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Schools' English teaching must do better

Tim Ross
19 Jun 2009


State schools are failing to improve standards of reading and writing quickly enough, inspectors warned today.

Ofsted criticised mediocre teaching that stops pupils who struggle with English from making progress.

Despite more than a decade of government policy aimed at boosting literacy, improvements have been too slow in recent years, the watchdog warned.

Employers complain that too many new recruits are unable to read and write accurately and have poor speaking skills.

In a report based on inspections of 240 schools, Ofsted found that while standards in English have risen since 2004, "the rate of improvement has been slow".

Chief inspector of education Christine Gilbert said: "Too much English teaching is no better than satisfactory and too many pupils are not able to make the progress they then need to catch up."

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4 gdness sake. just teach in txt.

Good grief! I can't even force myself to write in text-speak to make the point. English isn't just words - like any other language it is about the common structure of communication, including spelling, punctuation, conceptualisation and a thousand things besides. But these days it has been reduced to what will fit on a mobile phone screen in 10 seconds of frenzied thumb keying.

- Rogan, Irving, 19/06/2009 19:28
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I am afraid teaching English is just not PC in New Labours social engineered society.

- Frank, Home Counties, England., 19/06/2009 15:08
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When most of the kids are foreign these days what chance have the schools got?

- Steve, London, 19/06/2009 11:58
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