Published on openDemocracy (http://www.opendemocracy.net)
Who owns your child's school? The rise and rise of edu-business
Melissa Benn, 03rd April 2012
Faster than we recognise, schools are becoming profit centres. The
buildings, the teaching, the cleaning, the exam results are all ways to
make money. But who benefits? Not the poorest, argues Melissa Benn.
About the author Melissa Benn is a writer and campaigner. Her latest
book School Wars: The Battle for Britain's Education is published by
Verso.
Brooke House Sixth Form College in Hackney - known as BSix - has come up
with an inventive new wheeze [8] to break down the inequalities of
access to higher education. It has spent thousands of pounds creating a
replica of an Oxford don's study down to the colours of walls, antique
furnishings and polished wooden floors. The so-called Red Room has been
built in order to familiarise underprivileged youngsters, who aspire to
top universities, with the lush furnishings of privilege.
Age-old assumptions underlie the BSix initiative – namely, the perceived
superiority of certain elite institutions, in both the secondary or
higher education sector. But recent moves [9], a mere 30 miles away in
Luton, Bedfordshire, more accurately indicate the new direction of our
education system.
Here, the Barnfield Federation, a group that already runs a chain of
academy schools, has declared an interest in running one or more
for-profit further education colleges, taking advantage of a permissive
clause in the 2011 Education Act. Surplus cash generated by the
'business' will be used to pay a dividend to shareholders.
Welcome to the rampant, and rapid, privatisation that now characterises
the English education scene. As we move away from state provision of
state education, the remnants of a universal comprehensive system are
being dismantled and replaced by new providers at every level. Eton in
the East End
To take one small example: private schools are increasingly encouraged
(a process begun under New Labour) to set up, or take over, failing
schools, often with mixed results. At the Isle of Sheppey academy,
sponsored by Dulwich college, truancy figures were recently reported to
be the fifth highest in the UK.
More recently, there has been sharp protest at plans [10] by Eton
College and several other leading public schools, to run a super
selective sixth form college, entitled the London Academy of Excellence,
in London's East End. According to Eddie Playfair, head of nearby
Newham College:
'The rhetoric is that this is a lifeboat coming to save the poor. A lot
of effort will be wasted in competition which could be spent on
improving education and sharing good practice and developing what
students really need.'
Professor Stephen Ball of the Institute of Education, a leading
authority on the steady march of 'edu-business', describes it as a
'ratchet process' in which each new government circular or Education Act
has opened up a fresh business opportunity. As Ball told me when I
interviewed him for my recent book School Wars: The Battle for Britain's
Education [11], there have been 35 such moments since 1988, each one
encouraging the private sector to take over, and sell back to schools, a
range of services, from meals to building improvements, to the
examination system and inspection services. Over time, a plethora of
bidders has become consolidated into a few, established, providers. The
result is that, while during the 1990s there were 120 different
companies involved in the inspection of schools, this had shrunk to
seven by 2003. It has now dwindled to just three.
As Ball shrewdly observes, the term 'privatisation' does not do justice
to the complex interconnection being formed between state and market. We
are seeing a general "corporatisation" of schooling itself - covering
everything from the importing of private sector management techniques to
the dominance of entrepreneurial and aspirational narratives and values
within the classroom.
Take Amey [12], typical of companies operating in the education world.
It markets itself as a leading provider of "more effective and efficient
public services". It employs more than 11,000 staff, works in more than
200 locations in the UK, trumpets a range of education related
services, including ten major education partnerships. It boasts of
contracts for services ranging from schools improvement and special
educational needs to the delivery and management of new schools,
encompassing cleaning, catering, janitorial, security and building and
grounds maintenance. Philanthropy
However, the company's website does not make reference to Amey's
ill-fated sponsorship of one of the early city academies, Unity City
Academy in Middlesbrough, North Yorkshire, one of the poorest areas of
England, which opened in 2002. By 2008, only 12 per cent of its pupils
were getting five good GCSEs and the company eventually withdrew from
the school.
Worldwide, the education market is estimated to be worth more than £100
billion. It has increasingly attracted the interest of philanthropic
billionaires, such as Bill and Melinda Gates in the United States, and,
here in the UK, Arpad Busson, the London-based French financier who
founded ARK, one of the more successful educational chains in England.
