While many children spent Christmas cramming for January’s common entrance exams and my colleagues await the publication of the Secondary School Performance tables, as Head of a non-selective independent school, I have to ask myself the question; What are these exams actually measuring and what are the long term effects of pushing children and young people through the process?
With the Institute of Directors (IoD) criticising schools for failing to prepare children for the workplace with the skills and knowledge they need to succeed, it begs the question what’s the point of our obsession with exam results? Have we just become exam factories as claimed by the IoD? How are we measuring intelligence? What about creativity and valuable interpersonal skills – are they worthless?
I take inspiration from the likes of Sir Ken Robinson who argues that schools cannot meet the needs of the future by just refining what we have done in the past. Today’s education system, which was designed and conceived in a different age, is based around the thinking that there are only two types of ability – academic and non-academic. This has led to many brilliant people thinking they are not ‘intelligent’ as they are being judged against this sadly limiting mindset.


