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A Great Education for All

The Headteachers Roundtable


POLICY PAPER:
NATIONAL BACCALAUREATE
UP-DATE

Education Election Manifesto 2015


Media contact: Tom Sherrington
tsherrington@highburygrove.islington.sch.uk
@headguruteacher

We are a non-party political group of Headteachers operating as a think-tank,


exploring policy issues from a range of perspectives. Our goal is to provide a vehicle
for people working in the profession to influence national education policymakers so
that education policy is centred upon what is best for the learning of all children.
Twitter: @HeadsRoundtable
Find us at: http://headteachersroundtable.wordpress.com
Contact us at: headteachersrt@hotmail.co.uk

A Great Education for All


Less is always more. If we try to change too much we often end up changing very little and
damaging what we didnt want to change in the first place.
Our ten policy proposals are a modest collection of coherent ideas which, if implemented
fully, would result in a huge improvement to the education system of this country.
Implementing our proposals will take the will of politicians and a commitment to investing
in education; without investment, growth is very difficult to establish.
If we are going to grow great teachers and provide a great education for all, we have to
invest in improving the quality of education in this country.
Its that simple.

Ten Policies towards a Great Education for All


1a:

1b:
2a:
2b:
3a:
3b:
4a:
4b:
5a:
5b:

To introduce the entitlement to a professional development programme leading to


QTS for all teachers after a maximum of two years induction and a masters-level
professional qualification after five years.
To implement the blueprint for the Royal College of Teaching.
To introduce a National Baccalaureate framework following the Headteachers
Roundtable model.1
To introduce progressive qualifications in English and mathematics up to Level 3 to
facilitate continued study to 18 for all learners.
To implement an Intelligent Inspection Framework.
To stabilise Performance Measures.
To harmonise freedoms across maintained schools and academies.
To Introduce Transition Standards Grants to incentivise innovation towards
systematic primary- secondary progression.
To develop a National 0-5 Parent Support Strategy.
To establish a National Recruitment Fund.

http://headteachersroundtable.wordpress.com/2014/01/19/htrt-english-baccalaureate-trial-update-jan-2014/

Headteachers Roundtable Manifesto Update


A rigorous, inclusive and flexible curriculum & qualifications framework
POLICY PROPOSAL: To introduce a National Baccalaureate framework
The interest in this policy proposal has been overwhelming. As Professor Ken Spours
from the Institute of Education noted - "the arguments for a Bacc approach have been
won. However the fragments of a Bacc are spread across the English educational field."
In the journey so far we have discovered that HTRT are one of many voices that welcome
this development so our task is to pull all the fragments together to create a movement.
As result of hosting a Summit event in November, we managed to harness the energy of
people like Professor Ken Spours from IoE, a veteran Bacc campaigner, w i t h support
from the DfE, exam boards, numerous schools and colleges and others who have created
a Baccalaureate environment for their students.
There appears to be a very broad consensus that we should pull the various existing
fragments together to create a truly inclusive qualification structure that can unite the
English education system across the key stages. In doing so we would be creating a
powerful framework allowing academic and technical qualifications to sit alongside
other elements that make up a broad and balanced education. The umbrella structure
could provide a coherent path for students from the foundation stage to the end of
secondary.
The key elements of the National Baccalaureate Framework look something like this:

All of the existing models of Baccalaureates fit this broad outline so this is our starting
point.

The transcript might look something like this illustration:

This manifesto proposal has reached a new phase that goes beyond it needing to be
part of the political process. The idea of practitioners getting started, with the support
of key thinkers and organisations takes us beyond the outcome of the general election.
It is also beyond the stage of an idea led by a group of Headteachers and now needs to
fly on its own.

The Next Stages


1. Second Summit Meeting 13th March "Road to the National Baccalaureate Trust"
Agenda:
Finalising the process for establishing the Trust as a Legal entity.
Drafting a statement of core principles.
Drafting a Road map for developing the Baccalaureate structure over the next 3-5
years.
The aim is to create a National Baccalaureate Trust organisation by the General Election

2. National Baccalaureate Convention 25th June


On 25th June the convention will be an opportunity for all stakeholders; schools,
colleges, universities, employers and all organisations involved in the wider
development of young people to help change this into a national movement.
It will be an opportunity to discuss every element of the Baccalaureate: how we
implement it in practice, the Personal Development Programme, the start of a primary
model and work on the Entry and Foundation level Baccs.
School and colleges will be able to offer validated Baccalaureate Certificates and
transcripts from June 2016. That is the goal.

POLICY PROPOSAL: To introduce progressive qualifications in English and


mathematics up to Level 3 to facilitate continued study to 18 for all learners.
It remains a goal to enable all learners to continue the study of Maths and English up to
18. We welcome the initiative to develop a Core Maths Qualification for students for
whom AS or A2 Maths would not be appropriate. However, there need to be further work
done. There are learners in many different contexts who need to go further with their
learning in both areas but for whom the existing qualifications are inadequate. We need
slim-volume qualifications with innovative modes of assessment in maths and English that
can be taken when ready at a range of levels, post 16.
It is realistic to set a five-year timeframe for these qualifications to be developed and
evaluated.

Liam Collins and Tom Sherrington


January 2015

The First 100 Days


We believe the following actions should be taken in the first 100 days
of any new government:
1. Give public support to the concept of a National Baccalaureate
that encompasses all learners and qualifications, without seeking
to promote one particular brand of Baccalaureate at the expense
of the wider framework; explicitly taking the development out of
the political arena.
2. Give public support to the role of the National Baccalaureate Trust
as an independent body with a remit to develop the framework at
grass-roots level.
3. Provide or source seed funding to the National Baccalaureate
Trust to ensure that it has the capacity to do the work needed in
the early stages before it becomes self-financing.
4. Support the Core Maths pilot and develop a parallel process for a
qualification in English.
5. Set up a tendering process for an awarding body to develop a
tiered set of qualifications in Maths and English, different to GCSE
re-sits, allowing all Post 16 students to gain access to further
learning in both areas from Level 1 to Level 3 alongside their core
qualifications of all kinds.

Twitter: @HeadsRoundtable
Find us at: http://headteachersroundtable.wordpress.com
Contact us at: headteachersrt@hotmail.co.uk

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