The new British secretary of state for education has learned something very silly by reading about the “reform movement” in the United States. She now wants Britain to be first in the world in teaching grit. Truly! No, not the grit that gets stuck between your teeth. Not the grit that collects on the soles of your shoes. No, she means character!
This post was written earlier this year, so I don’t know how the contest ended up, but get this, as reported by Robin Alexander of the Cambridge Primary Review:
Those who thought that the departure of Michael Gove might give schools a breather before the 2015 election, liberating them from the weekly explosion of initiatives and insults, reckoned without the ambition of his successor. These days, few education secretaries of state are content to do a good job, deeming it more important to leave an indelible mark in the name of ‘reform’. To this lamppost tendency Nicky Morgan appears to be no exception.
Her wheeze, and it’s a biggish one, is to make Britain ‘a global leader in teaching character and resilience … ensuring that young people not only grow academically, but also build character, resilience and grit.’ To that end, DfE has invited bids for projects showing how ‘character’ can be built, and on 16 March there’ll be a grand ceremony at which the 2015 Character Awards of £15,000 each will be presented to 27 schools, with a £20,000 prize for the best of the best. Morgan modestly defines her chosen legacy as ‘a landmark step for our education system.’
In the same way that New Labour claimed, witheringly but inaccurately, that before the imposition of its national literacy and numeracy strategies England’s primary teachers were ‘professionally uninformed’, so Nicky Morgan’s happy discovery of something called ‘character’ implies that schools have hitherto ignored everything except children’s academic development; and that creativity, PSHE, moral education, religious education and citizenship, not to mention those values that loom large in school prospectuses, websites and assemblies and above all in teachers’ daily dealings with their pupils, were to do with something else entirely. Remember the not-so-hidden ‘hidden curriculum’? If there is a ‘landmark step’ then, it is not character education but its political appropriation and repackaging.
So what, in Morgan’s book, constitutes ‘character’? Its main ingredients, as listed in the guidance to applicants for the DfE grants and character awards, are ‘perseverance, resilience and grit, confidence and optimism, motivation, drive and ambition.’ (Readers will recognize ‘resilience’ as one of the most overused words of 2014). Rather lower down the list come ‘neighbourliness’, ‘community spirit’, ‘tolerance’ and ‘respect.’
Like so much in recent English education policy, this account of character is imported from the United States. The Morgan character attributes are almost identical to those in the eponymous Paul Tough’s book How Children Succeed: grit, curiosity and the hidden power of character, and in Dave Levin’s evangelising Knowledge is Power Program (KIPP). Here, then, we have a melding of the no-holds-barred values of corporate America with that fabled frontier spirit portrayed by John Wayne. ‘Grit’ anchors the education of character in both worlds….
If character is important, which it surely is, is such an idiosyncratic and unreconstructedly male account of it good enough, and is it for government to impose this or any other notion of character on every child in the land, of whatever inclination, personality, gender or culture? In one of two excellent blogs on this subject that I urge prospective applicants for the DfE awards to read, John White thinks not. He says: ‘Nicky Morgan is not wrong to focus on personal qualities, only about the set she advocates. This is tied to an ideology of winners and losers.’ (As, appropriately, is DfE’s Character Awards scheme itself). He reminds us of the considerably more rounded values framework appended to the version of the national curriculum that was introduced in 2000 and superseded last September, and he argues that ‘no politician has the right to steer a whole education system in this or any other partisan direction.’ For White, Morgan’s foray into character education is further confirmation of the need for curriculum decisions to be taken out of the hands of politicians and given to a body which is more representative, more knowledgeable and culturally more sensitive.
The other recent must-read blog on character education is by Jeffrey Snyder in the United States. He cites evidence that ‘character’ is more likely to be determined by genetically-determined personality traits than the efforts of teachers, and indeed he argues that anyway nobody really knows how to teach it. In this context it’s worth asking what those pupils subjected to 1850s/1950s character-building really learned, and whether there is indeed a correspondence between success on the playing field, in work and in adult life. And since you ask, did fagging and flogging really make for manliness (whatever that is) or were they merely perversions by another name?
Snyder argues, too, that the ‘perseverence, resilience and grit’ account of character ‘promotes an amoral and careerist “looking out for number one” point of view’ adding, tellingly: ‘Never has character education been so completely untethered from morals, values and ethics.’ As a result, ‘character’ is as likely to be harnessed to the pursuit of ends that are evil as to those that are good. ‘Gone’, adds Snyder, ‘is the impetus to bring youngsters into a fold of community that is larger than themselves … When character education fails to distinguish doctors and terrorists, heroes and villains, it would appear to have a basic flaw.’
