Thursday, 5 December 2013
How to obtain information about home education from Graham Stuart; the right way and the wrong way
Some readers have been asking today about Graham Stuart’s reply to Lisa Amphlett. I thought that it was worth talking a little about this and publishing it here. There were hints that my post yesterday was part of a coordinated attempt to smear a group of home educators in the Midlands. It wasn’t of course, it’s just that there is no such thing as coincidence in the Looking-glass world inhabited by these characters. Still, it gives me a chance to look at the correct way to find things out from MPs and also to look at the wrong way of going about the business. The hint was, you see, that because one of this group had failed to extract answers from an MP about something to do with home education, that must be why I had posted about a woman who had been in Ireland and is now in the midlands. (Yes, I realise that this makes no sense at all, but you know what these people are like!)
A couple of weeks back, I wanted to know three things about Graham Stuart’s intentions, and also about the functioning of the All-Party Parliamentary Group on home education. The best way to find things out, is of course simply to ask. If you are going to do this, it is better by far to limit your enquiries to one simple question at a time. Once this has been asked, you can leave it a week or two and then ask another question. It might take a few weeks, but that way you tend to find out what you want to know. The first thing I wanted was a written statement of Graham Stuart’s plans, if any, for new regulations about home education. I emailed him on November 22nd, saying;
Dear Mr Stuart, I'm sorry to trouble you, but a number of people are concerned that you might be in favour of some new regulation for home education in this country. I wonder if you could just confirm whether this is true or not? Thanks a lot.
Simon Webb.
Short and to the point, you see. An hour and half later, one of his advisers replied, saying:
Dear Mr Webb,
Thank you for your email.
The APPG for Home Education, which Graham chairs, is encouraging local authority home education officers to form a national organisation so that they can build expertise, and also challenge bad practice and ignorance in their authorities.
There is no question whatever of Graham suggesting or supporting new regulation regarding home education. The aim is precisely to avoid some of the problems which arise through local authority officials misinterpreting the existing regulations (whether by accident or design).
Kind regards,
Simon
You see? Easy peasy and now I have a written statement about this MP’s intentions; ’ There is no question whatever of Graham suggesting or supporting new regulation regarding home education.‘ Working in this way, I shall eventually have simple answers to all my questions. Now let’s look at the wrong way to go about it. Here is another email to Graham Stuart, this one sent the day after my own:
Dear Graham,
Thank you for taking the time to engage with me on Twitter and invite communication via email. In the interests of openness and transparency, this is an open letter that I will publish on my blog along with any response.
I write with reference to two points:
1. The APPG and its structure, and
2. The proposal that you mentioned at the end of the last APPG meeting in October 2013.
I will deal with them separately for clarity’s sake.
I appreciate that the APPG has been functioning for some time without widespread interest from the HE community. However, your minuted suggestion that ”home education experts from local authority areas” should come together to form a national organisation to “build expertise and challenge bad practice and ignorance” has precipitated interest, criticism and concern. This is, I believe, largely because of the potentially negative outcomes of such a proposal, which I will expand upon below.
A key concern for me is the unelected nature of the APPG, its secretariat (HEAS) and the “secretariat support”. I can only find the APPG minutes on the secretariat support’s personal website, and from reading those minutes I have deduced that she is responsible for the preparation of delegate lists, invites, agendas, supporting/briefing papers and minutes. I tried to communicate directly with this individual, to be told that my questions would not be answered.
My questions regarding the structure of the APPG are below:
How and when was the secretariat and secretariat function proposed, agreed and clarified? By whom? What were the terms of reference?
To whom do I direct my request for a full client list of the secretariat/secretariat support, as per P11 of the HoC Guide to the Rules on All-Party Groups?
How do I arrange for all future delegate lists/agendas, supporting/briefing papers and minutes to be either made publicly available at the time of their production or sent directly to me and any other interested parties?
What is the formal position of the APPG with regard to proposals that are made and taken forward through the APPG without consultation with and representation of the home education community, especially when such proposals have the potential to negatively impact upon all home educating families?
Is there a procedure for challenging/appeal against the decision to incorporate a secretariat and/or “secretariat support” — on the grounds of, say, a lack of neutrality, conflict of interest, or unprofessionalism when dealing with key stakeholders?
With regard to the proposal itself, I outlined my concerns in my blog post “Questions arising from the home education APPG” (hyperlink here). The professionalisation of “home education” will legitimise and validate what is currently an optional role (and rightly so) within local authorities.
