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EDITIONS
Wednesday, 13 March, 2002, 14:19 GMT
More test targets for 11 year olds
results graph
Progress so far: dashed lines are targets
England's primary schools are being set a new target for the performance of their 11 year olds in the national tests.

The government's expectation is that, by 2004, 85% will reach the appropriate level for their age in both English and maths.

English results
2000: 75%
2001: 75%
Targets
2002: 80%
2004: 85%
For the first time there is also a target for how many children will out-perform the group - reaching a higher level of attainment than they are expected to at their age.

Ministers think that, by 2004, 35% can reach the next level. Last year 28.3% did so.

Head teachers say the new targets are too ambitious and schools should ignore them.

The general secretary of the National Association of Head Teachers, David Hart, said he was still not sure whether schools would even meet the previously-set targets for this year's performance.

Maths results
2000: 72%
2001: 71%
Targets
2002: 75%
2004: 85%
Those existing targets are that in the tests sat nationwide this May, four out of five pupils will hit the expected level in English, and three quarters in maths.

The Education Secretary, Estelle Morris, said many schools had made great progress since 1998 but some were still not "enabling pupils to achieve their full potential".

"I know that some schools are concerned about the challenging level of these targets, particularly following last year's disappointing Key Stage 2 results," she said.

"But I am confident that we will see further improvements in results this year, which will provide a good platform for achieving the 2004 targets."

Maths results down

Last year three quarters reached the English level - the same as in the year before.

The maths achievement actually fell last year by one point, to 71%.

The former education secretary, David Blunkett, had said he would resign from that post if the 2002 targets were not met.

His successor, Estelle Morris, declined to pick up that pledge when she took over last year.

Her department counts the results of private prep schools which have chosen to do the tests when it announces how well schools have done, even though it does not set targets for them or itemise their results.

The effect of this is to inflate the national results by one percentage point - so last year's maths score in state schools was 70% and English was 74%.

More than a third of pupils in private schools are classified as higher achievers, compared to about one in six in state schools.

Unions scathing

David Hart was astonished by the 85% target, which he said schools would find very difficult to meet.

The government has a cheek setting new targets just as it becomes apparent that teacher morale is at an all-time low

Tory spokesman Damian Green
"It's extremely challenging. It would require a massive leap for the lowest-performing local education authorities to achieve so will put intolerable pressure on the schools," he said.

Doug McAvoy of the National Union of Teachers said the new targets were "nonsense".

"The government's independent evaluator, Michael Fullan, warned that the targets were narrowing the curriculum and placing excessive burdens on teachers, adding to their stress," he said.

And the second biggest teachers' union, the NASUWT, said the targets could backfire by driving teachers out of the profession.

'Out of touch'

"His advice has been ignored."

Schools would be forced to concentrate their efforts on getting children just below the expected level onto it - spending less time and resources on children working at lower levels, he added.

The Shadow Education Secretary, Damian Green, said: "The government has a cheek setting new targets just as it becomes apparent that teacher morale is at an all-time low precisely because of government interference and bungling.

"We all want higher standards, but to expect schools to achieve these when they are wading through the government's red tape shows how far from the real world the Department for Education is."

How it works

The government announces its overall targets, then looks at the performance of local education authorities, which varies widely.

It then allocates targets to each authority - ranging from 96% down to 78%.

Authorities then repeat this process with their schools, knowing that some will be able to do better than others.

They can overdo it. It is not unknown, for example, for Ofsted inspectors to come in to a school and observe that its targets are unrealistically high and should be renegotiated.

The National Association of Head Teachers is advising its members to agree targets for their own schools which they regard as "challenging but realistic".

  • The children are also tested on their knowledge of science, but the government has not set targets for that subject.


