JobTiES :.

TiES work with many International and private schools around the world. The majority of schools we assist cater for students from 3-18 years, range in size from 20 to 3,000 students and serve expatriate communities.

READ MORE

Schools Advertise :.

Why not advertise your teaching positions?

Once we receive a candidate’s application we will simply email this to you (or a chosen contact at your school).

READ MORE

Register today - it's free!

  • Upload your CV and let TiES start looking for that special job
  • Contribute to the TiES community
  • Receive FREE Newsletters, Advice and Job postings

Education News - Education World News

UK Private schools urged to accept bigger classes to keep fees down

Private schools should consider increasing class sizes to keep fees down as the credit crisis bites, the head of the Independent Association of Prep Schools (IAPS) has said. Smaller class sizes have long been the selling point of independent schools, and are frequently cited by parents as the main reason for educating their children privately.

Typical class sizes in prep schools range from 8 to 16, while secondary schools belonging to the Independent Schools Council boast a pupil-teacher ratio of 10-1, against an average of 26 and 21 pupils per teacher in state primary and secondary schools.

David Hanson, chief executive of the Independent Association of Prep Schools, whose members educate 130,000 children aged 3 to 13, said the sector's obsession with keeping class sizes small represented a “self-inflicted wound”.

“We need to abandon ship on the idea of small classes and focus instead on the quality of teaching and learning. The answer is quality, quality, quality. Small classes are not the answer. Many of our schools could transform their situation by increasing class size.

“There is no magic number. You can have schools that are too small. Eight or ten children to a class can be too small. It's too intensive,”

“For the children it can be like having an intensive tutorial all the time.”

John Tranmer, headmaster of the Froebelian School in Leeds and chairman designate of the Independent Association of Prep Schools, said that, at 24, the average class size at his school was well above the average for the independent sector. But the school was nevertheless among the top 100 in the country (out of more than 20,000) in the performance tables for 11-year-olds.

“There are some schools that still think that trading on class size is the key thing. They are missing the point,” he said. What mattered more was to attract the best teachers. Rather than have two classes of 12, each with a fully qualified teacher, schools should consider merging the two classes under a single teacher and a classroom assistant.

“You save on staffing costs, but the teaching quality is the same,” he said. “It's all about the quality of staff and the effective use of teaching assistants - they are of incredible support to teachers.”

Mr Tranmer, who used to teach in a school in Surrey with classes of eight pupils, said that the social dynamics in such small classes could be very difficult to manage.

The IAPS's change in position on class sizes is unlikely to be universally welcomed by many parents, who remain firmly attached to the notion of small classes.

On the wider issue of how private schools would weather the recession, Mr Hanson said that while some parents would struggle to pay school fees, the most vulnerable schools were likely to be very small, family-owned institutions that did not have the backing of a professional association such as the IAPS.

Within the association's 560 member schools, he predicted that at least three schools may be forced to merge to save costs. In other cases, schools were achieving savings by forming informal federations to do bulk ordering on equipment or by sharing specialist teachers.

http://www.iaps.org.uk/

NEWSLETTER Subscribe / Unsubscribe


(CTRL + click for multiple)

Dubai - BVU New Cambridge International School

New Cambridge International Primary School Planned PUNE: The Bharati Vidyapeeth University (BVU) announced on Monday its move to launch an international school that will offer the Cambridge international primary programme...

International School News | dolores Admin | Tuesday, 21 April 2009

READMORE

UK Private Schools feel downturn

Independent Schools close in UK Up to 30 independent schools in th UK have closed or are due to close in the coming months because of the economic climate, a...

Education World News | dolores Admin | Wednesday, 8 April 2009

READMORE

International schools in Asia hit by crisis, too

Asia's significant growth was a windfall for international schools HONG KONG - Asia's significant growth was a windfall for international schools as expatriates moved to the region in droves bringing...

Education World News | dolores Admin | Wednesday, 8 April 2009

READMORE

10 Critical Tips you Must Use - International Teacher Application

International Teacher Application In the 21st century much of our job hunt has moved online. International recruiters are often requiring us to submit our application packs by email, which certainly...

Teachers Classroom | Kevin McLaren | Tuesday, 3 February 2009

READMORE

Speed Reading for Corporate Staff - Increase Productivity

Speed Reading for Corporate Staff - Increase Productivity The written word is everywhere. In todays fast-paced, get-it-done-yesterday world, being able to speed read"and remember what you read"is nearly a matter...

Teachers Classroom | dolores Admin | Tuesday, 3 February 2009

READMORE

UK - International Baccalaureate Diploma Course slowly gaining A-level ground

International Baccalaureate Diploma Course slowly gaining A-level ground in the UK The International Baccalaureate started 40 years ago in Geneva and with it a message of broader and more self-motivated...

Education World News | dolores Admin | Thursday, 29 January 2009

READMORE

More in: Teachers Classroom, Education World News, TiES Company News, International School News

100%
-
+
3
Show options