Labour plays numeracy card

28th March 1997, 12:00am

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Labour plays numeracy card

https://www.tes.com/magazine/archive/labour-plays-numeracy-card
Nicholas Pyke on the launch of a task force for the third R.

The Labour party is expected to move further towards a traditionalist education policy by launching a numeracy task force at the National Union of Teachers’ conference next week.

The party has already shown that it is willing to take a tough line on reading and writing by insisting that poverty should not excuse acceptable literacy standards in primaries.

Now it is turning its attention to the third R, arithmetic. Maths is the subject causing most concern among education specialists with British 13-year-olds coming bottom of a league of nine economic competitors in recent international comparisons.

Labour’s education and employment spokesman David Blunkett is thought to be keen to project a hard-nosed concern for classroom standards at the NUT, where debates have frequently been dominated by calls for classroom militancy. Two years ago Mr Blunkett found himself jostled by angry delegates after he was accused of wanting to sack underperforming teachers.

The numeracy task force is certain to show a keen interest in whole-class maths teaching, mental arithmetic and whole-class targets for achievement - some of the more traditional elements used in successful countries abroad like Switzerland and Taiwan.

The party’s concern for the basic minimum standards could even set it at loggerheads with the Government’s National Numeracy Project which has so far taken a more familiar approach to maths teaching. According to some critics, the project shies away from demanding instant recall of times-tables and other “number bonds”. It also backs the sort of “differentiated” approach to children’s learning which Labour appears to have turned against All pupils, Labour is now arguing, should reach minimum standards unless they have severe special educational needs.

The numeracy task force is expected to be chaired by Professor David Reynolds, well-known for his interest in whole-class achievement, and in the participatory whole-class teaching used in Taiwan, a country which does well in international comparisons. This featured in his recent report for the Office for Standards in Education entitled Worlds Apart and in a high-profile edition of the BBC’s Panorama.

As the programme showed, Professor Reynolds is also impressed by the work done in the east London borough of Barking and Dagenham.

Emulating the methods used in Switzerland, the borough has introduced: detailed manuals to help teachers; whole-class teaching, with the desks in a horseshoe and an emphasis on pupil participation; minimum standards for the whole class - every child is expected to hit basic targets. All the pupils are taught to have instant recall of times tables.

David Blunkett is one of a number of politicians and educationists from across the political spectrum to have visited the scheme and expressed admiration.

Indeed many of its key elements are present in the interim report of Labour’s National Literacy Task Force which seeks to raise expectations for all pupils, not just the most talented in a class. Labour has promised that every 11-year-old will hit the correct national curriculum standard by the end of a second term in office.

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