If there’s nothing else you can say about the Minister for Education, Norma Foley. When we look back at 2024, it’s likely she will feature heavily. Whether it was her crisis opportunity during the general election campaign or her 9 million Euro phone pouches, in this episode, join me as I look back on a year where the Department of Education were more interested in smartphones than teacher shortages and where all of the problems in the education system seemed to be defended by throwing free school books and free school lunches at parents. So without further ado, let’s review the year from January to June.
Transcript
Hello hello, you're very welcome to if I Were the Minister for education from anshah.net a regular podcast where I delve into the world of primary education and let you know what I would do if I were the Minister for Education.
Simon LewisThis is Simon Lewis.
Simon LewisIf you enjoy this podcast, please feel free to subscribe on your favorite podcasting platform.
Simon LewisAnd if you'd like to leave a review, it would be really appreciated as it helps others to find the podcast more easily.
Simon LewisIf there's nothing else you can say about the Minister for Education, Norma Foley, when we look back at 2024, it's likely she will feature in the Highlights heavily, whether it was her crisis opportunity during the general election campaign or her 9 million euro phone pouches in this episode.
Simon LewisJoin me as I look back on a year where the Department of Education were more interested in smartphones than teacher shortages, and where all of the problems in the education system seem to be defended by throwing free school books and free school lunches at parents.
Simon LewisSo without further ado, let's review the year from January to June in this part and later on in the week I'll be moving on to the rest of the year.
Simon LewisReady to go?
Simon LewisLet's start with January 2024.
Simon LewisStarted in the same dark vein as 2023 ended with anti migrant sentiment continuing to flow throughout the country, unfortunately including my own town of Cardo from my adopted town of Cardo.
Simon LewisFor those of you who hear my South Dublin accent, run it raining through this podcast.
Simon LewisArmed with the big Lie theory as that is repeats something often enough and it becomes true, I have to drive by protests in my town and watch school children standing in the cold as their parents said they felt like strangers in their own classrooms.
Simon LewisNorma Foley's attentions weren't focused on that, of course, which was more the pity.
Simon LewisAs far as she was concerned, the biggest problem in the education system was those pesky schools forcing parents to buy smartphones for their children.
Simon LewisOne thing that didn't seem to be a problem were the vast swathes of money being gifted to the Catholic Church for divesting or reconfiguring as it's known now, their schools to a different patron body.
Simon LewisAnd I spent months in 2023 trying to find out how much it would be that they were paying.
Simon LewisAnd it turns out that per school the government were going to pay between €5,000 and €8,000 a year for each school that was reconfigured.
Simon LewisEssentially, if the government reached their target of 400 multi denominational schools, it would be over two and a half million euro per year given and gifted to the Catholic Church.
Simon LewisAnd not forgetting that the state also fund all the bills of those schools, including all of the maintenance and all of the building remains in the ownership of the church after the lease had run out.
Simon LewisIt was a sweet deal.
Simon LewisAnd I've no idea why the church aren't actually chopping, chomping at the bit to reconfigure as many of their schools as possible.
Simon LewisAnd I guess given the given free solar panels which were also given gifted to them, may have made them think that there's more money to be made by staying put.
Simon LewisAnd as I explored this in January, and despite my best efforts, the media weren't interested in that.
Simon LewisThey were really still interested in schools banning mobile phones.
Simon LewisAnd as we'll see, that became a theme throughout the year.
Simon LewisMeanwhile, in January, the teacher shortage crisis rumbled into its 10th year, with schools in major cities completely unable to fill temporary positions.
Simon LewisAnd while I still think people are missing many of the points as to why we have this teacher crisis, the minister remained in denial that there was a problem at all.
Simon LewisAnd yes, that's going to be another theme as we go through the year.
Simon LewisWe start the year on a depressing tone.
Simon LewisI'm sorry, and I don't know if February is, is going to be any different, but let's move on to that month and let's look at another angle of 2024, the other story of 2024.
Simon LewisAnd I think when we look back at the year 2024, apart from the world of education, we'll be looking at AI and ChatGPT in, I suppose, specifically because it's caused lots and lots of rumbles throughout the world, including the education system.
Simon LewisAnd for me, I found a lot of its power was in how it was able to analyze data.
Simon LewisAnd I found myself thinking a lot about the spreadsheets that the Department of Education actually produces, and they produce quite a few of them.
