Burston
“There really can be no peace or
victory for us which does not bring with it freedom for the countryside,
liberty and life for the labourer and prosperity and plenty to his home and
family. The labourer must henceforth take his place industrially, socially and
politically with the best and foremost of the land. He must do this himself -
by the force and power of his union. And he can!”
Tom Higdon, quoted in The Labourer, January 1917.
“The explicit value of solidarity needs to underline our
approach internationally, nationally and locally. It inspires action to promote
active citizens taking responsibiklity and undersdtanding their rights. It helps us to appreciate that children and parents are not “clients”, that citizens are
not mere customers. Our emphasis on solidarity enables us to play a part in the
construction of policies to help build community cohesion, and to end poverty
and exclusion….”
NUT General Secretary Steve Sinnott, writing in “A Good
Local School…” 2008
In thanking
UNITE, SERTUC and the Burston Trustees for their
great work in organising this annual rally, and for inviting me to take part
this year, and in bringing you the comradely greetings of the Officers and
Executive of the National Union of Teachers, I want to ask you all straight
away to make a commitment. A commitment to further commemorate the life, work
and ideals of Tom and Kitty Higdon and to strike a real blow for the rights of
children, just as they did, by doing everything you can to be in Trafalgar
Square on October 4th, and to bring as many people with you as
possible to the End Child Poverty “Keep The Promise” rally.
When Tom and
Kitty Higdon began the process of giving the children of “the labourer” the
educational tools they’d need to be able to best fight to take their place
industrially, socially and politically, they – of course - faced the anger and
enmity of the local establishment, the landed gentry, as a result. They also
faced the endemic inequalities and barriers of the economic and political
system of the time – presented then, as now, as things that are part of the
natural world, not possible to change. As well as their refusal to regard
education as a process of teaching children to know their place, the Higdons challenged those social inequalities… and from that
time on their card was marked.
We’ve come a
long way since those days of course. But we have not put an end to the
fundamental inequalities in our society, and the barriers they create. There is
a huge and growing wealth/ poverty gap. By government figures 1% of the
population of
The logic of
such a society is that the wealth gap is huge between those at the very top and
those at the very bottom – and the gap is widening, the process is
accelerating, what little social mobility there was is declining. The education
of millions of children is severely damaged and hampered as a result
Back in 1931, RH
Tawney wrote. “The
hereditary curse upon English education is its organisation along lines of
social class… the barbarous association of differences of educational
opportunities with distinctions of wealth and social position.”
Since then,
decades of research have proved him right, and the barbarous association has
continued in ever new forms, but with the same effect.
Amongst the most
recent research is that by Leon Feinstein of
The Government
recognises the link.
The Department
for Education & Skills, publishing the “5 Year Strategy” in 2004 wrote, “We also fail our most disadvantaged
children and young people… internationally our rate of child poverty is still
high …. The links between poor health, disadvantage and low education outcomes
are stark.”
In the same year
in the Child Poverty Review, Gordon
Brown wrote, “No child should ever be
left out or left behind. Yet the concentration of poverty amongst households
with young children is the greatest indictment of our country in this
generation and the greatest challenge of all. We know that an infant who grows
up in a poor family is less likely to stay on at school, or even attend school
regularly, less likely to get qualifications and go to college, more likely to
be trapped in the worst job or no job at all, more likely to be trapped in a
cycle of deprivation that is lifelong, unable to reach their full potential – a
young child’s chances crippled even before their life’s journey has barely
begun.”
The Government’s
stated target is to halve child poverty by 2010 and eradicate it by 2020.
In 2004, as
Gordon Brown put pen to paper, there were 3.6 million children living in
poverty by his own figures. Now in 2008 there are 3.8 million. Even before the
“credit crunch” the government were failing in their target. Now with prices rocketing,
greater job insecurity and below inflation pay impositions, the situation is
worsening daily.
So if the
Government has education standards and achievement at the top of its
priorities, if they recognise the link between poverty, disadvantage and
underachievement, and if they have specific anti-poverty targets, why are they
not making these their priorities?
Their
educational priority is, in fact and without doubt, privatisation. They are
preparing the ground by attacking the national pay and conditions of teachers
and non-teachers within the service, by promoting “workforce flexibility” – ie substituting unqualified staff for qualified teachers –
by undermining the professional control of the service and putting into the
hands of statisticians and accountants… and a whole lot more. They have the
privatisation process underway through their Academies programme, through PFI,
through Local Education Partnerships. And all this is just the start.
Education
International says “In the wake of other
major public services which have been subject to extensive privatisation and
deregulation, public education is increasingly being targeted by predatory and
powerful entrepreneurial interests” It is these predatory and powerful
entrepreneurs who are calling the tune… and the government seems only too
pleased to accept the invitation to dance.
So how do they
square this privatisation priority with their recognition of the link between
poverty and educational underachievement? By simply standing
the whole thing on its head.
When we argue
that schools cannot solve the questions of poverty and deprivation, we are said
to be “excusing failure”. It’s now not the actuality of poverty that damages
children the government seems to argue, but low teacher expectation of those
who are living in those conditions, a teacher culture of complacency.
Ed Balls,
Secretary for Schools, Children and Families (god help us all), put it like
this recently “A culture of excusing poor
performing pupils on the basis of deprivation will let another generation
fail.”
