|
Virgin
founder Richard Branson attacks lack of business lessons
at school
- 11th October 2015


Your
text advertisement here from as little as $100USD
per 12 months
Profiles
Business
Movies
Hollywood
Sports
Television
Entertainment
Australia
Advertising
Promotions

Sir
Richard Branson has urged Britains schools to
come up to date and devote more
time to teaching entrepreneurship.
His
call comes as figures from the National Union of Teachers
suggest that more than 50 per cent of teachers in
England are thinking of quitting in the next two years,
with 61 per cent blaming an excessive workload.
Branson,
who claims current teaching methods are of the
19th Century, told The Mail on Sunday: I
wish schools could be a bit more involved in trying
to teach entrepreneurship and inspire kids at school.
He
said the environment in Britain is fantastic for small
businesses at the moment, and added: Britain
is more entrepreneurial than France and Germany put
together. But he complained that schools do
not give students a taste of that while they are at
school.
That
would very much help them decide which direction they
want to go in life, he said.
The
NUT will lobby Parliament on November 18 about what
it calls an education funding crisis, and hopes to
persuade MPs that freez- ing school funding is wrong
when pupil numbers are rising while teacher
recruitment and retention is falling. Bransons
damning verdict on the education system comes after
the Government failed to deliver an enterprise adviser
for every school by September.
In
an interview with The Mail on Sunday ahead of the
Election, Lord Young then David Camerons
enterprise adviser discussed plans for this
and for a new enterprise passport scheme
to recognise activities outside the classroom, such
as voluntary work and sports achievements.
He
said at the time: I think it will take us a
while to do, but added: The advisers will
start from next September. He said that enterprise
passports would be introduced in 2016.
The
Governments new Careers and Enterprise Company,
headed by Christine Hodgson, chairwoman of management
consultancy Capgeminis UK board, is tasked with
delivering the schemes. Lord Young is a deputy chairman.
It
has revealed it started to work with 28 Local Enterprise
Partnerships on the adviser scheme in September, but
12 others, including Coventry & Warwickshire and
Greater Manchester, are listed as not participating
yet.
LEPs
vary greatly in size and resources, but are increasingly
expected to become powerful players in Chancellor
George Osbornes devolution revolution.
Neeta
Patel, chief executive of the New Entrepreneurs Foundation,
a charity focused on future business leaders, said:
Schools are busy, businesses are busy. Teachers
generally dont have business experience and
are nervous about it. It doesnt neatly fit into
schools pedagogy of learning.
Ive
said to Lord Young, Yes, it inspires children
when they see someone from their school who has started
a business, but its not education, its
inspiration.
She
added: This is my view, but I think governments
have a view that if you push more into schools somehow
youll have better quality students coming out,
and they dont understand the stress schools
are under. I think some schools are really struggling.
It
needs a rethink, how we introduce enterprise education
into schools. Having an enterprise adviser would form
part of that strategy having speakers forms
a part of it, but its not the end of it.
|