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The Badman Review
Another attempt to control or silence educational
diversity?
Derry Hannam
In January 2009 the UK state, in the form of Ed Balls and the DCFS, set up yet
another review of elective home education. It was conducted by Graham
Badman, the ex-CEO of children’s services in Kent (where incidentally, in the
year of his retirement in 2008 there were more ‘failing schools’ by the DCFS’
own criteria than in any other English county). The recommendations made
in this review have been accepted in full.
There had already been three other reviews in the immediately preceding
years which had recommended that there should be no changes to the
existing legal situation, which gives UK parents the responsibility for
ensuring that their children receive an efficient and appropriate education in
school ‘or otherwise.’ Just before the Badman review was launched the DCFS
had even issued statutory guidance to local authorities on how to carry out
their duty to identify children not receiving ‘suitable’ education.
The government claimed that a further review was required because home
education could be being used as a cover for forced marriages and other
forms of child abuse, even though it had absolutely no evidence that either
was actually occurring. In reality none of the recent high-profile child abuse
cases have involved home educated children. The children were either too
young to be at school or else registered at school and known to social services
who failed to act to protect them because of overwork or incompetence or
both.
In the opinion of the writer and virtually all home educators the Badman
Review is firmly in the New Labour tradition of ‘dodgy dossiers.’ Although
some 1300 home educators and over 200 children responded to the review
process they are virtually ignored in the report. One parent is quoted as
giving the apparently arrogant response that an LEA representative would
not be competent to inspect his child to assess her grasp of science; the report
fails to mention that this was because the child was prodigiously gifted in this
field. The Church of England is misleadingly quoted to suggest that it wished
to see tightening of the inspection arrangements for home educated children,
though when its contribution is read in full it is clear that it in fact
recommends that no changes to the current arrangements are required. The
‘dossier’ appears to deliver what government wanted it to deliver, as only
10% of respondents to the review were in favour of registration, monitoring
and inspection while more than 80% were in favour of the status quo. Local
authorities already have extensive powers to investigate if they feel that a
child is at any risk of harm. This applies equally to home educated children
and to schooled children.
The Badman recommendations that most offend home educators are that they
should be legally required to register their intention to home educate at the
time when registration at school takes place, and that they should be required
to submit an annual curriculum plan, against which they would be held to
account by regular, compulsory visits from local authority staff; these
inspectors would have the power to insist on interviewing the child without
the parents being present. It is well understood by Badman and Balls that
many home educators do not have any kind of curriculum plan beyond
following and supporting the autonomous interests of their children, so the
claim of Ministers to respect the right of parents to home educate is
immediately called into question. It looks like an attempt to force home
educators into the mould of the national curriculum despite ministerial
rhetoric about personalised education and concern for the child’s interests.
Somehow in the space of a few minutes a local authority expert is to be
expected to assess whether the curriculum plan is ‘suitable’ and whether its
implementation is ‘efficient’, and it will have the power to compel the child to
attend a school on the basis of this assessment.
As with the current controversial proposals for vetting all adults who have ‘frequent’ contact with children, there is a presumption of guilt until proved
innocent. The state is proposing to take away from parents the responsibility
for deciding what is an efficient and suitable education for their children, and
to arrogate to itself the right to ‘license’ parents to home educate in a manner
that the state wishes to impose on all children – except of course those whose
parents can afford to send them to private schools, which presumably can be
trusted to instil the ‘values’ of New Labour. An interesting thought.
The Minister claims that there will be no financial implications for local
authorities although no impact assessment has been carried out. Home
educators estimate an additional cost of many millions to local authorities
who are already cash-strapped and having difficulty in recruiting staff.
The Minister has put Badman’s proposals out for consultation and comment.
Many home educators have responded, but he seems to be intending to
implement the key proposals before the outcomes of the consultation are
formulated. The Parliamentary Select Committee for Children, Families and
Schools has become aware of the uproar in the home education community
and is to hold a ‘brief’ enquiry into the whole affair. Home education
organisations, including the HEYC (Home Educated Youth Council), will all be appearing before it with well-reasoned objections.
These include cogent criticisms of the ‘dodgy data’ and ‘dodgy statistics’ in
the ‘dodgy dossier.’
Why is the government choosing this moment to make life difficult for home
educators by apparently taking responsibility for a child’s education away
from parents, where it traditionally and legally lies in England, and into its
own hands? It makes sense to inspect schools because parents need, are
obliged even, to demand that the education they offer is ‘efficient and
suitable.’ Schools must be accountable to parents, because parents have the
legal responsibility for the education of their children. One might even
wonder whether parents are not in breach of the law if they send their
children to a ‘failing’ school. But what sense does it make to inspect parents in
order to make them accountable to themselves? Is it just about Ministers
needing to cover their backs? Is it an obsessive need of New Labour to control
anything that shows any sign of diversity and autonomy? Is it ministerial
concern that Essex County Council has set the precedent of beginning to fund
home educators who have withdrawn their children from a ‘failing’ school? Is
it to compel home educators to buy ‘appropriate’ curriculum materials from
some private corporate provider, such as the company responsible for the
SATs fiasco?
Public trust in the current government is so low that any combination of the
above is credible.
Postscript
Since this article was written it has become apparent that Graham Badman
has very recently written to all local authorities, with a very tight deadline,
asking them for more data in the hope that it will support the
recommendations in his report. He claims that this is because '...a few home
educators...' do not agree with his original findings. The author contacted a
member of the Review's civil service team who told him that '...we need more
data before the select committee hearings because the original data was not
quality assured.' The idea that all the Badman recommendations are built
upon insecure data will not surprise anyone who remembers the 'dodgy
dossier' record of New Labour but it is shocking nonetheless. The home
educating community also objects to the fact that Badman has been allowed to
rewrite his data to a later deadline than they have had to prepare their
submissions to the select committee and that they will have had no
opportunity to scrutinise this enhanced data before they appear before the
committee.
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