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Articles

Provision for mathematically able children in primary schools: a review of practice five years after England dropped the gifted and talented initiative

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Pages 358-380 | Received 08 Mar 2017, Accepted 10 May 2017, Published online: 05 Jun 2017
 

Abstract

After the abandonment of the Gifted and Talented initiative and the recent developments in mathematics educational policy (i.e. the new national curriculum and the “mastery” initiative), this research project aimed to explore the current primary school situation regarding educating the “most able” children in mathematics, along with teachers’ views, experiences and perceived needs. This was a pilot research study gathering insights from a small number of schools in order to identify areas that could be improved by larger-scale research studies. The findings obtained from 49 schools under four local educational authorities in southwest England suggested that the education of children with the ability or potential to excel in mathematics has reached a crucial stage. There is a real need for specialised support and guidance in recognising and developing mathematical potential for classroom teachers and school leaders who try on their own to discover what could enable them to meet the government’s educational target of achieving “excellence everywhere”. This support should have underpinnings from theory and research, preventing our schools from using questionable practices or repeating methods that have failed in the past. This article highlights research areas specifically for this reason. It also raises some questions with potential implications for the special educational needs coordinator’s role, as well as for implementing new initiatives like the mathematics “mastery curriculum”.

Acknowledgements

The research for this paper was financially supported by Plymouth University’s Research Bidding Scheme (R1, June 2015). The authors thank colleagues from Plymouth University for technical assistance (Claudia Blandon) and critical support (Linda La Velle and Nick Pratt).

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