Subscribe to The Spectator

Sunday 27 May 2012

Latest issue

Buy the current issue

Jobs at Telegraph

Thursday, 9th February 2012

The Waugh Scale of Schools: Some Aren't Even Schools

Alex Massie 5:33pm

As is customary, one prefaces this post with the observation that there are very many fine state schools and many others, a good number of which are also grand, that do tireless work in demanding circumstances. Nevertheless...

According to government data released today, in England last year there were:

137 schools where no pupils were entered for geography GCSE
57 schools where no pupils were entered for history GCSE
30 schools where no pupils were entered for a modern language GCSE
219 schools where no pupils were entered for French GCSE
1,067 schools where no pupils were entered for Spanish GCSE
516 schools where no pupils were entered for any of the individual science GCSEs
For context: there are 3,100 secondary schools in England. So one in six didn't enter pupils for Chemistry, Biology or Physics GCSE (though, presumably, a good number of them did enter pupils for general "science" exams involving elements from each f the distinct disciplines?). Still, 4% of schools entered no pupil for geography and 2% none for history.

On the Waugh Scale of Leading school, First-rate school, Good school and School I'm not sure some of these even qualify as School. Which, as you know, is bad news since, between you and me, School is pretty bad.

[Hat-tip: Mr Rentoul]

Filed under: Education (349 more articles) , England (129 more articles)

Blogs: Martin Bright | Susan Hill | Alex Massie | Melanie Phillips | Faith Based | Cappuccino Culture

Actions: Email to a friend  |   Permalink   |   Comments (8) | Subscribe

Post this entry to:   del.icio.us | Digg | Newsvine | NowPublic | Reddit

Comments Post comment

Mike Stone

February 10th, 2012 7:35am Report this comment

How about English, maths and computer science? They're the ones that really matter.

Sir Graphus

February 10th, 2012 12:48pm Report this comment

Of these schools, I bet there are many labelled "Outstanding" by Offsted.

William Marshall

February 10th, 2012 2:57pm Report this comment

long live the standard grade, higher and Advanced Higher, more choice, better subjects

escapedRoger

February 10th, 2012 3:19pm Report this comment

Dear Mike, those are compulsory .
When I was at school there was 'General science' available in the 4th year (year 10 in newspeak) so that the classics/languages pupils would have something of science before concentrating for their 'O' levels , the maths/science types then did separate sciences and 'additional maths',as maths and english language were also done in the 4th year. These days doing an exam 'out of cohort'( not in the year of your age group) doesn't count for school league tables. after the 'pupil level data collection' by the DoE (or whatever it's called at the moment).

Kingstonian

February 10th, 2012 3:46pm Report this comment

Mike Stone
February 10th, 2012 7:35am

Computer Science, as taught today at GCSE, is a total waste of time. Pupils are taught how to put together a Powerpoint presentation or how to enter data into a spreadsheet. I was going to say it's like teaching Maths by showing pupils how to use a calculator, but that is too close to being the truth.

In the Far East, Computer Science involves teaching programming languages, preparing them for real, reasonably well paid jobs in the very real companies that want to employ them.

Is anyone surprised that so much software development work has migated East?

salieri

February 10th, 2012 6:41pm Report this comment

Did you not see that question from last year’s (GCSE) combined science paper?

Qu 1: Deepak’s study group is learning about the moon. Which of the following would help him?
(a) a microscope
(b) a periscope
(c) a telescope
(d) a stethoscope or
(e) a spectroscope?

Qu 2. Can you say why?

Baron

February 13th, 2012 9:58pm Report this comment

salieri, whoever set the questions must have expected the pupils to answer (c) definitely, but (e) and (a) may have been of use to the group, too, the former to dissect light radiation from the moon, the latter to examine bits of the rock collected, brought back by a number of Apollo missions.

is Baron right?

salieri

February 14th, 2012 8:03pm Report this comment

Yes, Baron is right. He gets an A?* - the query denoting bein' clevah.

Post comment

Back to top

Cartoons

Tag Cloud

Coffee House archive

sponsored links

Spectator recommends

Spectator classifieds

THE PRESENT FINDER

1,700 Unusual Christmas Presents Request Catalogue 01935 815 195 Quote SPEC10 for 10% discount www.presentfinder.co.uk

OLIVE BRANCH FLORISTS

Pimilco based Florist with online ordering Web: www.olivebranch.net Tel: 020 7630 1868 Fax: 020 7233 8844

RUFFS Bespoke Signet rings

62 Shore Road, Warsash, Southampton, SO31 9FT Telephone: 01489 578867 Web site: www.ruffs.co.uk