Simon LewisSo I decided that I'd use ChatGPT, in the absence of having a statistics degree, to analyze those, the data that they put out behind any, anything to do with special education, specifically the special education allocations.
Simon LewisAnd I spent a lot of February analyzing that.
Simon LewisAnd not only did I find unsurprising evidence that the government press releases weren't exactly telling the truth, more worryingly, the entire set allocation system is completely based upon junk data.
Simon LewisThere is absolutely no rhyme and no reason for the set allocations that your school receives.
Simon LewisAnd looking at the country on a county by county analysis of resources.
Simon LewisSchools in Offaly were receiving an average over 10% more resources than they should have, and schools in County Ross Common, not so far away, were receiving almost 10% less, and every county in between.
Simon LewisThere was no rhyme and reason.
Simon LewisAnd if you were in a developing school, you were receiving a whopping discrepancy of 43% fewer hours than you should have been as well.
Simon LewisAnd sadly, though, when the set allocations were accidentally released at 11 o'clock at night on a Friday of the new Irish bank holiday, by Saturday morning principals were screwing each other over in the annual event, which is colloquially known as the cluster Games.
Simon LewisHowever, not only was I getting disillusioned with my principal colleagues on the fact that they were quite happy to spend their Friday night of bank holiday essentially screwing each other over, the government decided to turn the screw further by removing the criteria of complex needs from those set allocations.
Simon LewisAnd I'll talk more about that in a couple of months in this review.
Simon LewisIn the meantime, after a Freedom of Information request, I found the state had gifted over 500 million euro, half a billion euro, to the Catholic Church and other private bodies on capital building projects.
Simon LewisFrom when, do you think, how long would you think that amount of gifting took place?
Simon LewisThe other five years, 2018 to 2022?
Simon LewisHowever, again, the media weren't interested in that.
Simon LewisThey were more interested in the fact that 25% of 6 year olds own smartphones.
Simon LewisI get that.
Simon LewisI get that is a fairly, fairly awful thing.
Simon LewisBut of course, that's school's faults.
Simon LewisIrish exemptions were being given out far too easy, which of course is school's faults.
Simon LewisAnd schools closing for the polling day for the referendum, which didn't pass, was also school's faults.
Simon LewisIf you read the media in February, do you know what?
Simon LewisThere's some things, you know, even ChatGPT can't process.
Simon LewisLet's move on to March.
Simon LewisIn March, I learned a new word, quantum, which according to the Cambridge Dictionary, is the smallest amount or unit of something, especially energy.
Simon LewisThat term, quantum, was used three times in one of the most bizarre statements I've ever experienced in my career from the Irish Primary Principles Network, who decided to turn on their own members when they criticized the Department of Education's decision to cut the complex needs criteria from set allocations.
Simon LewisRather than actually support their members who thought this was shocking, they decided to defend the Department of Education's decision to cut the complex needs criteria.
Simon LewisAnd to quote their statement, it is important to be clear that that children with complex need have not been excluded from the allocation of hours that schools received.
Simon LewisAnd they went on to explain that given that the revised allocations model is now underpinned by more accurate data provided by schools, it is hoped that the quantum of hours allocated to schools will better enable children with additional and complex needs to achieve and thrive in their mainstream settings.
Simon LewisI wonder if ChatGPT wrote that quantum so baffling they used it three times in their statement.
Simon LewisIt's a word that could equally define the IPPN's representation of their own members, in this case the smallest unit of energy March also saw Josepha Madigan stepping down as the Minister for Special Education.
Simon LewisUnfortunately for her legacy will be best remembered not for anything to do with it will be to do with special education, but for her many misspeakings, as she called it herself, including calling children without additional needs as normal children.
Simon LewisI could go on, but I don't think it's worth spending much more than a quantum on her legacy April despite the hype around Christmas, Easter is actually the most important holiday in the Christian calendar which celebrates the birth of their Lord Jesus Christ.
Simon LewisHowever, in April, a study of over 4,000 teachers by a Catholic organization in the Grace Project revealed that over half of teachers working in Catholic schools who promised that they would uphold the ethos in their interview under the age of 50 don't believe in God.
Simon LewisWorse for Jesus was the census records that were released of 25 to 29 year olds in 2022 who are now older and having kids and so on only showed that 53% of them identify at all as Catholics.
