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Column State of our education system is a national emergency

Irish education standards are going backwards, says independent TD Stephen Donnelly – here he suggests some radical changes needed to reverse that decline and secure a prosperous future for the country.

IF YOU’RE TRYING to understand what has Ireland into the state it’s in today, the recent revelations about maths standards in our schools are a good place to start.

It’s not simply that we’re bad at maths, or that many of our maths teachers are underqualified, as has been revealed. It’s that our students are struggling in maths despite the fact that one of the only sectors in Ireland which has a plethora of high skilled job opportunities is the tech sector. Many of these jobs require a solid foundation in maths.

Ireland’s tech companies – whether big multinationals or smaller indigenous ones – are struggling to recruit. We’re not producing graduates with the skills the market wants.

Just how bad is the current situation? The OECD’s report on educational outcomes, published late last year, found that a quarter of our 15-year-olds are not sufficiently literate to participate effectively in society. Ireland has had the steepest decline in literacy standards amongst the 39 countries in the OECD. In maths, we had the second steepest decline, and are now ranked below average in the OECD. Incredibly, the problem is not that we are not improving fast enough, it’s that we’re actually going backwards.

At the same time, our universities have experienced sharp falls in world rankings: over the last two years, Trinity has fallen out of the top 50 universities and UCD has fallen out of the top 100. NUI Galway has just fallen 66 places to 298.

Teachers’ pay, if it delivers some of the best educated students on earth, is money well spent

If our economy and national finances weren’t in such turmoil, the collapse of our educational rankings would be a national emergency. With everything else we’re coping with, it is just another serious problem to address. But let us be very clear – the medium-to-long-term survival of Ireland as a prosperous nation depends on our having one of the best education systems on earth.

In this context, the current debate on education, focused largely on teacher’s pay, is grievously misdirected. It is true that our teachers are paid well relative to many other countries. But theirs is probably the most important of professions. We entrust them, literally and metaphorically, with the future of our country. If they can deliver some of the best educated and prepared students on earth, then it is money well spent.

The question we must start asking is this: ‘How do we create one of the top-ten education systems internationally in the next five years? How do we get into the top three within ten years?’

The problem is that the mechanism for reform, the Croke Park Agreement, anchors any reform to the current system. Let’s take teaching hours as an example. The question which needs to be asked is ‘How many teaching hours per week do the best education systems in the world have?’ The question which was asked instead was ‘Can we increase current teaching hours by one hour per week?’

We are benchmarking ourselves against the wrong country.

We need to benchmark ourselves against the best. South Korea, Finland, Canada, New Zealand – these have the best education systems in the world.

In 1989, New Zealand had an underperforming education system, and one of the most centralised in the world. A new government shut down the Department of Education overnight, set up a new Ministry for Education, and devolved power to individual schools and their boards, made up of parents and community leaders. Today, they have the fourth best education system in the world.

In the early 1990s, Finland emerged from the collapse of the Soviet Union, its principal trading partner, into recession, with unemployment exploding from three per cent to 18 per cent. The Government responded by increasing education spending, investing in teachers and principals, and promoting creativity and innovation in schools. Today, they are ranked as the second best system in the world.

New Zealand and Finland took radical approaches – but produced radical improvements

New Zealand and Finland took radically different approaches to reforming their education systems – New Zealand’s is market-based, with funding following students to the schools; Finland’s is more cooperative. Both made mistakes along the way, but both approaches were radical and both produced radical improvements.

The people who know what radical changes need to be made are our teachers and principals. And yet the changes are being decided in and around Kildare Street by a mixture of union officials, quango appointees, politicians and civil servants.

I’ve been talking to teachers and principals, and this is what I am hearing. Teachers want more sophisticated training at college, and more effective in-service training. They want more freedom in the classroom – to innovate, to experiment, to inspire their students. They want a curriculum that is designed for today’s children and tomorrow’s adults, not one bound by tradition and a points race.

Principals want better resources and support. They want to be allowed to run their schools as they deem best. They want control over their own budgets. One principal explained to me that they couldn’t paint the walls, as purchasing paint with the annual budget was not allowed. They also want management control. This includes the power to hire the best teachers they can find and, ultimately, to fire teachers (constrained by employment rights and with strict oversight). With this authority must, of course, come real accountability – to the school boards, to the parents and to the Department.