A national organisation has the potential to rubber stamp local authorities as “good” (whatever “good” is defined as; surely operating within the law does not require national organisation?) without maintaining adequate oversight of developing problems or bad practice — this happens surprisingly quickly, and even local authorities with “good” reputations continue to make mistakes.
It could well block home educators from tackling local problems at a local level, effectively funnelling all efforts through a monolithic, “official” body. This is the antithesis of localism and it is incredibly disempowering and destructive in the medium to long term (it happened in my own local authority area when “experts” intervened without the consent of many active local home educators). Having seen the detailed and complex level at which home educators have had to operate in “good practice” areas, I fail to see how a national organisation could hope to replicate the levels of application, dedication and diversity needed to turn local authorities round.
The most worrying aspect, for me at least, is the potential this association has to cause significant harm in the hands of a government that has few sympathies with the importance of families and the primacy of the parent with regard to welfare and education. You and I tweeted about Barry Sheerman’s perspective (hyperlink here) a week or two ago, and it is precisely this entrenched attitude towards home education, also seen in many local authority officers, that could turn any professional organisation into a powerful lobbying group against freedom in education after the next general election.
It is true that there is nothing to stop officers organising if they so wish. However, I think it is totally unacceptable to organise and/or additionally resource this through an unelected and unaccountable body in the face of significant opposition from the affected community, and I would like to express my opposition to this in the strongest terms.
My questions regarding your proposal are below:
Have you had discussions about this national organisation prior to proposing it at the end of the last APPG?
When you referred to “home education experts from local authorities” did you mean local authority officers, consultants or individuals from the home education community?
What is your definition of “home education expert”?
What exactly is the purpose of the next APPG? Is it to scope the proposal, or actively take it forward? Has there been or will there be an evidence based impact assessment?
Are there formal mechanisms in place to deal with opposition from key stakeholders?
I am conscious of asking so many questions but I think they are reasonable and pertinent to the current situation, so thank you for your patience. Should you need any clarification regarding any of the points I have raised, please let me know. I look forward to hearing from you and sharing any responses.
Lisa Amphlett
Oh, dear! Can anybody spot the difference between this email and my own? Yes, that’s right, mine was a couple of dozen words, containing a single question. Lisa Amphlett’s, on the other hand, is a long, rambling communication, with no fewer than thirteen questions embedded in it. What do readers think are the chances of anybody ploughing through all that and answering all the questions? That’s right; practically zero! So it proved, because here is the answer which she received ten days later:
Dear Lisa
Thank you for your letter of 23 November about the All Party Parliamentary Group (APPG) for Home Education.
APPGs are designed to provide an opportunity for Parliamentarians to learn more about a topic, and that is the function served by the Home Education group.
As you may know, I have been engaged in highlighting and challenging inappropriate behaviour by local authority officers regarding home education for some years. This can sometimes feel like an uphill struggle. It is my belief, and that of the APPG, that an association of local authority officers dealing with Home Education would make it easier to share best practice, stamp out misunderstanding and ensure fair treatment of home educating families.
Any such association would determine its own priorities but could provide local authority officers with guidance to help them challenge the sometimes unnecessarily defensive approach adopted by some local authorities towards home educating parents.
Yours sincerely,
Graham
This all illustrates the two cardinal rules for such endeavours. First, keep it short and secondly, ask only one simple question at a time. I have a suspicion that Lisa Amphlett will never receive answers to her questions, whereas I have now the answers to the two most important questions I wished to ask. The third, I shall have in another few days.
Already, the rage is mounting about this and the conspiracy theorists are gearing up. I fear that the only real mystery is why anybody would think for a moment that such a long winded and prolix communication had the remotest chance of being answered!
So basically we should assume MPs have the literacy level of the average Sun reader and adjust our expectations accordingly? Yep, you're probably right...none of them were autonomously educated as far as I know, or they might be able to read and write complex material.
ReplyDelete'none of them were autonomously educated as far as I know, or they might be able to read and write complex material.'
DeleteThere is one home educated MP. Lisa'a reply wasn't written by an MP though. It is a standard thing, knocked up by an aide and sent to several other people who have been asking questions.
And given that level of contemptuousness from an elected MP towards addressing the concerns of stakeholders (who also happen to pay his wages) why does anyone imagine home education is safe in his hands?
ReplyDelete'why does anyone imagine home education is safe in his hands?'
ReplyDeleteI'm not sure who does imagine this! I've met the man and wasn't over impressed.