Education has also attracted the interest of multinational corporations
such as Pearsons, owners of the Financial Times and the Penguin Group,
and of Rupert Murdoch's global empire, News International. Pearson
Education employs around 37,000 people and is based in more than 60
countries. This company recently bought up educational businesses in
Brazil, India and the US. It has contracts with five English academies
for textbooks, as well as providing pupil assessments, teacher training
and software. Pearson has also expressed interest in the new boom area
of English education - helping to run new free schools and academies.
Since coming to power in 2010, the Coalition has accelerated the
break-up of state education, and encouraged a range of semi-private
providers to enter the system. Free schools were initially presented by
Tory ministers as a form of parent power, but most of the new schools
are in fact being run by an eclectic mix of charitable and third-sector
organisations, religious groups, and, increasingly, private providers
and the rapidly expanding academy chains.
Take Oasis [13], one of the largest academy chains, with 14 academies
already open and more in development. As Henry Stewart reports on the
Local Schools Network [14] website, between 2006 and 2010, the revenue
received from government by the Oasis chain grew from £3 million to £70
million. The revenue of ARK [15], which runs 11 academies in London,
Birmingham and Portsmouth, increased from £3 million to £117.5 million.
In 2009-10, the income of E-ACT [16], another academy sponsor, grew from
£15.5 million to £60 million. Its head, Sir Bruce Liddington, former
Schools Commissioner, was reportedly paid more than £280,000 a year, in
the last year when accounts were available. (The finances of these
chains are no longer published.) All these groups are highly regarded by
government in policy debates and have considerable influence on the
development of government thinking and practice in education. The views
of local authorities, on the other hand, are largely ignored. Profit
centres
The idea of 'for profit' schools is now widely discussed in the media
and various policy arenas. In Spring 2011, the Adam Smith Institute [17]
proposed the introduction of for-profit free schools, claiming it the
only solution to dealing with a rapidly expanding primary age
population. In January 2012 Policy Exchange [18] came up with the more
emollient sounding 'John Lewis' or social enterprise model, in which key
stakeholders share the profits: the origins of the Luton sixth form
college proposal mentioned above.
The economic logic of privatisation is clear: with drastic cuts in
public spending, forced on government by the bankers' crisis in 2008,
putting public services out to market appears to save the tax payer,
while enabling shareholders to earn a share of the profits. What it does
not do is ensure equitable provision.
Proponents argue that it is the poor who will ultimately benefit from
such changes. Bill Gates told the 2008 World Economic Forum that this
was 'creative capitalism, an approach where governments, businesses, and
non-profits work together to stretch the reach of market forces so that
more people can make a profit, or gain recognition, doing work that
eases the world's inequities.'
Professor Ball notes wryly of this approach in a forthcoming article in
FORUM [19], (Vol 54, No 1, 2012): 'Here, then, profit becomes a force
for good, at exactly the same time as it brought the western financial
system to the brink of collapse.'
How these policy developments will promote the interests of poorer
children remains questionable. An independent analysis [20] of 23 of the
24 free schools that opened their doors in September 2011 revealed that
these schools had a significantly lower percentage of children on free
school meals (a good indication of deprivation) than neighbouring
schools. And recent analysis by the Local Schools Network [21], featured
in The Observer [22] and now confirmed by researchers at the House of
Commons, has shown that the much-trumpeted sponsored academies do less
well in terms of results than the relentlessly traduced community
schools serving similarly disadvantaged populations.
Given the relentless drive to privatisation of our schools by the
current Coalition government, their poor performance remains a
surprisingly well-kept secret.
-------------------
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Source URL: http://www.opendemocracy.net/5050/melissa-benn/who-owns-your-child%E2%80%99s-school-rise-and-rise-of-edu-business
Created 04/03/2012 - 07:18
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[8] http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-oxfordshire-17351103
[9] http://www.guardian.co.uk/education/2012/mar/25/academy-federation-run-college-profit
[10] http://www.thisislondon.co.uk/news/education/we-dont-need-eton-to-save-our-children-say-east-end-heads-7564942.html
[11] http://www.amazon.co.uk/School-Wars-Battle-Britains-Education/dp/1844677362
[12] http://www.amey.co.uk/AboutAmey.aspx
[13] http://www.oasiscommunitylearning.org/
[14] http://www.localschoolsnetwork.org.uk/2012/02/academy-chains-no-case-for-expansion/
[15] http://www.arkschools.org/
[16] http://www.e-act.org.uk/academies/academies-2
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[22] http://www.guardian.co.uk/education/2012/feb/25/academny-schools-fewer-gcses-study
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