On this day #2: Freedom from constraints

When Academies and Free Schools were announced, the prospect of freedom was alluring — to an extent.

Archives, by Terry Freedman

Archives, by Terry Freedman

On 1 October 2010 I wrote:

I loved teaching, and sometimes think about looking for work teaching ICT for a day or two a week, but the only thing I dread is not whether the kids are all out of control, but finding myself working for someone who insists on a three page lesson plan for every lesson, setting out in precise detail what will be happening in every nanosecond.
— Terry Freedman

That was in the context of the promised forthcoming freedom from the National Curriculum for Academies and Free Schools. As someone asked in a conference I attended, if the National Curriculum is the best of the best, why will some schools be given the freedom to ignore it? The speaker from the Department for Education had no coherent answer.

I think, though, you have to think of the context of the time. We’d had to endure the National Strategies, my area of expertise being the Key Stage 3 Strategy for ICT. The lessons were not exactly scripted, but were so detailed that they were not far short of that. The idea of freedom from DfE-stipulated curricula seemed like a breath of fresh air.

However, being a cynic, and having been around the block a few times, my enthusiasm was not completely without doubts. You can read the full post here:

Two cheers for Academies

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