How different things have been under Gove. Where New Labour indulged the retrograde ideas of the education establishment, Gove challenged them. Where New Labour tolerated widespread grade inflation, dumbing down of examinations, and a flight from academic subjects in order to create an illusory rise in standards, Gove put an end to cynical manipulation. Where New Labour
aimed to raise results by demanding less of children and schools, Gove demanded more.
His detractors often characterised Gove as an ill-informed ideologue, led by half-baked prejudices based upon his own school experience. Nothing could be further from the truth. On the occasions when Gove challenged the education establishment, he did so with a wide and deep understanding of the available evidence.
The Guardian's education editor Richard Adams, not a natural ally of a Conservative Education Secretary, conceded in his valediction for Gove: "He was a minister utterly on top of his brief, with an extraordinary knowledge of educational research and statistics." Adams recalls how, at an international education conference in Boston where Gove was set to deliver the keynote speech, he spotted the Secretary of State at 8am sitting in at the back of a breakfast seminar on early years' reading programmes, making notes.
This dedicated understanding of educational issues was clear in Gove's speeches, which were reliably entertaining, challenging and erudite. In a speech at the University of Cambridge in November 2011, Gove ranged from Gladstone's Midlothian address to the 1983 film Educating Rita, via Jade Goody and the English Literature GCSE. His speeches were informed by research at the forefront of the education debate, such as that of the cognitive scientist Daniel T. Willingham, the curriculum specialist E. D. Hirsch, and Professor John Hattie of the University of Melbourne.
Far from hating teachers and schools, Gove's speeches never failed to mention those that Gove knew and admired. Within the strange twilight world of social media, his time in office has coincided with an effervescence of teacher-bloggers who track the discredited dogmas that Gove has been so keen to reform. Gove's speeches showed a keen awareness of this work at the coalface, and were littered with references to such twittersphere luminaries as Andrew Old, Joe Kirby, Daisy Christodoulou, Tom Bennett and John Blake (more than one of whom are Labour party members - so much for partisanship).
Gove entered head first into the debates about curriculum content and teaching methods. This won him few friends amongst teachers, many of whom were never able to get past a basic indignation that a politician had the gumption to form an opinion on how and what they should teach. However, such a situation was far preferable to that of some previous education secretaries, who were ill-informed and thus beholden to the whims and fancies of a discredited education establishment.
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