Last night, I got sucked into a
Twitter debate about the Government’s new times-tables tests for children in
year four. I don’t have a massive
objection to a five-minute on-screen test but I question its necessity. I was surprised and disappointed by so many
teachers’ enthusiasm for the announcement.
On Twitter, secondary teachers
were decrying their intakes for not having quick and easy recall of
times-tables facts and pointing out the challenges children then have in
studying the key stage three and four curriculums. This is a fair point, and one to which, I
know, many year six teachers will relate, having prepared eleven-year-olds with
poor knowledge of basic number facts for their SATs. Rightly, there is consensus that children
should know their times-tables.
My surprise is because a test, in
itself, is not a silver bullet that will suddenly make children better at
learning their times-tables and I thought this was something that teachers
everywhere would agree upon. That will
continue to depend on the quality of teaching, assessment and learning. Like primary teachers everywhere, I know the
importance of times-tables and have devoted many hours with every class I have
ever taught to teaching and testing them in all sorts of ways. I reckon there are plenty of children who
will remember taking home the ‘Mr
Parker’s Times-Tables Challenge’ trophy!
I have also devoted many hours to beating my head against a wall over a
hardcore for whom nothing seemed to work.
Rather than pile more pressure onto teachers in the form of another
test, I would rather there was investment in understanding better why some
children struggle to learn their times-tables, what teaching strategies are
most effective and in resources to support top-quality teaching. And if secondary colleagues know how to do
it, I wish they would tell us!
Some people believe that it is
only with a standardised, national test imposed by Government that teachers
will really know which children know their times-tables and which do not. Really?!
As I posted on Twitter myself, either a child knows her times-tables or
she doesn’t and seriously, any teacher who can’t assess this and doesn’t know it
probably ought to be for the high jump.
I suppose Nick Gibb has a point
when he says that the Phonics Check had the effect of improving children’s
learning of phonics by forcing it to the top of schools’ priorities and
focusing attention, training and resources on the issue. (Incidentally, he also says that a lot of
schools are doing a good job of teaching times-tables begging the question of
what those schools are going to gain from his test and, despite his assurance
that school-by-school results will not be published, possibly hinting at an
agenda to identify those schools that are not doing so well.) What I don’t understand is why we need him to
do this for us. The ‘new’ curriculum
with its requirement for children in year four to know their times-tables isn’t
that new anymore and we already knew there were children finishing primary
school with poor times-tables recall.
Judging by the comments on Twitter yesterday, secondary teachers
certainly knew about it. So why haven’t
we as a profession done something about it?
Why haven’t primary Headteachers and their staff effectively grasped the
nettle? And if the Heads of Maths in secondary schools had so much to complain
about, why haven’t they been more effective in working with their primary
colleagues to address the issue?
My disappointment is because of
the apparent division within the teaching profession – the doubt and lack of
faith in each other and the criticism (at least implied) of each other’s
teaching and assessment skills. We ought
to be better at supporting each other and at standing up for our professionalism. Assessment is one of the pillars of teaching
but whenever we call for another test – whenever we say we need one to check
our own assessments – we imply, at best, our lack of confidence in our own
assessment and, at worst, our inability to assess accurately. When we welcome a test as a means of driving
up children’s outcomes, we express doubt in each other’s aspirations and goals
for children and in each other’s teaching abilities and we reveal a lack of
understanding of the pressures on our colleagues. When we defer to someone else’s test, we allow
that someone else to undermine our professionalism and set the agenda.
Perhaps that is a large part of
the problem: we’ve allowed Government and its agencies to continue setting the
agenda for so long that we’ve become divided, it’s become hard to reclaim the
agenda for ourselves, we’ve lost the confidence to do so and we’re so busy
dancing to someone else’s tune that we don’t have time to compose our own.