The
national curriculum is so boring that children are becoming alienated
and disruptive at school, Michael Moore, president of the Association
of Teachers and Lecturers, said yesterday. He also said, teachers
had been turned into robots obliged to teach lessons irrelevant
to pupils' lives.
The Government was so concerned about meeting its examination
targets that ministers were oblivious to the damage caused to
children by an overly prescriptive curriculum and national tests
at the ages of 7, 11 and 14.
Mr Moore told the association's annual conference that government-sponsored
research had shown a decline in children's enjoyment of school
in recent years. This was true for virtually all subjects among
pupils aged 11 to 14 in secondary schools.
He said: "I believe that too many children and young people
are turned off learning because they are fed up with what they
see as a boring curriculum diet that has little choice and less
relevance to their lives. No wonder they start to misbehave."
He spoke as delegates said that "parental paranoia"
over testing was putting pupils as young as four under unreasonable
pressure from the moment they started school. Some, particularly
boys, reacted violently to being forced into formal education
too soon because of the need for schools to do well in tests at
seven. They called for a review of the curriculum in the early
years of primary school so that learning was based more on play
than structured lessons.
Phil Baker, a middle school teacher, said: "We are creating
the wrong sorts of learning environment for a lot of our youngsters.
We have created a system for them to fail."
(Agencies)