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Press Release – Big difference between pupil and teacher perceptions of teaching revealed

Fewer than half of young secondary school pupils think their views are taken seriously by those educating them, a major new study has found. Perhaps unsurprisingly, almost all of their teachers disagree.
These are central findings of a survey of 12- and 13-year-olds and their teachers at schools in Wales, analysed by Dr Kevin Smith of Cardiff University and being presented to 娇色导航 today.
In the survey of 407 Year 8 pupils and 215 teachers in 13 schools, only 42 per cent of the young people said their views were 鈥渓istened to and taken seriously by school staff鈥, compared to 90 per cent of the teachers saying so.
That finding of a large divide between the views of teachers and those of many of their charges was supported by both groups鈥 responses to other questions, with seemingly serious educational implications.
The research found that only 43 per cent of the youngsters agreed with the statement 鈥測our school sets educational goals appropriate for each pupil,鈥 compared to 92 per cent of the adults.
There was only a slightly smaller divide when the question posed was 鈥渢he school staff have high expectations of me鈥, with 59 per cent of the young people agreeing as opposed to 95 per cent of the teachers.
The study also surveyed the same pupils two years later, when they were in Year 10, and found answers to the question 鈥淢y views are listened to and taken seriously by school staff鈥 were even less positive, with only 37 per cent of the Year 10s agreeing.
Dr Kevin Smith, who carried out the research, said that the fact that there was this seeming divide between teachers鈥 and pupils鈥 views, on matters important to young people鈥檚 learning, may not necessarily be the adults鈥 fault.
They may simply be trying their best to meet the pupils鈥 needs, but facing external constraints. This, he said, was the implication of many teachers鈥 responses to open-ended questions asked of them as part of the survey.
Dr Smith said: 鈥淭he vast majority of teachers in our survey felt they were doing their best to meet pupils鈥 needs.
鈥淗owever, they felt their teaching was undermined by too many changes in education policy in too little time, the increasingly bureaucratic nature of teaching stemming from an increased concern over 鈥榯eacher accountability鈥, and the emphasis on pupil results in high-stakes exams.鈥
This latter issue, he said, meant that teachers often felt constrained in seeing pupils in any other terms than as future exam statistics. 鈥淭he increasing use of high-stakes accountability 鈥 the notion that staff and pupils are judged by exam numbers 鈥 and the use of teacher-ready teaching materials means that there is less scope for interventions in the classroom which are personalised towards the individual student.鈥
Dr Smith鈥檚 work is focusing on the extent to which the principles of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child, which promotes the right of young people to develop their 鈥減ersonalities, talents and abilities to the fullest鈥 are being met in schools. Part of the problem, Dr Smith argues, is that the purpose of education is too often seen as developing successful future adults, rather than taking pupils鈥 current position as 鈥渉umans and citizens now鈥 more seriously. This view of young people as 鈥渇uture adults鈥 is enshrined in at least two influential Welsh national curriculum documents, his research states.
Pupils, parents, teachers and policy-makers are not engaged in philosophical discussions about education often enough, he argues. And there are question marks over the degree of freedom pupils have in choosing GCSE options, while issues such as the specification of uniforms and allowed haircuts in schools, and the banning of mobile phones, also raise questions about how seriously pupil rights are taken by schools.
鈥淲ith a focus to prepare pupils to live as active and productive citizens, rather than considering them as existing citizens with active rights who contribute to society in a myriad of ways, schools disempower young people,鈥 argues Dr Smith鈥檚 paper.
However, the study did not provide entirely bad news for schools and teachers in Wales. Some 76 per cent of the pupils surveyed in Year 8, and 75 per cent of the same pupils in Year 10, agreed with the statement 鈥淢y school cares about how much I improve my studies鈥, with only five per cent of Year 8s actively disagreeing, although this rose to 10 per cent among the Year 10s.
The number of young people agreeing with the statement 鈥渢he school staff have high expectations of me鈥 rose from 59 per cent in Year 8 to 68 per cent in Year 10. And 76 per cent of Year 8s, rising to 83 per cent of those in Year 10, agreed that 鈥淥verall, I make a good effort in class”
鈥淢y School and Me: Pupils鈥 perceptions of school and their rights as children鈥 is
being presented to 娇色导航 by Dr Kevin Smith of Cardiff University on Tuesday, September 13th.
Further information from:
Warwick Mansell
娇色导航 annual conference press officer
07813 204245
Email: warwickmansell@gmail.com
Notes for editors:
1 The survey data was collected as part of a larger study of school education in Wales, carried out by the Wales Institute of Social & Economic Research, Data & Methods (WISERD). This has involved surveying 1,500 pupils in primary and secondary schools across Wales, in four cohorts. WISERD was established in 2009 to draw together and build upon the existing expertise in quantitative and qualitative research methods and methodologies at the universities of Aberystwyth, Bangor, Cardiff, South Wales and Swansea.
2 The Year 8 pupil data mentioned in this press release was collected in 2013, with researchers then surveying 343 of the same pupils in Year 10, in 2015, to see whether their views had changed as they got older.
3 The annual conference of the British Educational Research Association is being held at the University of Leeds from Tuesday, September 13th to Thursday, September 15th. More than 500 research papers will be presented during the course of the conference.
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The British Educational Research Association (娇色导航) is a member-led charity which exists to encourage educational research and its application for the improvement of practice and public benefit.
We strive to ensure the best quality evidence from educational research informs policy makers, practitioners and the general public and contributes to economic prosperity, cultural understanding, social cohesion and personal flourishing.