economic organization warns Rating sitting next to students at 16 does not provide the key skills needed to work
GCSEencourage "teaching to the test" and perhaps past its expiration date, according to a leading business organization in Britain.
The Confederation of British Industry warned that the rating is to stop teachers offer a "class experience inspired" and must be replaced as far school rankings for A-level.
John Cridland, director general of the CBI, said the industry is facing a shortage of key skills, particularly in science and mathematics. The CBI, which represents more than 240,000 businesses, is also concerned about the 40% who fail to reach the benchmark of five GCSEs good, including English and mathematics.
The percentage of students at this level is the primary measure of school success.
Speaking at the launch of a CBI survey in education, argued that abandoning GCSE Cridland could help provide a more complete education.
"There is something in this GCSE funnel that produces a prescribed form of learning seems to be teaching to the test.
"It frustrates the teachers, because it prevents the delivery of classroom experience inspiration and to see young people going out."
- "I think we have raised the age of participation to 18 and you end up with an education system that focuses on the 16" Cridland said.
"What would happen if you took out this obstacle - it run faster on the treadmill"
More than 600,000 children in England, Wales and Northern Ireland should take GCSE this summer. many other countries, without public scrutiny 16. Finland, the school system the largest in Europe embodiment according to the OECD classification, only one public examination at the age of 18, although children are regularly tested in younger children.
Find best price for : --GCSEs----Cridland----GCSE--
Blog Archive
-
▼
2012
(407)
-
▼
October
(37)
- After Ben-Ali's conviction: the state of Tunisian ...
- Manchester gets ready for a parade to celebrate it...
- Abu Yahya al-Libi and this perpetually self-defeat...
- South Africans offered free phone for every 60 rat...
- Let's raise a toast to alcohol | Mark Liam Piggott
- South African authorities offer free phone for eve...
- May's jobs report hurts Obama's re-election prospe...
- No public interest definition can really apply to ...
- Where are women's rights in plans to tackle rape i...
- GCSEs not fit for purpose, says CBI
- Parenting classes are a good idea. But families ne...
- Sam Hallam walked free, escaping a fate almost wor...
- Does Buddhism need the supernatural stuff? | Andre...
- The Azerbaijanis who aren't feeling the Eurovision...
- Everton 3-1 Newcastle United | Premier League matc...
- Gay Americans' risk of mistaking marriage equality...
- Lunch dances: reel meals | Observer editorial
- Chen Guangcheng's nephew charged with voluntary ma...
- Q&A with Naomi Wolf: the spectacle of terror
- Houston Dynamo have a new home as MLS puts down it...
- Sheffield Wednesday 2-0 Wycombe
- Warren Buffett urges 'shared sacrifice' as he defe...
- Chen wants seat on Clinton's plane
- Syria promises Kofi Annan it will respect ceasefire
- Syria promises Annan it will respect ceasefire
- Just trash TV? No, there are beating hearts here |...
- Afghanistan: our modern opium war | Pratap Chatterjee
- Turkmenistan leader keeps grip on power despite cr...
- Stevenage's unbeaten warriors finally fall to Colc...
- Spain's BBVA bank plans ?8.7m fire sale of unwante...
- Championship roundup: Hull City suffer second stra...
- Napoli hit the summit after Cavani's hat-trick - a...
- Napoli hit the summit after Cavani's hat-trick - a...
- Mike Baker, 'a seeker of the truth'
- Replication is the only solution to scientific fra...
- 'We're doing medicine in a really inefficient way,...
- Chile: making investment in science a national pri...
-
▼
October
(37)
0 comments:
Post a Comment