    The table below shows the targets set for each of England's local education authorities:

    Local education authority English Maths
    Barking and Dagenham 83 85
    Barnet 87 87
    Barnsley 83 83
    Bath and North East Somerset 88 88
    Bedfordshire 86 85
    Bexley 85 85
    Birmingham 83 83
    Blackburn with Darwen 83 82
    Blackpool 84 83
    Bolton 84 86
    Bournemouth 88 85
    Bracknell Forest 87 86
    Bradford 88 85
    Brent 84 85
    Brighton and Hove 84 84
    Bristol, City of 82 80
    Bromley 90 87
    Buckinghamshire 88 87
    Bury 91 89
    Calderdale 86 86
    Cambridgeshire 87 86
    Camden 84 83
    Cheshire 88 87
    City of London 90 86
    Cornwall * *
    Coventry 85 85
    Croydon 85 85
    Cumbria 87 87
    Darlington 87 87
    Derby 85 85
    Derbyshire 87 86
    Devon 85 85
    Doncaster 85 85
    Dorset 88 86
    Dudley 85 84
    Durham 86 86
    Ealing 83 81*
    East Riding of Yorkshire 88 87
    East Sussex 86 85
    Enfield 86 86
    Essex 85 85
    Gateshead 87 86
    Gloucestershire 89 87
    Greenwich 79 79
    Hackney 79 79
    Halton 84 86
    Hammersmith and Fulham 82 83
    Hampshire 89 87
    Haringey 81 80
    Harrow 85* 83*
    Hartlepool 84 83
    Havering 88 85*
    Herefordshire 88 87
    Hertfordshire 89 87
    Hillingdon 86 85
    Hounslow 83 82
    Isle of Wight 85 86
    Isles of Scilly 96 96
    Islington 80 80
    Kensington and Chelsea 85 85
    Kent 85 84
    Kingston Upon Hull, City of 82 82
    Kingston upon Thames 89 87
    Kirklees 84 85
    Knowsley 85 85
    Lambeth 81 82
    Lancashire 85 85
    Leeds 86 86
    Leicester 80 78
    Leicestershire 87 86
    Lewisham 82 83
    Lincolnshire 86 86
    Liverpool 84 82
    Luton 82 81
    Manchester 81 81
    Medway 84 81
    Merton 85 84
    Middlesbrough 83 83
    Milton Keynes 83 80
    Newcastle upon Tyne 83 80
    Newham 78 79
    Norfolk 86 85
    North East Lincolnshire 85 85
    North Lincolnshire 87 87
    North Somerset 88 87
    North Tyneside 90 90
    North Yorkshire 90 89
    Northamptonshire 87 87
    Northumberland 88 87
    Nottingham 80 81
    Nottinghamshire 85 85
    Oldham 84 84
    Oxfordshire 86 87
    Peterborough 83 83
    Plymouth 83 84
    Poole 86 85
    Portsmouth 85 82
    Reading 85 85
    Redbridge 86 85
    Redcar and Cleveland 85 85
    Richmond upon Thames 90 89
    Rochdale 83 83
    Rotherham 83 85
    Rutland 90 91
    Salford 85 84
    Sandwell 84 84
    Sefton 87 87
    Sheffield 84 82
    Shropshire 88 88
    Slough 87 86
    Solihull 90 87
    Somerset 86 85
    South Gloucestershire 88 88
    South Tyneside 87 85
    Southampton 85 85
    Southend-on-Sea 85 82*
    Southwark 83 80
    St. Helens 88 87
    Staffordshire 87 87
    Stockport 88 88
    Stockton-on-Tees 86 85
    Stoke-on-Trent 81 82
    Suffolk 86 85
    Sunderland 86 84
    Surrey 90 87
    Sutton 87 87
    Swindon 85 85
    Tameside 85 85
    Telford & Wrekin 85 85
    Thurrock 83 85
    Torbay 86 86
    Tower Hamlets 82 82
    Trafford 87 86
    Wakefield 85 85
    Walsall 83 81
    Waltham Forest 80 81
    Wandsworth 83* 83*
    Warrington 87 87
    Warwickshire 87 85
    West Berkshire 88 86
    West Sussex 88 86
    Westminster 83 84
    Wigan 86 86
    Wiltshire 85 85
    Windsor and Maidenhead 89 89
    Wirral 87 87
    Wokingham 92 90
    Wolverhampton 81 82
    Worcestershire 85 85
    York 88 87
    England 85 85
    Note: Asterisks * indicate negotiations are ongoing

  •  WATCH/LISTEN
     ON THIS STORY
    The BBC's Mike Baker
    "The Government admits the targets are very ambitious"
    See also:

    18 Aug 03 | Education
    01 Mar 02 | Education
    05 Dec 01 | Education
    05 Dec 01 | Mike Baker
    02 Jul 01 | Education
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