Exam Nation, Sammy Wright
Exam Nation, Sammy Wright
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Exam Nation
Why Our Obsession with Grades Fails Everyone – and a Better Way to Think About School

Author: Sammy Wright

Narrator: Sammy Wright

Unabridged: 10 hr 1 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 08/15/2024


Synopsis

Brought to you by Penguin.

Exams, grades, league tables, Ofsted reports. All of them miss the point of school and together they are undermining our whole approach to education.

What is school for? Drawing on his twenty years as a teacher, hundreds of interviews and his experience on the UK Government's Social Mobility Commission, head teacher Sammy Wright exposes the fundamental misconception at the heart of our education system. By focussing on the grades pupils get in neatly siloed, academic subjects, we end up ranking them and our schools into winners and losers: some pupils are set on a trajectory to university - the rest are left ill-equipped for the world they actually face.

Wright's entertaining and hugely important book shows that schools are - and should be - so much more than this. With wisdom and humour, balancing idealism and pragmatism, he sets out what a better way would look like and how we might get there.

'An essential read – as entertaining as it is insightful – for anyone who cares about the way we treat young people' Observer

‘Deeply absorbing . . . Wright deserves the highest marks’ Financial Times

'Such a compelling read, no matter your outlook' Telegraph

‘Brilliantly illuminates the realities and blindspots of the system’ Jeffrey Boakye

‘A thoughtful and considered analysis . . . that asks searching questions . . . with sympathy and intelligence’ Michael Gove, The Times

‘Extraordinary and brilliant . . . the book education has been waiting for’ Laura McInerney, co-founder of Teacher Tapp

‘A tremendous book, like the best lesson ever – informed, funny, fair’ Richard Beard

*AS HEARD ON BBC RADIO 4 BOOK OF THE WEEK*

© Sammy Wright 2024 (P) Penguin Audio 2024

Reviews

Goodreads review by Eve on September 01, 2024

where to begin? it's bizzare reading a book about schools, written by your teacher, just after your little brother got his alevel results and you got your qts, first of all. second of all, its fascinating to read this in the limbo i'm in currently where i somehow both identify with "student" and "te......more

Goodreads review by Tim on August 27, 2024

This book really hits the nail on the head about the state of our education system. Maybe I was so impressed with it because he has expressed more eloquently than I could many conclusions that I have reached over my 30 years teaching. I love the nuance of his analysis (he doesn't just say "get rid o......more

Goodreads review by Debby on August 25, 2024

I listened to this on BBC Sounds. The timing of Sammy Wright’s book couldn’t be better (with recent GCSE and A Level results). He draws on his experience as a Head Teacher of more than 20 years and he tells the story about Britain's national exam obsession - and the harm it does. I thoroughly enjoye......more

Goodreads review by Jakub on September 10, 2024

What is a school for? That is broadly the question that this book tries to answer, by looking at policy structures, individual schools as well as the author's own experiences and approaches. The author is a teacher and a school leader and sits within the more progressive side of the mainstream, whic......more

Goodreads review by John on December 28, 2024

Just finished reading (well listening on Spotify) [URL not allowed] by Sammy Wright, and I cannot recommend it highly enough. This is a book that every parent, teacher, policymaker, and member of our communities should read. Why? Our education system desperately needs radical change and this b......more


Quotes

An essential read – as entertaining as it is insightful – for anyone who cares about the way we treat young people . . . This book is a pleasure to read and its strength is that it is not . . . an enraged, politicised polemic. It is a considered and nuanced . . . diagnosis, looking at education from every possible angle . . . Exam Nation wears its sometimes disturbing findings lightly and mixes in healthy doses of self-awareness and black humour throughout . . . brilliant Observer

A deeply absorbing book that should be read by anyone who wants to understand how our current system really works — or rather, about the many ways in which it doesn’t . . . Wright’s most powerful argument is that as long we have our current system in place we are simply wasting the potential of the long school years — and our nation’s young . . . Wright deserves the highest marks for giving us deep insight into his considerable experience in the classroom and elaborating on all these complex themes with subtlety and a keen intelligence Financial Times

Well-researched, compelling and thought-provoking . . . funny and self-interrogating . . . such a compelling read, no matter your outlook on our educational system . . . it will force any reader interested in education, with whatever their prejudices, to think about the experience of school, what it is for and who it is serving. And how, perhaps, we might make it better Telegraph

Persuasive . . . Really this is a book about inequality and fairness . . . refreshingly unsentimental. He is clearly a superb teacher himself . . . Wright gives a series of good, quick and easy-to-follow guides to government education policy . . . His main point is this: schools are only part of a student’s life. They can make a big difference, but there’s a limit to how much they can mitigate the problems caused by entrenched poverty. This is not a call to return to the ‘soft bigotry of low expectations’, just a polite request to engage with reality Literary Review

A thoughtful and considered analysis of our education system that asks searching questions about what school is for . . . with sympathy and intelligence. He makes a series of recommendations for improvement . . . most of which are eminently desirable The Times, *Book of the Week*

No book in recent years has made quite the same impact on the education sector as this extraordinary volume. It is going to be quoted for generations to come… a brilliant read from start to finish Church Times

The timing of Sammy Wright’s book couldn’t be better . . . [this] should be a good moment for some serious soul-searching about the state of our schools . . . His journey through the history of English education, its relationship to class, and our exam culture, meets that challenge . . . it is rich in analysis of the current problem and in solutions, too Guardian

Exam Nation is compelling and complicated, much like the system it chronicles . . . on reflection, he is right New Statesman

To write this book, Wright has put in the hard yards. He visited 20 schools over the course of a year and interviewed hundreds of children . . . Wright’s talent is to let these voices shine through . . . Wright also has a neat turn of phrase; you can see how he’d be an inspirational English teacher Daily Mail

A tremendous book, like the best lesson ever – informed, funny, fair – I’d defy any reader not to learn much of value, and not just about school