I am somewhat baffled by the argument that Grammar Schools are divisive and
geared towards wealthier people. I attended a Grammar School in which there were
pupils from very different backgrounds and from all areas of the city and
beyond. The wealth of the pupils’ families was of no significance at all to us,
as we simply saw classmates, in the same uniform, studying the same subjects and
being encouraged to achieve all the we could achieve according to our individual
talents.
There are many people who say that Grammar School were divisive as those
who did not attend them were viewed as somehow inferior. Again, I think this
argument does not hold water. The problem was not with the Grammar Schools but
rather with the attitude that somehow academic talent is superior to any other
talent – technical, manual, musical, artistic or otherwise. Rather than
condemning the Grammar Schools, the question should have been why are some
talents viewed as more important than others.
The fact is, I am not gifted manually. I wish I were. I cannot sing opera.
I wish I could. Should, therefore, there be no singing lessons because people
like me feel inferior to those who can sing? Should there be no university
degrees in physics, because I would not be admitted to the courses? Should
there be no drama schools because some people are not good actors? Should there
be no apprenticeships in plumbing and electronics because I couldn’t do
it?
It often seems to me that rather than raising everyone up to their highest
potential, certain politicians prefer to make everyone the same and pretend that
we all have the same talents. I certainly do not think children should be made
to feel inferior in any way because their talents are not the same as someone
else’s, but equally it would be wrong to pretend that some children are gifted
at everything when they clearly are not. It would also be wrong to prevent one
child excelling at something because another child couldn’t do it. We will never
all be Olympic athletes, pop stars, actors, footballers...nor would we all want
to be. Education, as far as the Latin I learned at Grammar School goes, surely,
means ‘leading out’ as in helping children to discover whatever talents they
possess and using them to their highest ability.
The question I would like to ask is not, “Are Grammar Schools divisive?”
but rather, “Why do we value some gifts more than others?” If we stop doing
that, then all children could be attend appropriate educational facilities and
we would stop pretending that we are all the same.
No comments:
Post a Comment