Friday, November 10, 2017

UK School Computing is terminal (official)



It’s official UK school computing is dying before it could even toddle.
The Royal Society reports this week:
  • Across the UK,  11% of students in England took GCSE computer science
  • 20% were female and the figure fell to 10% at A-level
Anyone who reads my blogs will know that I have been warning for some time that Computer Science is going to fail to establish itself as a subject in schools. There are three problems encapsulated in the bullet points above but for the time being I’ll let those points just hang there to be fully absorbed in all their bleakness.
At the school I teach we offer Computer Science at GCSE and A level and introduce it in Y6. There are two of us in the department both of whom can code to professional/hobbyist level in two languages.   Girls make up our very best students from Y6 but fail to opt to do it for GCSE (see above); forty years separates me from my colleague;  I will retire this year and my colleague from Eastern Europe will leave after Brexit.
We struggle to work out exactly what the exam boards want for their wildly varying syllabuses and our subject is the most expensive in the school due to the small number taking the subject compared with Geography or History for example.
I write the anecdote above because it explains everything. There are vanishingly few UK teachers between 30 and 60 years old; there is little to no substantial training for existing teachers to fill that gap; the subject appeals to those with the geek mindest which means a small uptake and a shortage of girls and finally this means it’s expensive - schools are short of money by the way.

That’s it folks, stop the hand wringing, none of  the above will be solved anytime soon.Even if you inject loads of cash we’ll just buy toys with it and the training courses will simply prove to the trainees that this is not for them.

And if you (misguidedly) make it ‘girl friendly’ you’ll patronise both women and the subject with pink-eco-friendly-code ... even ‘relational’ databases are so yesterday.
The computer-trained Euros are going home and the ZX80 generation are dying off. Just get over it and think afresh.

There is a solution, and computing should lead the way. UK is a third world country wrt teaching computing so we need third world tech solutions. All schools have broadband and whiteboard. The exam boards themselves should directly employ teachers  to deliver lessons to any signed up school in the 4pm to 5pm slot: done. Google classroom will provide the glue but what about ‘marking’? I hear you say. Don’t be daft, do you want to get rid of the teachers over again? .

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