DCSIMG

Minister 'no idea' of 11-plus reform cost

EDUCATION Minister Caitriona Ruane has admitted she has no idea how much it will cost to implement the plans she has to reform the transfer procedure.

In answer to a written Assembly question

from MLA Simon Hamilton, the minister said

"the exact nature, and therefore cost, of that

change cannot be accurately predicted", until

different areas have agreed the mechanism

they wish to follow.

Ms Ruane has said academic selection will

end in 2008 with pupils deciding their next

move at the age of 14 (and schools in various

localities deciding amongst themselves exactly

how this will happen and whether or not

intermediary schools, for 11 to 14 are set up).

Some MLAs criticised the lack of detail in

her plans. Others have simply opposed the

scrapping of selection.

Strangford MLA, Mr Hamilton said the minister's

vision was "short-sighted" and it was

worrying that she had "failed to consider even

the most elementary of matters" – namely

cost.

He said: "She has given no consideration to

the current legislation, which protects academic

selection.

"No consideration to what happens between

2009 and 2011 (the end of the 11-plus and the

timetable for her new system to begin]. No

consideration to the need to achieve crossparty

consensus in the Assembly chamber for

her proposals.

"No consideration at all for views of parents

and teachers, including the 64 per cent of parents

and 62 per cent of teachers who responded

to the Department of Education's own

household survey demanding the retention of

academic selection.

"And now she has also, by her own admission,

given no detailed consideration to the

inevitable cost that an overhaul of the scale

she proposes would bring about. This is fiscal

irresponsibility of the worst kind."

Mr Hamilton asked the minister "to detail

the analysis her department has carried out on

the cost impact of the transfer procedures"

announced to the Assembly on December 4.

She responded: "Implementation of the

vision for new post-primary arrangements outlined

on December 4, 2007 will require a certain

amount of structural change, though the

exact nature, and therefore cost, of that

change cannot be accurately predicted until

area planning mechanisms are operational.

"The important point is that structural

reform is required in any case due to the number

of surplus places that exist across the

schools' estate, and it makes sense to design

flexible new transfer arrangements that make

full use of spare capacity in the first instance,

and which are in harmony with curriculum

reform and delivery of the Entitlement

Framework."

Mr Hamilton said: "Surely the cost of any

alterations to the education system should be

a central factor in the decision making

process.

"Yet, the minister is so blinded by her ideology

and driven by her dogma that she hasn't

given the cost a second thought. Northern

Ireland's ratepayers deserve to know how

much of their hard earned money would be

wasted on the minister's proposals, but

Caitriona Ruane doesn't seem to care about

cost so long as she gets her way."


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