As Mrs Thatcher's education secretary, Kenneth Baker was charged with solving the disaster in Britain's classrooms. By his own admission, he did not succeed. In his memoirs, he wrote that the Department of Education "was among those with the strongest in-house ideology. There was a clear 1960s ethos and a very clear agenda which permeated virtually all the civil servants."
I dearly hope that Michael Gove can succeed where Baker failed. Unlike bad laws, bad ideas are very hard for a minister to reform away. Such thinking will have to be slowly overturned. This process will take far longer than Gove's stint as Secretary of State but if he successfully sets it on course, our country may yet have a schools system to be proud of.
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