinn N 1992 'The implementation of educational innovations: lessons from Pakistan' International Journal of Educational Development12 (4) pp. 297-307



Appendix 1

A training/mentoring scheme run by CPD Scotland might consider some of the following options in its design rationale. In this, it might have some similarities to (but also differences from) the national training run in Scotland in the 1990s in, for example, Staff Development and Appraisal and in Management Training for Headteachers.

1. Like these schemes, the central rationale would be to extend the number of mentors/trainers who can then work back in school or on an inter-school basis in supporting colleagues.

2. Unlike the 1990s initiatives, one might accept that, at least initially, it is not universally accessible. There would be schools who would not want to access such a scheme because they believe they already have the requisite staffing competence and capacity; conversely, there might be schools sceptical, at least initially, of the value of such approaches. So entry to the scheme might be on the basis of application (by the school) and might be subject to competitive bidding for entry. Schools might be expected to fund some of the costs, financial and other, involved.

3. As with the 1990s schemes, one might be looking at something like a 3-day event; but with follow-up activities and support. E-learning approaches (e.g. e-conferencing; web-based resources) could figure heavily in follow-up activities. But the evidence is that one must blend that with face-to-face contact (preferably very early on) to achieve effectiveness. There is much expertise readily available in Scotland on effective approaches to blended learning. The use made by LTS of the seminal work of David Perkins) is but one example of what can be done

4. Unlike the 1990s schemes, the approach would be about generic school capacity-building, i.e. it would not be topic-specific. But it would be closely aligned to the capacities described in a Curriculum for Excellence.

5. Unlike the 1990s, there would be no need for expensive course material development. Such materials are available in abundance from Scottish and other sources. The current problem is not their availability. It is their under-use.

6. Any course should minimally have at least two participants from any one school, one a senior management figure.

Iain Smith, Glasgow, 7 June 2010

My mother's school photograh circa 1922

Letter to Herald :published about 4/11/10

Editor
The Herald
200 Renfield St
Glasgow
G2 3QB

Dear Sir
The Browne Report and its somewhat amended implementation in the English university system from 2012 (as announced by the UK Government today) raise interesting policy challenges for the Scottish university system.

One is the issue of EU undergraduate students from outside the United Kingdom who attend UK universities. Until 2006, such students faced a level playing field between Scotland and England. Since 2006, they have paid a tuition fee of over £3000 per year to study in England; but de facto a zero tuition fee to study in Scotland.

If one compares the 1st year enrolment of such students between 2005-2006 and 2008-2009, the numbers in England went up from 33700 to 37200, a rise of just over 9%; but the numbers in Scotland in the same time period went up from 4700 to 6400, a rise of 27%. On this evidence, geographically mobile EU students appear to be sensitive to price, a wholly unsurprising finding.  As a consequence, the equivalent of one large Scottish university is entirely populated with non-UK EU students; and the Scottish Government pays the teaching cost of their education in its entirety. (While tuition fees remain effectively zero for undergraduate Scottish students, the Scottish Government has no choice. It can, and does, discriminate against English students; but EU law does not allow it to discriminate against other EU countries).

Firstly, it does not take much imagination to see that, if post-2012 Scottish tuition fees remain effectively zero and English tuition fees rise as planned to up to £9000 per year, we are likely to see still more Scottish university places filled from elsewhere in the EU: all at the expense of the Scottish Government. This would be (unintended) altruism on a grand scale.

Secondly, what are usually described as “overseas” students (i.e. students from outside the EU) are not subject to a quota; but non-Scottish EU undergraduate students count for quota purposes in exactly the same way as Scottish students. In a system where that undergraduate numbers quota is firmly capped by the Scottish Government, each non-Scottish EU undergraduate student who is admitted to a Scottish university deprives an aspirant Scottish undergraduate of a university place.

None of what I have written is intended to be an attack on the presence of European students in Scottish universities. My intention is simply to point out that a major system change in England may have (as with many system changes) some quite large and unplanned effects in Scotland.
Iain Smith

127 Balshagray Avenue
Glasgow
G11 7EG

Tel  0141 563 3002


(414 words)


Sunday 28 November 2010

Scottish Universities

Extracts from readings that I think have some relevance to current university issues in  Scotland

A HISTORY of the SCOTTISH PEOPLE
THE SCOTTISH EDUCATIONAL SYSTEM 1840 -
1940
W  Knox


Things did improve in 1889 due to an Act of Parliament which transformed
university education in Scotland from a system based on general arts to a more specialised basis of study. As a result, philosophy, which had previously formed the core of the arts degree, was made optional. Students were also forced to compete for bursaries and this acted as an unofficial entrance examination.

