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New exam targets branded 'insulting'

Posted: 10 April 2003 | Subscribe Online


Looked-after children's organisations have branded the government's revised targets for improving the educational performance of children in care as "insulting", "patronising" and "fundamentally flawed".

The new targets specify that 90 per cent of looked-after children should sit a GCSE or equivalent exam and 15 per cent should be achieving A*-C grades by 2006. They replace targets set in 1998 and 2002 respectively for 75 per cent of students to be passing a GCSE by next year and 15 per cent to gain five A-C passes by 2004.
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New figures published last week show that only 41 per cent of children in care achieved one GCSE or GNVQ pass last year, 4 per cent lower than 2001 (news, page 6, 3 April).

Maxine Wrigley, co-ordinator of A National Voice, said the new target was about "getting bums on seats", while John Kemmis, chief executive of Voice of the Child in Care, said they were "pointless" and devised to "make them achievable".

Fostering Network executive director, Gerri McAndrew said: "It is patronising and obstructive to suggest these children cannot achieve educationally, and there is no reason why specialist targets should be set for them".


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