English Bacc music GCSE warning

ViolinMusicians warn that GCSE music will suffer from its exclusion from the English Bacc
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It could become “impossible” for young people in England to study music GCSE, if the English Baccalaureate is kept in its current form, a professional body for musicians says.

Music is not included in the proposed English Bacc list of GCSE subjects.

And the Incorporated Society of Musicians is writing to the schools minister to say teachers are reporting the subject is being “squeezed out”.

Schools Minister Nick Gibb says the new measure is “having a positive effect”.

A final decision on the shape of the English Bacc, for the 2012 league tables, is expected from ministers in the next few weeks.

But Incorporated Society of Musicians chief executive Deborah Annetts said teachers had already reported a drop in pupils taking music GCSE and one school where it was no longer on the curriculum.

The English Bacc sets out the subjects on which league tables will be based showing how many pupils achieve at least a C grade.

The subjects proposed by the government are English, maths, two sciences, an ancient or modern language and either history or geography.

But critics say this will undermine the teaching of other subjects and limit the choices for GCSE.

“It is a concern to the government that children, particularly in deprived areas, are not being offered that combination of choices”

Nick Gibb Schools minister

“Without music GCSE being given the weighting it deserves, our cultural and creative economy will be put at risk, and young people who want to be involved in the music sector will have their efforts hampered,” said Ms Annetts.

“The government is setting England up for an almighty shock in the future if they continue this policy – let alone the impact it is already having on young people who want to study music.”

There have also been protests about the absence of religious education and economics from the list and concerns schools will prevent pupils taking both history and geography, when only one will appear in the league-table results.

On Monday Schools Minister Nick Gibb told the House of Commons the English Bacc would add to the quality of information available and help ensure more children take core academic subjects.

“The English Baccalaureate is not prescriptive. It is just a measure, one of many measures, that this government are putting forward as part of the transparency agenda,” he said.

“It is the next stage in that school’s improved performance. It is a concern to the government that children, particularly in deprived areas, are not being offered that combination of choices.”

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

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