The setting up in 1901 of the Carnegie Trust Fund (CTF) provided a further source of assistance and by 1930 70% of university students in Scotland were receiving awards from the fund. The numbers of students in higher education institutions increased from 4,400 in 1830 to 6,000 in 1900, to 10,000 in 1938. At Glasgow University, working-class students increased as a percentage of the total, from 18.6% in 1860 to 24% in 1910. Most, however, were concentrated in the Arts. Medicine and the law were still the preserve of the middle classes; the chances of a male from the lowest social class from gaining a degree in law was 1 in 20,000 and in medicine 1 in 6,000. The situation also improved for females.

Even so, Scotland fared better in providing access to higher education for
children of poorer backgrounds than England. Scotland had one university place for every 1,000 of the population, compared to 1:5,800 in England; in secondary schools the figures were 1:140 and 1:1,300 respectively.

Dominies and Domination:
Schoolteachers, Masculinity and Women
in 19th century Scotland
by Helen Corr
History Workshop Journal

The accessibility of Scottish education was, even in the nineteenth
century, a subject of debate. In 1834, George Lewis, editor of the Scottish
Guardian delivered a devastating attack on complacency with his book
Scotland: A Half Educated Nation. Lewis found that only 1 in 12 of the
population attended day schools and in this Scotland was lagging behind
Prussia, France and parts of the United States. In the 1860s, the son of a
minister was a hundred times more likely to go to university than the son of a
miner. The Argyll Commission reported in the 1860s, that the burgh school
tended to be the preserve of the middle classes.7 The objective reality was
that before 1914, the vast majority of working-class girls and boys left at the
age of 13, the minimum school leaving age in Scotland as elsewhere in other
Western capitalist countries in search of work to contribute to the family
income.8 The myth of equality of access to an educational ladder did not
apply in the case of girls since they were legally denied the right to graduate
from any of the Scottish universities until 1893.9 Given the invisibility of
women in the sociological and historical literature on education, this paper
explores Scottish women teachers' identity and position in the educational
structure.

Stefan Collini

  • The Future of Higher Education
    Stationery Office, 112 pp, £17.50, January 2003, ISBN 0 10 157352 9  London Review of Books
In fact, it was only at some point in the decade after 1945 that the state started to provide even half of the income of any British university, and it was only after the report of the Anderson Committee in 1960 that a national system of mandatory grants for students was put in place

At this point the state played hardly any direct role in financing universities; they were autonomous foundations with their own endowments, or the result of local initiative and funding, or dependent on students’ fees – or, usually, some combination of these. Only in 1919 was a body established to distribute the small grant-in-aid which governments had begun to make to some institutions; called the University Grants Committee, this was essentially a device for protecting the autonomy of universities by allowing a small group, mostly made up of senior academics, to act as an intermediary body to advise the government on the needs of universities and then to distribute such sums as the Treasury should allocate for the purpose. In the 1930s the annual recurrent grant was around £2 million; postwar expansion, especially from the late 1950s onwards, saw this rise to £61 million by 1962. As late as 1956 the total allocated to universities via the UGC for capital projects (as opposed to recurrent expenditure) was only £3.8 million; by 1963 this had shot up to £30 million.

The Priest

The Bragar Priest

I remember a man who used to come home to Bragar every second summer when I was young. His father was, I think, my grand-uncle, had gone off to Newcastle to work, and had met and married an Irish woman. One of their sons became a RC priest, a Jesuit I think. But used to come back on holiday to his father’s ancestral village of Bragar where he stayed with two female first cousins (both devout Free Kirkers); who adored him and were very proud of his intellectual achievements (if less proud of his religious beliefs).

He used to tease them; saying to my father “You know, John, sometimes I go on holiday to a Roman Catholic retreat, where the nuns look after me exceeding well. But not as well as my beloved cousins”. And he would have a twinkle in his eye as he delivered this great double entendre.

I was also present one night when one of the cousins asked him why he had embraced the Roman Catholic Church. “Aye, that is a great mystery. Came as a great shock to my father. He never took me to church. But my mother took me to Mass every Sunday. And then my Dad was totally surprised as to why I embraced my mother’s religion, and decided to become a priest.”

Unsurprisingly, in the Bragar of the 1950s and 60s, a place then short of Jesuit priests (as I believe it may be to this day), he was simply known as “The Priest”.

My recollection of him was that he had a very pleasant personality; but, behind it, an intellect of steel. He was totally unphased by the locals gently trying to persuade him that he lived (as they would put it) in “grievous error”. Reminded me, even then, of what I had heard and read about the legendary Jesuit Father Martin D’Arcy. [Who, incidentally, once in the 1930s did a distinguished performance in the distinctly unfriendly environment of Stornoway Town Hall: probably one of these rare examples of the lion being thrown to the Christians.]