Simon LewisAnd worse again, Catholic marriages are at their lowest point at under 35% of marriages.
Simon LewisIf Jesus hadn't escaped his grave, he would be rolling in it.
Simon LewisAnd if saying that sounds disrespectful, of course it is.
Simon LewisBut no more disrespectful than the way teachers are expected to be missionaries for the Catholic Church in 90% of primary schools.
Simon LewisAnd which segues me nicely to what used to be a big deal for teachers in the calendar, which was the into Congress where the media covered the motions raised on the role of faith formation this year in 2024 it was actually probably one of the biggest stories of the 2024 IMTO Congress.
Simon LewisAs much as its importance in the school year has diminished over the last decade or so, it's still one of the highlights of a number of teachers school years.
Simon LewisAnd I know it seems that it's the same people every year going up and complaining, why is there nobody else showing up to this thing?
Simon LewisIt's a question I often tell them to ask themselves rather than giving out, about why people like me and like many others don't get involved in the into the answer is we don't feel welcome in the club and there's there's some work to be done.
Simon LewisBut let's move away from my rant and get back to my ponderings on April about why the Inco Congress, with all the motions and many of them the same every year, why was it that religion in education was the one that grabbed the headlines?
Simon LewisAnd why was it that the motion that went through certainly wasn't the motion that was the over overall biggest demand for more people in the country, despite huge work around the country for a very strong motion on religion, the INTO standing Motions committee decided they'd pick the very weak motion from Ross Common of all places, rather than the other counties in Ireland who had much stronger motions.
Simon LewisBut they said that they wanted, for whatever reason, Ross Common decided that they would put that a survey and that would be what we need.
Simon LewisThis is the big deal about religion in education.
Simon LewisWe need a survey and we need to demand the end of the religious certificate in Catholic education.
Simon LewisThe questions that Ross Common and therefore the Standing Orders committee decided, rather than the much stronger motion that people had put forward was we would ask teachers two questions.
Simon LewisShould faith formation education take place in primary schools?
Simon LewisAnd should primary school education in Ireland have secular or religious patrons?
Simon LewisNow, I have less of a problem with the first question than I do with the second question.
Simon LewisAnd to be honest, at the time I didn't really comment on it because I was just a bit.
Simon LewisI was really miffed, to be honest with you, with those two questions.
Simon LewisAnd number one, they lack absolute nuance.
Simon LewisThis is a highly complex area.
Simon LewisPeople talk to me about how simplistic my view is of separating church and state.
Simon LewisBut to add to have a survey asking just those two questions is shocking and the second question is ridiculous.
Simon LewisLike who said it's a choice between secular or religious patrons?
Simon LewisWhat about patrons in general?
Simon LewisAnd so on.
Simon LewisSorry, I'm going back into a round.
Simon LewisBut at this time of writing, which is the end of the school year, the survey is due to be sent out to a selection of members in early 2025.
Simon LewisThey're not even going to bother asking all of their members.
Simon LewisAnd thinking about the future for teachers who might want to be treated with the slightest level of respect for their private religious beliefs, it's going to need a miracle bigger than any messiah even Jesus could give.
Simon LewisAnd it also shows the contempt Maybe I think that the INTO have for their members that don't go with the flow and accept, I think, and I suppose I'm going again to a third round in April.
Simon LewisI think the INTO are probably quite happy with the patronage system.
Simon LewisThey seem to be.
Simon LewisTheir question even would suggest that, that they would like to see the continuation of patron bodies.
Simon LewisYou know, would.
Simon LewisWould we rather have secular religious patrons?
Simon LewisWe.
Simon LewisThey don't ask the question of should we have patrons at all.
Simon LewisI think privately, I don't think they think this is all a big deal and this is just a storm in a teacup.
Simon LewisAnd I do remember actually when I got a call from the INTO after I was.
Simon LewisAfter I was racially abused online when people cared about that kind of thing, I had a call from a member, from a person who was very high level in the into and I congratulated them at the time because at the time they had decided to do so.
Simon LewisAn act of rebellion, I would say, which was to raise the pride flag in schools, even ones with religious ethos.
Simon LewisAnd I congratulated them at the time because the person involved was heavily involved in that.
Simon LewisAnd when I congratulated them, I thought it was interesting.