We might put it
another way. “A culture of excusing poor
performing governments on the basis of blaming teachers will let another
generation of politicians get away with it.”
So, if it is all
the fault of teachers and schools, the priority must be to give them a good
shaking up…. “workforce reform”, performance related pay, league tables, Academisation,
privatisation, narrow “vocationalism” for many
children.. But this smoke screen behind which they seek to give our schools
away to millionaires and big business is not very effective. More and more
parents and whole communities are seeing through it.
So we teachers,
we teacher trade unionists… while needing to defend our pay (and we will) and
to protect our members from crushing “reform” workload (and we will) will not
lose sight of the real struggle that has always been the underlying theme of
the history of education – the struggle for education for all, and particularly
for the children from the toughest backgrounds, the most deprived areas. The
struggle for education has always been a central strand of the struggle for a
more democratic society, and for the rights of working people. Clearly that
struggle is nowhere near completion.
The very rich
and powerful still call the shots, pay the piper. The unpalatable and politically unpopular fact is, in my view, that
social class advantage and disadvantage, the growing wealth/poverty gap - far
from being aberrations in our free market, dog-eat-dog, private not public
society – are economic imperatives that government feels unable or unwilling to
challenge. If it is money that makes the world go round, it is inequality in
wealth and power that keeps it turning the way that we are encouraged to think
of as normal.
We teachers need to be part
of a wider movement that rejects the fundamental systemic inequalities of
society, rejects the social mechanisms that sustain inequality, and works
strategically against them. We need and want to reflect the values of the
ordinary people of
And maybe the Labour
Government could respond to that movement. There ARE things they could do if they listened to the
ordinary people instead of big business, all of which would have dramatically
positive effects on educational achievement.
How about
the development of an integrated policy on education, training, youth
employment and apprenticeships.
How about
legislating for security of employment rather than promoting insecurity –
particularly affecting low paid workers - in the name of “workforce
flexibility.”
The level of the minimum
wage, and benefits too, should be raised to a level necessary to support
dignified and secure living.
There should be a new
commitment to high quality affordable council housing – and no child should,
under any circumstances, be sleeping rough.
There should be the extra
£4billion pounds put into Child Tax Credit that the
And there should
be established a progressive, redistributive taxation system. If the super-rich, non-doms
and big companies are so keen on our schools, here’s a message – you don’t need
to buy them – just try paying your taxes.
All are
fundamental to raising educational achievement. How about that as a budget for
a Labour Government?
There are some
more things they could do. How about free uniform and school equipment for
every child? A free breakfast and lunch for all children and
school workers? A nurse permanently attached to every school, and a rota
of visiting doctors to give regular checkups? Guaranteed work or training for
all education leavers?
Is this a bit
“pie-in-the-sky? Well if it can be done in
Deprivation and poverty are not immutables –
though they may appear so in our current society. But in the struggle for
education, whether it be that of Kitty and Tom Higdon,
or in the current fight against pay cuts, or in opposing an Academy plan, or in
resisting the channelling of working class kids into narrow vocationalism…
in the course of those struggles it becomes clearer from our own experience too
that another world is possible.
The NUT is working closely
with our sister teacher unions, the NASUWT and ATL on child and family poverty.
Over the next few weeks we will be doing so particularly at the TUC, and then
in the End Child Poverty activities in October – absolutely crucially on
October 4th in Trafalgar Square. Make sure that you are there with
your families, friends, comrades – with your community organisations of all
kinds.
So Tom Higdon was right in
the momentous year of 1917 that “There really can
be no peace or victory for us which does not bring with it freedom, liberty and
life for the labourer and prosperity and plenty to his home and family.”
The NUT is committed to that struggle, to defend children, teachers and
our education system, and for a new kind of world. Thanks you very much for
listening – and I’ll see you on October 4th in
************************************************************************************
Report from the local paper
"THE DISS MERCURY"
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| The Burston Strike School march at the weekend. |
08 September 2008
Despite the rain, trade unionists came armed with their banners and there
were impassioned speeches in Burston to mark the longest strike in history.
The rally has been held annually since 1983 and celebrates a boycott of the
church school in the village near Diss that lasted 25 years. Pupils walked out
in protest after teachers Annie and Tom Higdon were sacked for helping
farmworkers establish a union and went to a rival strike school run by the
couple.
Guest speakers yesterday included NUT president Bill Greenshields, deputy
general secretary of the Cuban TUC, Reinaldo Valdés Grillo, CND chairman Kate
Hudson and MP John McDonnell.
Mr Greenshields told the crowd that more action was needed to combat child
poverty. He said: “There should be the extra £4bn put into child tax credit that
the Institute of Fiscal Studies says would give a 50/50 chance of halving child
poverty. And there should be established a progressive, redistributive taxation
system. All are fundamental to raising educational achievement. How about that
as a budget for a Labour government?”
He added: “How about free uniform and school equipment for every child? A free
breakfast and lunch for all children and school workers, a nurse permanently
attached to every school and a rota of visiting doctors to give regular
check-ups and guaranteed work or training for all education leavers?
“Is this a bit pie-in-the sky? Well if it can be done in Cuba, a developing
country embargoed by the richest and most powerful nation in the world for the
last 40-odd years, you think we might be able to match it - that is, if
education was a priority.”