We do not know, other than by anecdote, who is doing well and who is struggling

Accountability requires, amongst other things, measurement of performance. Astonishingly, there is no standardised collection of performance data for our schools. We do not know, other than by anecdote, who is doing well and who is struggling. This makes is very difficult to identify and learn from the best and to direct financial support and expertise to where it is needed most. It makes it impossible to hold people to account.

There is magnificent work being done in our schools. But it is being done in spite of, not because of, the system. We need to reverse that, so that the system encourages excellence, and so that all schools can rise to that standard.

This is a time of enormous challenge. But there is also great opportunity. We can, and must, emerge from these crises – social, financial and educational – with an education system which is the envy of the world.

We may struggle to beat New Zealand on the rugby pitch (though after Saturday’s magnificent victory against Australia in the Rugby World Cup, anything is possible). But when it comes to education, at least, we should be able to play them off the field.

Stephen Donnelly is independent TD for Wicklow and East Carlow.

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57 Comments
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    Mute Keith Twamley
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    Feb 10th 2012, 12:26 PM

    Great news story, a lovely read for a Friday :-)

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    Mute Dan
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    Feb 10th 2012, 12:27 PM

    Fair play to them.

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    Mute Andrew Peacock
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    Feb 10th 2012, 2:32 PM

    who would thumbs down that comment, wankers!

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    Mute Bilbo Baggins
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    Feb 10th 2012, 12:30 PM

    Fair play lads, I wish you much success.

    Thats the sort of innovation Ireland needs.

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    Mute Jay funk
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    Feb 10th 2012, 6:28 PM

    And they have to leave Ireland, wish they could of stayed in Ireland

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    Mute AMAS
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    Feb 10th 2012, 12:35 PM

    Congrats to @patrickc and brother John Collison @collision on latest $18m funding!

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    Mute Cpm
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    Feb 10th 2012, 1:32 PM

    This isn’t Twitter you know

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    Mute Francis Stokes
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    Feb 10th 2012, 12:35 PM

    Delighted to see these two brothers getting on so well.I am sure they will go far. Fair dews to them.

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    Mute Hanly Sheelagh
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    Feb 10th 2012, 3:50 PM

    Fair dues

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    Mute Francis Stokes
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    Feb 10th 2012, 6:33 PM

    I stand corrected

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    Mute Peter Carroll
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    Feb 10th 2012, 12:37 PM

    They deserve it. Their main product has removed one of the last barriers to market for anyone setting up a new business or wanting to operate a small business. Brillant.

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    Mute Mike Turner
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    Feb 10th 2012, 2:01 PM

    Spot on Peter.

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    Mute Katherine Nolan
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    Feb 10th 2012, 12:39 PM

    Couldn’t be happier about this. Great people, great product, great investment.

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    Mute Fr Tod Umptious
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    Feb 10th 2012, 1:03 PM

    Really amazing entrepreneurial spirit but wish it could have been further developed in Ireland rather than California :)

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    Mute Michael Fagan
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    Feb 10th 2012, 1:31 PM

    Why can’t we make it attractive for guys like that to start up/ keep their business in Ireland . What are the politicians doing??

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    Mute Chris
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    Feb 10th 2012, 2:12 PM

    I dont think it can be entirely blamed on politicians..I dont think Ireland has the same startup environment that california has…and I think its a lot to do with our attitude towards entrepreneurs…and lack of VC funding perhaps..I think to imitate an environment like california, Ireland needs a spark, and for lots of people to take risks, both on their own ideas and on other peolpes…and also to think big, these guys obviously have done that but id say they are one of very few in Ireland. Maybe the draw of having like minded people around is what took them to the US?

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    Mute Philip Wilson
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    Feb 10th 2012, 1:06 PM

    First time I’ve ever seen a story on the Journal without a single “thumbs down” good work lads.

