Scientists must join artists and writers in speaking out against English school reforms聽that have triggered a 鈥渢errifying collapse in the teaching of creativity鈥, the director of the Victoria and Albert Museum has said.
In a debate with Sir Paul Nurse, director of the Francis Crick Institute, at Queen Mary University of London on 7 November, Tristram Hunt, who leads the specialist London design museum, called on scientists to add their weight to calls to scrap the English Baccalaureate system in which students are required to take five compulsory GCSEs 鈥 maths, science, English, geography or history and a languages. Many聽聽that the Ebacc is discouraging schools from offering creative subjects, such as art, design and drama.
While the Ebacc system, which began being phased into schools in 2010, would appear to push more students towards science subjects, science would not benefit in the long run if learners were not given the opportunity聽to be creative at school, said Dr Hunt.
鈥淭he campaign against some of the curriculum changes has been led by artists and designers, but if scientists and their institutions came out and said 鈥榥arrowing the curriculum does no good for science鈥 that would be a really powerful message,鈥 said Dr Hunt, a historian and former Labour shadow education secretary.
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鈥淣ot leaving it to theatre producers, artists and authors would be a really powerful statement,鈥 he added.
Dr Hunt cited last year鈥檚 5 per cent drop in university applications to study creative arts and design, which聽resulted in 14,000 fewer applications for courses in these disciplines, as聽evidence聽of the impact of the Ebacc policy. Almost 10,000聽聽pupils sat a design and technology GCSE this year compared to 2017 鈥 with just 117,605 sitting the subject in 2018, latest figures also show.
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鈥淚nnate creative capacity is something we have to foster more than ever,鈥 argued Dr Hunt. He added that 鈥渨e are still ahead of robots in terms of ingenuity and imagination, but they are catching up.鈥
鈥淚 do not mind [politicians] ignoring cultural institutions 鈥 that is often to be welcomed 鈥 but the political decisions around school management have had devastating consequences,鈥 he said.
The event, for BBC Radio 3鈥檚 Free Thinking programme聽鈥 which was chaired by聽探花视频聽columnist聽Shahidha Bari, senior lecturer in romanticism at Queen Mary聽鈥 aimed to revisit the famous 1959 lecture 鈥淭wo Cultures鈥澛燽y novelist and scientist CP Snow, which argued that there was not enough of a connection between science and the humanities.
Agreeing with Dr Hunt, Sir Paul, a Nobel prizewinning physicist, said that it was a 鈥渃omplete mistake鈥 to force young people down a scientific path too early.
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鈥淲e are selling our youth short by making them specialise so early 鈥 a good scientist has to be creative to discover the new,鈥 Sir Paul said.
On the 鈥渢wo cultures鈥 question, Mr Hunt also cited the history of the V&A, which began life in 1852 as the Museum of Manufactures but was later divided in the 19th聽century, with the Science Museum and V&A, which promotes decorative arts, occupying different sites on the same road in South Kensington.
鈥淚f you want a symbol of the 20th-century division, the splitting of [institutions on] Exhibition Road is a good example,鈥 he said.
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