Schools are becoming "Orwellian" societies where
CCTV cameras in classrooms monitor pupil behaviour and staff
performance, teachers will warn today.
They are relying on "Big Brother-style" tactics
to crack down on assaults on staff and fellow children, it
is claimed.
Many of the Government's semi-independent academies have
installed cameras and two-way mirrors to let senior staff
monitor pupils, they say.
But the 160,000-strong Association of Teachers and Lecturers
fears that the systems are being used by heads to monitor
staff performance, putting teachers' ability to work independently
at risk.
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Speaking at the ATL's annual conference in Torquay, Julia
Neal, the union's president, said the shift was symptomatic
of the "current reality of over-measured, over-monitored
education".
She also criticised the increasing use of league tables and
examination targets which, she said, stifled teachers' ability
to work and undermined pupils' learning.
"Teachers will talk about surveillance cameras in classrooms,
about over-zealous observation of their teaching," she
said. "We will hear about teachers delivering a prescriptive
curriculum and teaching to the tests in order to secure a
good place in the league tables for their school.
"These issues all add up to an education system which
focuses on targets and outcomes, and fails to meet individual
pupils' needs.
"It is time for a re-think by the Government on what
constitutes real success for pupils before the push for better
results, increased monitoring and more measurements means
young people can only function in a society which has been
so spoon-fed that it cannot think for itself and cannot challenge
and grow in the future."
Full
article here.