DFE CONSULTATION ON THE NATIONAL CURRICULUM, PHASE 1: GENERAL CONCERNS ABOUT THE PROCESS
(From the Cambridge Primary Review’s response to the 2011 National Curriculum consultation, section K, question 36)
1. We deplore the perpetuation of an approach to planning a national curriculum for a highly diverse and complex country of 51 million inhabitants which has no discernible educational aims or rationale, or whose aims are at best cosmetic. Aims in this exercise are vital, and they should precede rather than decoratively follow the determination of content. They should be properly researched and clearly argued. They should attend to the conditions and needs of learners and society today. They should respond to a much wider and more secure range of national and global imperatives than international benchmarking based on contested evidence about student achievement. And they should understand that the notion of ‘essential knowledge in key subjects’, which the government has provided as the main criterion for ‘slimming down’ the curriculum, is far from straightforward (see below).
6. The case of RE takes us back to the criterion of ‘essential knowledge’. Overall, the CPR has argued (final report, pp 257-60) that a national curriculum must be concerned, inter alia, with acculturation. We quote, once again, from the final CPR report.
From the final CPR report, pp 257-9:
What should children learn?
It is a conventional truth, but a useful one, that how children learn is as important as what they learn, in as far as a curriculum, however relevant or inspiring it is on paper, will make little headway unless the teacher succeeds (CPR aim 2) in igniting ‘children’s active, willing and enthusiastic engagement in their learning.’ The aims we have proposed contain other such reminders: the importance of the imagination (aim 11); of dialogue and joint activity which both motivate pupils and capitalise on what is now known about how brain, mind and understanding develop during the early and primary years (aim 12); and of generating that sense of empowerment allied to skill through which learning becomes inner-directed and autonomous rather than dependent on pressure from others (aims 3 and 4).
Yet we cannot accept the claims in some of the Cambridge Primary Review submissions that ‘process’ is all that matters, that the content of the curriculum is no longer significant, and that in a fast-changing world knowledge is merely an ephemeral commodity to be downloaded, accepted without question or summarily discarded. Indeed, this is a view which we have deemed it necessary to contest with some vigour, for we believe it to be based on a fundamental misunderstanding about the nature and possibilities of knowledge and on a caricature of teaching as telling and of learning as factual memorisation and recall. We have also suggested that if the caricature has substance, it is a comment not on knowledge but on teachers.
That is why the aims, for all their apparent emphasis on process, include the unambiguous statement (aim 9) that primary education should enable children
to encounter and begin to explore the wealth of human experience through induction into, and active engagement in, the different ways through which humans make sense of their world and act upon it: intellectual, moral, spiritual, aesthetic, social, emotional and physical; through language, mathematics, science, the humanities, the arts, religion and other ways of knowing and understanding.
The statement goes on to remind us that knowledge matters because culture matters. Indeed, culture is what defines us:
Induction acknowledges and respects our membership of a culture with its own deeply-embedded ways of thinking and acting which can make sense of complexity and through which human understanding constantly changes and advances. Education is necessarily a process of acculturation.
That, too, is why the same statement couples knowing and understanding with exploring, discovering, experimenting, speculating and playing, for ‘content’ and ‘process’ are not mutually exclusive as in yet another of primary education’s dichotomies they are held to be, but are equally essential aspects of knowing and understanding.
It is on this basis that we argue not only for faith and belief as necessary and explicitly specified elements in a national curriculum, but also for the arts, the humanities and much more. To confine the national curriculum’s ‘essential knowledge’ to English, maths, science and PE betrays extraordinary insensitivity to the nature, power and educational importance of culture, and makes the constant references to Matthew Arnold’s ‘best that has been thought and said’ somewhat hollow. Equally, to presume that every school understands that the other domains are in their way no less important to the processes of learning, education and acculturation, and that they must be treated with equal rigour if not equal time, is, regrettably, to ignore the hard evidence of recent educational history.
7. As recalled in the quotation above from its final report, the CPR has argued strenuously that knowledge is central to the curriculum, has deplored the way it is downgraded and caricatured in some of the prevailing discourse of primary education, and has cautioned against the profligate attachment of the word ‘skill’ to curriculum elements which are about knowledge or disposition rather than skill properly conceived (CPR final report, pp 245-51). At the same time, we warn against another kind of reductionism in the current NC review, equating ‘essential knowledge’ with ‘essential facts’. Even supposing that we could agree on what are the ‘essential facts’ of science or history, there is of course much more to knowledge than propositions.
Re-thinking the curriculum therefore requires a proper engagement with epistemology – in the NC review no less than in schools and teacher training. At the very least, a distinction needs to be made, as in the quotation above, between process and content, between a subject’s essential structural features, processes and procedures – or its key concepts and modes of enquiry – and what are taken to be its essential content. This distinction is a long-established one which commands a great deal of support. It was used, on the basis of a considerable amount of consultation and discussion, by those who planned the first national curriculum introduced in 1988, and it survived, as the structure of attainment targets, into the version introduced in 2000. It should be revisited. If this earlier analysis is still regarded as valid, then paring back a subject’s specifications must at all costs retain its structural features, core concepts, processes and procedures so that pupils come to understand the essence of what it is to think and act as a mathematician, a historian, a scientist or a musician, whether these forms of understanding are timetabled and taught as separate subjects, as broad domains or by some other framing device. That, we emphasise, is for schools to determine, and as the CPR warns (final report, p 263), we should not confuse the way a curriculum is conceived and framed at the level of national specification with the way it is re-packaged for the purposes of timetabling and teaching in schools.
And, as drawing on research evidence we also argue (final report, chapter 21), the greater the teacher’s command of the knowledge and understanding on which the curriculum draws, the more freedom he or she acquires to translate that knowledge and understanding into classroom experiences which will engage the attention and advance the understanding of the learner. A curriculum conceived as a number of domains or subjects can be structured and taught in many different ways.
We might suggest that a subject’s distinctive features, concepts, processes and procedures constitute its invariables, while the content which results from the working of these invariables comprises its variables. There is of course debate about both elements, but there is also far more consensus about each subject’s conceptual and processual invariables than its content, for it is on the content that the key concepts and processes work, and it is the content that is contested, modified and sometimes superseded as the boundaries of subjects are extended and new understanding builds on old. In the current debate, especially in the primary sector, there has been a tendency to merge the two elements, and this category confusion has prompted some to dismiss knowledge as ipso facto obsolescent. That charge can be justified when content is merely transmitted as unassailable fact detached from processes of enquiry, exploration, creation, verification or authentication.
8. Finally, we remind the NC review that the CPR’s own review of the primary curriculum formed part of a much wider enquiry into English primary education which in turn was embedded in consideration of the condition and needs of children, society and the world today. In all these matters it drew on a vast array of carefully-balanced evidence which responded to questions which were posed in a genuinely open manner. The NC review has nothing like this breadth of focus and many of its questions are closed or lead respondents in one direction only. We therefore urge that full advantage be taken of the evidence and thinking in the CPR interim and final reports which accompany this submission as well as the extrapolations from CPR evidence cited in our responses to the questions on the consultation form. The CPR offers an unrivalled resource of genuinely independent evidence and thinking about primary education which the previous government chose to reject. Let that not happen this time. Children have too much to lose, and in England they have already lost too much, when education policy is justified by evidence which rather than being even-handedly applied is selected on the basis of ideological fit, party-political ambition or ministerial whim.
Robin Alexander for the Cambridge Primary Review 14 April 2011