Simon LewisThey said, look, you know, it was an easy, it was an easy victory.
Simon LewisWe measured the temperature really of the time and it was like nobody really minded.
Simon LewisI noticed this year there was very little publication of raising the pride flag in schools.
Simon LewisI don't know if they raised the pride flag at all in any of the primary schools because now it isn't as easy as it was.
Simon LewisAnd it was very notable that I didn't see the pride flag being proudly waived this year in June by the into.
Simon LewisAnyhow, as I said, easy victories is where they're at.
Simon LewisAnd I think the INTO are just going to wait until other people do all the work and they'll sweep in and say, look what we've been doing anyway.
Simon LewisHowever, one chink of bright light was that 13 years after the forum of patronage and pluralism, the first ever Catholic school divested to educate together.
Simon LewisNow, you may not have heard that correctly.
Simon Lewis13 years later.
Simon LewisYes, years after the forum of patronage and pluralism, I think I might have found a better definition for the word quantum.
Simon LewisLet's move to May.
Simon LewisMay was all about the money and it's all about the dum dum decisions made by the Department of Education, who decided in the midst of rumors of a general election that they would cut funding to the school book grant, reducing it by 17%.
Simon LewisThe ancillary grant and to the summer program, which is now half of what it was two years before.
Simon LewisAnd as the Minister for Education continued her two chief crusades.
Simon LewisFirstly, to blame schools for parents having to buy their children mobile phones, and secondly, to reduce the entire primary education system to a cheap child minding service for working parents in inverted commas, which I have no doubt are both the brainchild of her appointed advisor, a school in Dublin that ran out of classrooms and had to therefore close an after school child minding service that was in one of their classrooms was met with mass protests and a petition of over 1000 signatures.
Simon LewisAnd I found that really interesting that I was looking at the same time when I was looking at this.
Simon LewisI also looked for petitions from the same parents or any parents protesting the cuts to the school book grants, the ancillary grants and the summer program.
Simon LewisBut funny enough, I couldn't find a single petition from those working parents for those cuts to basic services to education.
Simon LewisLet's move to the end of the school year.
Simon LewisIt's June, and as the world seemed to be falling apart with war, you probably may have wondered if I was going to mention any of the terrible conflicts happening around the world.
Simon LewisWhether that was Iran, Yemen, Syria, South Sudan, the Russia war in Ukraine or Israel in Gaza.
Simon LewisAnd given my own background, and given that President Michael D.
Simon LewisHiggins claimed there was no anti Semitism in Ireland, and given that the day before I had just received a torrent of images featuring stereotypical beasts with large hooked noses and people telling me to get out of Ireland and go and kill some Palestinian children, I felt that despite not feeling very safe doing, but also realizing how stupid that sounds when there are so many Palestinians out there and who are feeling much, much less safe than my stupid feelings.
Simon LewisAs someone who was brought up in the Jewish faith, I was always taught the bad things happen when good people do nothing.
Simon LewisAnd it was the only way.
Simon LewisI remember being told to explain why the Holocaust happened in all the way from the 1930s, all the way before the Holocaust itself, during the Holocaust, and why it came to a point where 6 million Jewish people were killed and several other million minorities were murdered, and how that was justified.
Simon LewisAnd I have spent the last number of years trying to understand how the Israelites that I grew up with, one under Yitzhak Rabin, could move from a place where there was relative peace and a plan for a solution, possibly a two state solution, to one where the Israeli government has essentially lost any form of humanity.
Simon LewisI tried my best to articulate my thoughts on the situation in Gaza and try to explain why.
Simon LewisUltimately, I believe that the reason for the rise in antisemitism that I have faced in Ireland in the last number of months is a direct result of the Israeli government justifying their murder of innocent people in my name.
Simon LewisAnd while the majority of Irish people are able to differentiate between Judaism and Zionism or even being Israeli at all, I'm not foolish enough like Michael D.
Simon LewisHiggins to believe that antisemitism doesn't exist.
Simon LewisIt's why I was very uneasy about Michael D.
Simon LewisHiggins saying that.
Simon LewisAnd while I absolutely agree with him that criticisms of Israel are not anti Semitic, to say that Irish people are not anti Semitic is highly problematic, especially working in the education system, which I have argued for so many years, is covertly racist.
