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Independent schools are already trying to break down the 'Berlin Wall'

Michael Gove spoke of his desire to knock down the 'Berlin Wall' between the state and independent sector.

Education Secretary Michael Gove.(Image: Stefan Rousseau/PA Wire)

Michael Gove has had plenty of things to say about education in the first ten days of February.

He started the month with the call to go back to the future by restoring the old fashioned values in punishment, the writing of lines, the collecting of litter and the weeding of playing fields.

He seems to think that this is the world of the best schools, when such things are long gone.

However, at the end of last week he decided to say nice things about independent schools, that every school should be as they are, that every school should have Oxbridge success and debating, and the Combined Cadet Force, and a longer school day as a norm.

He claims that his desire is to knock down the Berlin Wall that exists between the state and the independent sector.

Such opinions do two things to teachers. Teachers in the state sector are annoyed, at best, and they have two forms of annoyance.

Those in the best state schools say that they do all this anyway and don’t need any lessons, thank you very much.

Those in schools that cannot do all these things say, quite rightly, that it’s all too easy for independent schools to do these things: after all, they get somewhere between two and seven times more money per pupil and they have able pupils and supportive parents and fields as far as the eye can see. After all, the average staff pupil ratio in the state sector is 21:1 and in the independent sector is 10:1.