The problem with your strategy is that superficial, overly-simplistic questions naturally invite superficial or overly-simplistic responses. For example, you asked if Graham Stuart was supporting new regulation. This invited the apparently reassuringly unequivocal response that he is not. However, Lisa asked the much more pertinent question addressing the possibility that the APPG, being comprised of LA officers, will put forward new regulation and this question receives what amounts to a metaphorical two fingers from Graham Stuart's office. Can you not understand the frustration and mistrust this causes? Your superficial question and Lisa's much deeper questions can hardly be compared. It's not so much that there is a right and wrong way to get information it's more that most information is being withheld. If you believe otherwise, why not put it to the test. Take Lisa's questions one at a time and drop a friendly email to Graham Stuart. See if you get answers.
ReplyDelete' Take Lisa's questions one at a time and drop a friendly email to Graham Stuart. See if you get answers.'
DeleteAh, I think I see what you mean. You are suggesting that I should lend her a hand in finding out what she wants to know? I could do that, but I doubt that she would welcome my input. I have a somewhat different agenda, anyway.
What's your agenda?
DeleteI wasn't suggesting that you lend Lisa a hand, merely suggesting that you might like to put to the test your theory that Graham Stuart's response was due to the manner of asking rather than an outright refusal to be open and transparent. I venture to suggest you are unwilling to risk being proved wrong!
ReplyDelete'I venture to suggest you are unwilling to risk being proved wrong!'
DeleteOr perhaps I am very busy. If you are that keen to make the experiment, why not give it a try yourself? I have now had definite answers to two of the questions which I asked and I expect the third and final answer tomorrow. Since I am anxious to maintain good relations with Graham Stuart's office, I don't really see how it would help to bombard them with another thirteen questions over the next three months!
"If you are that keen to make the experiment, why not give it a try yourself?" Well because it isn't my theory it's yours. I wonder then do you propose to put your thinking on this to the test and if so how? Do you usually examine and test your theories?
ReplyDelete'I wonder then do you propose to put your thinking on this to the test and if so how? Do you usually examine and test your theories?'
DeleteWhy yes, this theory has stood the test of time for that very reason.
Well I am unclear on this. Your theory is that Lisa did not get answers from Graham Stuart because she asked the wrong way. Whereas you did get answers because you asked the right way. Please explain how you have put this theory to the test in such a way as to eliminate the possibility that the refusal to answer Lisa was due to the content of her question rather than the manner of her asking?
ReplyDelete' Please explain how you have put this theory to the test in such a way as to eliminate the possibility that the refusal to answer Lisa was due to the content of her question rather than the manner of her asking?'
DeleteAnother difference between Lisa's questions and mine was that she already knew the answer to some of them. For instance:
'To whom do I direct my request for a full client list of the secretariat/secretariat support, as per P11 of the HoC Guide to the Rules on All-Party Groups?'
She knows as well as I do that only Jane Lowe and Fiona Nicholson are members of the secretariat support. The questions that I have been asking are about things that I don't know, but wish to know
Sadly that comment does not address my question.
ReplyDeleteThe Amphlett email reads like something from a 1970s student union "debate". I've mixed feelings about the questions, but they're drowned in the rest of the turgid prose.
ReplyDeleteThat doesn't mean the questions don't deserve an answer, but unfortunately this is the way that politics seems to proceed - too many words and too little thought on either side.
Given Fiona has refused to answer direct questions about her role or indeed the APPG, it's hardly surprising that GS has been asked for clarification. It is disappointing that he hasn't bothered to address the questions. And yes I would expect an MP who is supposed to represent 'us' to answer the questions put forward to him, no matter how in depth or complex they may be.
ReplyDeleteThe questions weren't "in depth or complex" - they were lost in what looks like an opinionated political rant.
DeleteIt's harder to ignore direct, well-formed questions, and an alternative route through a local MP might also be worth a try.
Hysterical!
DeleteAnonymous at 8.15, lol.
DeleteWith all the trolling here by Simon and his sock puppets this blog is a farce.
ReplyDeleteWhile I've crossed swords with the real Cheshire cat on a few occasions, I find you much more obnoxious.
DeleteExactly. There is only one Cheshire cat and you, Madam, are no Cheshire Cat.
Delete'There is only one Cheshire cat and you, Madam, are no Cheshire Cat.'
DeleteI have a suspicion about the identity of the false Cheshire Cat, which incidentally, sounds like an offbeat thriller; The Case of the False Cheshire Cat. Has anybody else noticed the use of the word, 'inanity'? This is a fairly unusual turn of phrase, but I have observed one well-known home educator who is very fond of using both this word and also 'spew'.
You still at it? Twit.
ReplyDelete