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8:16am Wednesday 20th August 2008
Almost two million teenagers have left school without gaining a single good GCSE, it has been claimed.
Figures released by the Tories show that 1.75 million children left school without one GCSE at grade C or above between 1997 and 2007. In the same time frame, over 380,000 left without achieving a pass at grades A* to G. Last year, almost 153,000 pupils left without gaining a single C.
The data, obtained by parliamentary questions asked by shadow schools secretary Michael Gove revealed that last year around 23,500 pupils were not entered for a GCSE. Between 1997 and 2007, just over 300,000 teenagers left school without being entered for a single subject.
Shadow families minister Maria Miller said: "Eleven years after Labour came to power, almost two million children have left school without any 'good' GCSE passes. The Government has let down an entire generation of pupils who are not getting anything like the basic set of qualifications they need to continue studying or get the job they want.
"The problems with educational underachievement are concentrated in the poorest areas of the country. It is in those areas that our policies for a Swedish model of school reform to create thousands more good new school places can make the most difference. Only then will children from disadvantaged families start to get the same kind of opportunity as others."
The data comes the day before thousands of 16 year olds are due to receive their GCSE results.
The pass rate is expected to rise again this year and experts predict that one in five grades could be A or A*.
Schools Minister Andrew Adonis said that the gap in achievement between children from poorer and more affluent backgrounds is narrowing at GCSE level. He said: "Record investment and schools' hard work have transformed the lives and prospects of millions of young people. Since 1997, the number of schools where less than 25% of pupils gain five good GCSEs has dropped from 616 to 17: a 36-fold reduction.
"And standards are also rising in higher-attaining schools - the number of secondary schools where 70% or more pupils gain five good GCSEs has risen eleven-fold to 891, up from 83 in 1997. We are now putting £400 million of extra money into schools with the lowest GCSE results.
"Rather than peddling doom and gloom on the day before thousands of young people receive their results we suggest that the Conservatives get behind young people and celebrate their achievements."
BLUEBIRD will power its way across Coniston Water once more if a public consultation into changing the lake’s by-laws is favourably received, reports Matthew Taylor.
An award-winning Lake District baker is putting together a rescue package for the bakery he closed down last week.
KENDAL Mountain Festival is in full swing after the event kicked off with a string of films and lectures at venues across the town.
Although the recession has, “technically,” only just begun, most businesses have been noticing a slowdown in the economy for months. A few have been experiencing it for more than a year!
Without wishing to sound a gloomy note in this era of credit crunch and climate change, have you noticed that we appear to be doomed? We’re not really taking this climate change thing at all seriously, are we? A recent experience in Windermere made me realise that sustainability, local and sourcing are just empty words in a dictionary.
REPRESENTATIVES from more than 250 businesses visited the first-ever South Lakeland Business 2 Business Exhibition, making the event a big success.
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