In his announcement at BETT 2012, the education secretary, Mr Gove, effectively removed ICT as a subject from the curriculum of English schools to be replaced, in effect, by ‘Computing’. This announcement, and indeed during the months leading up to the announcement, has seen much debate and some degree of schism among educationalists, who have either been in favour of a move toward teaching computer science or who have been defensive of good ICT teaching where it has existed. Of course, other educationalists have been sat on the side bemused by the debate, feeling, perhaps, that it doesn’t affect them.
The reality is that the announcement does affect all of us in education, particularly if we wish to keep the good elements of ICT and promote best teaching of computing. This I feel is the challenge to us all as a result of Mr Gove’s announcement; how can we keep the good elements of ICT and implement effective teaching of computing plus, of course, how to keep both developing in the future.
This is unlikely to be brought about by pro and anti ICT teachers arguing with each other. It is surely time to come together and create something new. That ‘something’ needs to be not restricted to a new ‘subject’ teaching but to be more truly cross-curricular and bring non-ICT teachers into the debate.
Related articles
- Digital literacy campaign – Michael Gove speech and live Q&A (guardian.co.uk)
- You: Michael Gove to scrap ‘boring’ IT lessons (guardian.co.uk)
- Gove proposes ‘wiki curriculum’ (guardian.co.uk)
- National News: Gove brands ICT curriculum ‘a mess’ (coventrytelegraph.net)
- Computer science reboot (guardian.co.uk)
- Michael Gove: ‘IT lessons are boring’ (telegraph.co.uk)
- Michael Gove brands ICT curriculum ‘a mess’ (independent.co.uk)
- Kids should be making software, not just using it – Gove (go.theregister.com)
- Michael Gove admits schools should teach computer science (guardian.co.uk)

Possibly Related Posts:
- Learning Without Frontiers 2012 a quick view
- Who’s Going to Buy Apple’s New eTextbooks?
- Subscription Services for Schools, Why?
- Do Learning Styles Really Exist?
- BETT 2012 first impressions
Post Revisions:
- 12 January, 2012 @ 8:17 [Current Revision] by doug
- 12 January, 2012 @ 8:17 by doug
- 12 January, 2012 @ 8:16 by doug
- 12 January, 2012 @ 8:15 by doug
Tags: Computing, Education, ICT, Michael Gove






















Bringing teachers from all subject areas into the future role of ICT teaching is essential. Learning Technology, ICT, Computing – all will become integrated in every subject so every teacher must adapt if they have not done so already. Gove has basically given the technology specialists what they have been crying out for, complete freedom in their approach to the teaching of Technology. And we must share our expertise with those that may feel lost come September when the current outdated ICT curriculum is finally abolished.
RT @deerwood: RT @deerwood Mr Gove’s Challenge to Us All http://t.co/EnOjUL3N My thoughts on that announcement
RT @deerwood: Mr Gove’s Challenge to Us All http://t.co/Q4pcDJZ9 #BETT
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