Policy 'dumbing down education'

Ministers are damaging the lives of children by "dumbing down" education and denying middle-class teenagers the chance to go to university, teachers will be warned.

The Government must halt the "social engineering" which is designed to push more working-class students into higher education, according to Peter Morris, from the Professional Association of Teachers.

He will tell the PAT's annual conference in Harrogate that the middle classes are the Government's "whipping boys" as academic standards decline.

Mr Morris will propose a motion demanding that ministers "stop interfering in educational life chances for our young people with attempts at social engineering".

He will tell delegates: "I am angry because this Government has interfered with my children and their children's chances of getting a good education in this country.

"They have changed the ways that examinations are assessed, and clearly this has had a 'dumbing down' effect on the academic standards, in order to get more pupils to achieve."

Exams have gone from being academically rigorous to posing "woolly, touchy-feely" questions with very little intellectual merit.

"But the ultimate social engineering by this Government is the change which they have introduced in selection procedures for higher education," he will say.

Teenagers applying for university will be asked to state whether their parents have degrees as tutors and ministers attempt to attract more students from poor backgrounds into higher education.

But Mr Morris claims this initiative, which came from the admissions service Ucas, is another attempt to target middle-class pupils.

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