Do read the embedded links. They connect to some very interesting articles by White and Snyder.
As you will note, this is an older post. I don’t know who won the national competition for teaching grit. When I find out, I will let you know.

Good luck measuring that with a multiple-choice format. Then again, Pearson is a British publishing company.
LikeLike
Snyder argues, too, that the ‘perseverence, resilience and grit’ account of character ‘promotes an amoral and careerist “looking out for number one” point of view’ adding, tellingly: ‘Never has character education been so completely untethered from morals, values and ethics.’ As a result, ‘character’ is as likely to be harnessed to the pursuit of ends that are evil as to those that are good. ‘Gone’, adds Snyder, ‘is the impetus to bring youngsters into a fold of community that is larger than themselves … When character education fails to distinguish doctors and terrorists, heroes and villains, it would appear to have a basic flaw.’
Exactly!
LikeLike
Ed reformers have huge problems with context. It trips them up every time. They can no more isolate “character” from “morals, values and ethics” than they can isolate children from the environment in which children live.
LikeLike
“Brits and Grits”
Brits and grits and edutwits
About as nutty as a gits
LikeLike
edutwits – TAGO!
LikeLike
Heading over to the UK in a couple of days. Can’t wait to hear what people think of this.
LikeLike
“Please, Sir. I want some more grit”
LikeLike
With cheese??
LikeLike
Well, Pearson Education crossed the big river to make billions in the US, I bet Leader in Me will cross back over and start making millions more over in the UK!
LikeLike
Welcome to the 51st state !
LikeLike
I sort of hope they go forward with defining “character” and then attempting to push their definition into every public school in the country. That’s not going to go over well.
Is “humility” included in the ed reformer definition of “character”, I wonder? They might want to review that section at one of those conferences 🙂
LikeLike
Didn’t you get the memo?
There are no words that begin with “hum-” (humility, humanistic, humanities, humor) in The Reformer’s New World Dictionary.
LikeLike
Except hummer which is what they expect all of us to give them.
LikeLike
Character as genetically determined? That sounds like a dangerous concept.
In any case, it is clear that you can be a billionaire, insult a US senator who endured five years in a concentration camp, engage in non-stop character assignation of other candidates for political office, and still be met with high ratings as a candidate for President of the U.S.
LikeLike
Time for a remake of Two Sir, With Love. Wondering how Sidney Poitier would handle those crazy kids with grit, SOLs, and data-driven learning. Sounds like a horror show.
LikeLike
It still amazes me how complete the capture by the ed reform “movement” was (and probably is) in the Obama Administration.
This is the twitter feed of one of the “formers”. There is not a single positive mention of a US public school. They are quite literally “anti” US public schools, and they are the US Department of Education! It’s freaking remarkable. How in the heck did this happen? Did no one in that organization object to this? No push-back at all? Aren’t there career people In the USDOE who are supposed to provide a check or balance on a CLEAR agenda like this from political appointees or are they all completely captured too?
https://twitter.com/pcunningham57
LikeLike
Keep Calm
And
Grit Your Teeth
LikeLike
Did the new British secretary of state for education go through the Broad Academy and/or once work for Pearson?
LikeLike
It’s even worse than you think:
Rugby coaches to be drafted in to help build grit in pupils (official government headline)
This link has the full list of awardees.
https://www.gov.uk/government/news/rugby-coaches-to-be-drafted-in-to-help-build-grit-in-pupils
LikeLike
“‘Gone’, adds Snyder, ‘is the impetus to bring youngsters into a fold of community that is larger than themselves …”
What is this guy smoking?
All countries have systems (governments). Uncle Madison observed “All governments
rest on OPINION.”
Establishing the “opinion” of the system, and promoting the system, requires actions.
Actions, carried out, by the recruitment “agents” of the system, assigned and defined,
by the sponsoring government.
The objective IS to bring youngsters into the “fold”, to cultivate a culture to INHIBIT
disruptive thought and actions towards the sponsor (government). The “fold” of
domination/submission, through division.
Turning people into the “other”, by any means, is REQUIRED for economic conscription,
slavery, wars, in general a disregard for humanity.
Turning people into the “other”, is displacing any sense of interconnectedness,
blasted by the conventional “wisdom” of division.
Go figure, the “powers that be” aren’t in “business” because “they” establish
“systems” to reduce their power. As always, complicity is required…
LikeLike
https://martinrobborobinson.wordpress.com/2015/07/16/does-nicky-morgan-really-value-the-arts/
LikeLike
Wasn’t Reagan a CLOSE friend of Thatcher? This is where the lunacy started.
LikeLike
Reblogged this on David R. Taylor-Thoughts on Texas Education.
LikeLike