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THE PARLIAMENTARY REVIEW Highlighting best practice 4 | REVIEW OF THE YEAR Apart from the unexpected departure of Michael Gove, the education story that gained the most headlines this year was the strange tale of Birmingham’s ‘Trojan horse’. In November 2013, Birmingham council received an anonymous letter that claimed to outline how groups of hard-line Muslims were taking over the governing bodies of schools in the city and imposing their own religious agenda. This was dubbed Operation Trojan Horse, a reference to the classical legend of how the Greeks tricked their way inside the walls of Troy. is a reading test that will be used as a baseline for measuring future progress. There are few corners of the education world where he hasn’t intervened. Mr Gove’s supporters argued that his legacy would be higher standards and greater autonomy for state schools. They argued that the move towards more academies, which operate outside of the local authority system, was unlikely to be reversed, regardless of who was in office. Measuring achievement in education systems is a long-term process. It is turning around a supertanker rather than a speed boat. It will be well into the next decade before the pupils who began school under Mr Gove’s changes are taking their GCSEs and A levels. By then there will have been many more education secretaries to take the praise or the blame for their results. It will also take time to separate the impact of the reforms from the controversial character of their instigator. Mr Gove’s changes to the school system were often accompanied by vituperative arguments with teachers’ unions and other parts of the education establishment. He dismissed this opposition as ‘the blob’, caricaturing his opponents as a barrier to progressive policies. It could be hard to disentangle the personal rows from the disputes over policy. Only after his departure, and the acrimony has receded, will it begin to become apparent how much has really been achieved. How the Trojan horse entered the headlines New Education Secretary Nicky Morgan with the Prime Minister 21 schools in Birmingham were subject to inspection
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