Where youth work meets politics (with a big P)

Using Sledgehammers to Crack Nuts............

I awoke one morning earlier this month to the news of the government's "radical" (their word not mine) approach to tackling the perennial problem of NEETs (those young people Not in Education Employment or Training). Force them to stay in education until they are 18. Is this the same Gordon Brown advocating this who apparently advocates votes at 16? So we will accept that at 16 you are old enough to pay taxes, join the army, get married and maybe vote..........but not decide your future for yourself? And, if you decide you would rather not...........you will be sent directly to jail, whoops, sorry, fined but not sent to jail. You will however have a criminal record. Hmmm, so, you are not at school, you are not at work, but you are going to pay a fine. Now that is a well thought out policy if ever I heard one!

So I was particularly pleased to read Nick Robinson drawing attention to the important role youth work can have in re-engaging young people. I have said elsewhere that I left teaching and went into youth work because I was interested in learning, this is a little tongue in cheek, but there is an element of truth.…...for so many children and young people school is part of the problem not the solution. We don't put lime loving plants into acid soil and blame the plants if they don't thrive, but we do that to children every day of the week.

School is a prison for a lot of our young people, for some, it teaches them to hate learning rather than see it as something that is life enhancing. Ipsos MORI  research disturbingly found that 23% of young people don't like school most or all of  the time.

I am at a loss to understand how Ed Balls thinks criminalising young people who are already marginalised is going to help? I am reminded of a young woman I worked with who hated school. She was regularly self-harming. Her mother would put her on the bus to school and she wouldn't get there. Mum (living on benefits on her own with other children) was desperate, she had done all she could do, she ended up in court, being fined because her child wasn't at school...... I tried to talk to the inclusion unit at the County Council.......what this young woman needed was time out. Couldn't she have it? Couldn't they just accept that maybe with time away she would eventually come round? NO.

On another occasion I was doing a piece of research and interviewed a young man of 17 I was working with, someone who was constantly in trouble with the police. My first question was, "what was the worst thing that ever happened to you?" his response was "school". At the end of my questioning I asked, "If there was one thing you could change about your life what would it be?" His answer? "I'd go back to school." We have to structure our education system around our children, not the other way round. Our education system is fine for the many but a nightmare for the few.

I have personal experience. My son struggled with school. When he dropped out I had to hold my nerve, after all, I did the same thing and ran away to join the army at least he didn't do that! Now, he is back, doing his A levels. I dread to think what would have happened if he had been forced to stay on until he was 18.

There is a lot in the proposed bill to commend it, of course the more opportunities young people get to learn the better, it is just the element of compulsion that I regard as counterproductive. Using a sledgehammer to crack a nut invariably fails. The key to this problem is not enforcement it is engagement.

Comments

 

Rob Quinn said:

Great blog Linda. At popular complaint about schoolchildren/ young people in the UK is that in comparison young people in developing countries are always keen to go to school? Is this because it is not as widely avaliable, or is it that if there was enough supply to meet demand, the same would happen elsewhere.

November 29, 2007 3:58 PM
 

Tom Lloyd said:

The government has published its Education and Skills Bill today, which will allow it to implement these reforms. While few could argue with the idea of giving more educational choice to young people, the idea of compulsion does seem a bit extreme.

In fact, I wonder if they are backing away from this element. Beverley Hughes was asked yesterday in Parliament how many young people she thought might end up in prison for not paying fines for truancy. The answer was none.

November 29, 2007 4:01 PM
 

LINDA JACK said:

Rob

I think that there is probably a different attitude and value put on education where it is scarce and precious. That applies to most things. But I also think that our education system could do with a complete overhaul so that it meets the needs of all children.

November 29, 2007 11:47 PM
 

Tony Taylor said:

My tendency to verbosity means I make heavy weather of contributing in a succinct way to exchanges like this one, but I can but try!

- I think it's worth stressing that there is a liberal and working class tradition in this country that has a different attitude towards and places a different value on education.  For this tradition,  education is a perpetual, holistic engagement with all aspects of being a social individual and not just a passport to the labour market. It is a creative, unpredictable process without guarantees. This way of viewing education has been under a relentless attack for at least the last 30 years.