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    Mute Philip Wilson
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    Feb 10th 2012, 1:07 PM

    of course just as I send my comment…………ah well, still a great story

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    Mute James Doyle
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    Feb 10th 2012, 1:11 PM

    Great news hope it goes well for the young men,best of luck,it’s what Ireland needs at these times

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    Mute Barry Finnegan
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    Feb 10th 2012, 5:43 PM

    Chris money doesn’t buy genius it’s fairly obvious these boys are something special really proud of them all do I don’t know them

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    Mute Eric
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    Feb 10th 2012, 2:24 PM

    Congratulations to them ! It’s a shame they couldn’t be incorporated in Ireland and employ Irish people, but the truth of the matter is that our universities are not producing graduates of the calibre required to start a tech company and guide it to success .

    A corollary to that is the total funding vacuum that exists for tech startups in Ireland , whether it is venture or angel investment. Enterprise Ireland lack the domain knowledge required – a software startup costs peanuts to fund initially ; most of the cost goes on rent and food but EI and their ilk want to give you way more money than you need in exchange for way more equity than you want to give away, on top of ridiculous conditions like needing to hire a minimum number of people and spend a minimum amount which you will then be reimbursed for.

    We will never have a so called smart economy if this doesn’t change and we will continue to produce mickey mouse companies that turn a tiny profit and hire a tiny amount of staff.

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    Mute Inda Kinny
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    Feb 10th 2012, 2:41 PM

    I don’t agree 100% with the calibre of graduates in Ireland. i think that the problem is more so the numbers of people doing IT/science subjects. There are some pretty smart people coming out of some pretty good courses at the moment but nowhere near enough.

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    Mute terry
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    Feb 10th 2012, 9:36 PM

    Very well said Eric. The government should make it easier for the existing it contract development community to setup business and go it alone. I have 12 years experience lots of good ideas but I can’t take s year off ti try something without

    Free office rent
    A grant of about 45 k a year
    And free access to broad band and hardware

    Give me that enda and in 5 years I would employ at least 5 if not mire people

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    Mute Rob O' Bli
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    Feb 10th 2012, 3:53 PM

    The thumbs down on the site is getting a bit ridiculous.

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    Mute Jim Power
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    Feb 10th 2012, 8:15 PM

    @ Chris Gardner – Your very much mistaken these guys went to a public school in Limerick, if their parents wanted elite education for them they could have sent them to Glenstal not far away. The only downfall with this type of talent in Ireland is that we don’t know how to nurture them past the R&D stage. These guys are in the mould of Gates & Zuckerberg,just a shame we couldn’t keep them but the v best of luck to them.

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    Mute Chris Gardiner
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    Feb 10th 2012, 4:00 PM

    These Brothers while they deserve their hard work it must be pointed out that they came from an enormously priveleged family with basically unlimited resources. They were destined to do well getting every and all help along the way. Not the story of the vast majority of irish young men. As I said I am thrilled they are doing well but I and millions like me never had these priveleges growing or resources. Its a pity all Irish school goers do not get the same equalities and indeed come to school facing enormous disadvantages, We won’t be reading about them anytime soon.

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    Mute Joe Sixtwo
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    Feb 10th 2012, 5:59 PM

    Well done lads.

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    Mute Melvin
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    Feb 10th 2012, 6:51 PM

    There should be a http://www.coderdojo.com in every town/village in the country! Time to ditch fable studies and get programming languages into schools!

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    Mute Joan Featherstone
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    Feb 10th 2012, 9:32 PM

    OMG lads yis are a legend, well done, I’m as proud of you both as if I were your mother! Wonderful…

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    Mute Susan Duffy
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    Feb 10th 2012, 7:03 PM

    They’re set up for life then! Well done to them!

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    Mute Bernadette Dunne
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    Feb 10th 2012, 10:49 PM

    Congratulations to you both

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    Mute Mark Rodgers
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    Feb 10th 2012, 6:34 PM

    The very highest levels of protection must be provided for intellectual property such as this for the most obvious of reasons. I’m certain that the naysayers and petty critics who believe that it’s acceptable practice to thieve from owners of such valuable property will slink to the sidelines while these young lads bask in well deserved glory.
    Fantastic achievement lads…well done!

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    Mute James Grant
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    Feb 11th 2012, 9:48 PM

    Your welcome Palo Alto, California.

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    Mute James Grant
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    Feb 12th 2012, 1:52 AM

    “You’re welcome” dummy

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