Simon LewisIn the same way, I don't believe Irish people are generally xenophobic, despite the widespread protests outside those accommodation centers for migrants that I spoke about in January.
Simon LewisOr in the same way I don't believe that Irish people are generally homophobic.
Simon LewisDespite the protests in the libraries, I acknowledge there is a growth in xenophobia, homophobia, racism, and anti Semitism and Islamophobia.
Simon LewisThey are all happening before our very eyes.
Simon LewisAnd to say that none of it is happening is deeply dangerous.
Simon LewisBecause as days and days go on in 2024, the rise in discrimination in terms of, and I suppose what we can call prejudice, is growing all the time.
Simon LewisAnd this in an education setting where discrimination, blatant discrimination happens and legally discrimination happens every single day, whether it's single sex schools who discriminate by design on gender, whereas 96% of schools discriminate on a daily basis on the foundation of religion.
Simon LewisIt's just to say things like that is dangerous.
Simon LewisAnd I suppose in the end of my article that I wrote about, and it was the first article I wrote about Israel and maybe I should have written it earlier.
Simon LewisI, I guess I was probably a little bit reluctant to write anything given my background and given that I'm one of the only people in the system from minority background.
Simon LewisAnd I suppose there are much, much more thoughtful and intelligent people out there.
Simon LewisIn fact, I'm not a thoughtful, intelligent person on the, and I don't know very much about, about the intricacies and the complexities of the situations.
Simon LewisNo more so than anybody else might be, but I am, I guess I also, at a human level, am disgusted by the atrocities that are happening in Gaza and it needs to stop.
Simon LewisSo at the end of the article I listed much more thoughtful and intelligent articles and lessons that teachers could possibly use if the subject of Israel and Gaza or war in general came up.
Simon LewisWhich kind of leads me to an unrelated issue that I explored near the end of the school year in June.
Simon LewisWe have a wonderful array of thoughtful and intelligent teachers in Ireland who do talk about the education system in Ireland.
Simon LewisAnd I have to say, as the as time went on, I find it a little irksome that when that in the media, one of the only teachers that's features in the media has to express herself in a column called the Secret Teacher.
Simon LewisI think it's a very strange and weird thing that if the most prominent teacher in the media is not able to express herself without being in secret, that we have a massive problem in the education system that you cannot express yourself outside of the shadows.
Simon LewisAnd furthermore, when the media believe that the most influential figure in Irish education, as the Irish Times put it, is not even Irish.
Simon LewisAnd I'm not saying that in a nationalist sense, but isn't even an educationalist, it's actually a German statistician.
Simon LewisAnd we look at Singapore and Estonia to find out how to do education properly.
Simon LewisIt can be easy to see how disillusionment can creep in when you work in the education system and you care about the education system and you see the small little nuances of the education system and you understand why the education system is the way it is.
Simon LewisAnd that as much as we can learn from Singapore and Estonia and we should learn from Singapore and Estonia and Finland and all and even our Germans, that our education system needs to be analyzed by people within it and the media need to stop looking.
Simon LewisThey can look beyond, but they also look have to look within to find what's going on.
Simon LewisAnd we shouldn't have to do that in secret.
Simon LewisI guess things could be worse though in Ireland as we come to the end of our first six months.
Simon LewisAs you probably can see, not a lot of educational things have happened yet in 2024.
Simon LewisAnd as I'm talking it through, I'm wondering, gosh, will something educational happen?
Simon LewisBut I guess we might think about that in our next episode.
Simon LewisAnd I guess this might sound a bit depressing as an episode, but I guess it could be worse because I was reading in June that Louisiana teachers in America may be forced to teach the Ten Commandments as fact.
Simon LewisAnd I also saw there was a British head teacher, a principal who was in the media because he had to double job as a caretaker because there was not enough money to pay the bills.
Simon LewisAnd I just thought at least nothing like that could happen here.
Simon LewisOh wait, I hope you enjoyed listening to the first six months of my review of the the year 2024.
Simon LewisI'll be back in a few days with the rest of the year and we'll see if anything educational happens, or if we're still going to be talking about things that aren't really educational at all.
Simon LewisI wouldn't hold my breath if you've enjoyed this episode, please come back to me in a few days and we'll find out what happens from July to December, and we'll see what my conclusions are from the year 2024.
Simon LewisThanks so much for listening.
Simon LewisAll the very best.
Simon LewisBye.