-As for a complete overhaul of the education system this is spot on. But how could this possibly take place without a radical transformation of society itself, without a revolutionary shift in the values, norms and organisations to which we adhere? Of course to say this is to be accused of  naivete, romanticism and utopianism, as if folk like me haven't got a clue what being pragmatic means.  The dilemma is that if educators do not have a vision and a commitment to a world based on social need and not private and corporate greed, what are their chances of resisting the 'generalised conformity' that pervades certainly contemporary Western society?

December 3, 2007 4:59 PM
 

LINDA JACK said:

Tony,

I totally agree with you. It is a real struggle and maybe we need a coalition of educationalists, whether approaching this from political positions or not, to lobby for such an overhaul.

December 8, 2007 10:05 PM
 

Mike Amos-Simpson said:

I think Rob is correct although I think theres more to it than just scarcity - I think that society and particularly parents put a higher value on their childrens education in developing countries because they see it as a serious solution to getting out of poverty.

In the UK I don't think this is the case - 'poverty' here isn't comparable to the third world, and I think there are now generations of people who have had bad experiences with the school system or simply didn't appreciate it for whatever reason and so this has a knock on effect on those peoples children today and the comparative lack of value placed on education.

We've just come back from working with children in Malawi and I wasn't alone in feeling ashamed at how much I'd taken for granted my own education. All of the children we spoke with had ambitions to become teachers, accountants, lawyers etc. - only primary education is free over there and as nearly all of the children we worked with were orphans their prospects of going to school are extremely unlikely. We're going to try and support a small number by raising funds to cover their school fees & related costs but thats a very small pebble.

I also agree with Tony - I think the problem there is that its such a huge undertaking to put in the massive reforms needed (and that would probably include a backlash from teaching unions) - but I don't think the current curriculum is the best way to prepare children  for modern society. Society and the skills now needed to work in society are advancing and changing so quickly but the main school curriculum still seems to be based on requirements from a past age. Knowledge is cheap and easy to acquire now - what young people need are skills in how to learn quickly, how to adapt, how to keep up with change and to be flexible. I agree too that there needs to be much more emphasis on social awareness - I don't think the citizenship element yet goes anywhere near far enough and isn't yet high enough on the priority list.

I do think though that youth work has a responsibility to support young people back into mainstream education (if they're not), or to help them get the most from it. This isn't easy though if people don't have faith in that system - I think any future 'overhaul' would need to seek to integrate youth work and informal education towards an overall system working together (now who's speaking of utopianism?!)

January 11, 2008 12:24 AM

About LINDA JACK

I have spent most of my life in youth work getting the bug as a teenager. After leaving school I started on an art pre dip course but then ran away to join the army! This, surprisingly, lasted nearly 4 years, working as an analyst in Special Intelligence. This was also my first attempt at collective bargaining - it didn't go down too well and I was threatened with a charge of mutiny - the only charge punishable by death! After doing a combined teaching and youth work degree I went on to teach for a short while but then went into fulltime youth work. During my youth work career I have been a club based, outreach and detached worker. I also represented Unison on the JNC and as chair of the Youth and Community Workers Forum for several interesting years. I now work on the FSA Financial Capability Strategy as a Youth Policy Adviser with particular responsibility for developing our strategy to meet the needs of young people who are not in education employment or training. I have been a local councillor and parliamentary candidate and am currently a Prospective European Parliamentary Candidate (PEPC) for the Eastern Region. I also sit on the Federal Policy and International Relations Committees of the Liberal Democrats. I am a trustee of ElijahTrust ( a charity working with the 20% Arab minority in Israel) and chair of Compowerment a charity committed to community cohesion. When I get time to myself I love walking, talking (!) spending time with friends and family and anything artistic. For me, my eyes are the greatest gift God gave me and this is the sense I couldn't survive without. I have two adorable children, Lara and Ravi and an even more adorable granddaughter Sumaiyah!

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