How to improve education
The need for more books in classroom libraries and the possibility of further use of technologies during reading lessons is also made clear for all to see
The McKinsey& Co Report (2010) classifies the Maltese schooling system as 'fair' in contrast to other international school systems that are classified as 'good', 'great' and even as 'excellent'. This international study implies that our system needs to sustain basic literacy and numeracy skills amongst our students, and needs to consolidate its foundations.
The local situation: children at 7+ (Year 3 Survey Results)
A local survey conducted by the Directorate for Quality and Standards in Education in 2012 among a sample of our Year 3 primary students, and never released in the public domain, clearly shows that the national policy and strategy on Maltese and English literacy, designed by the said Directorate, was not effective at all and failed dramatically. The survey results show that a high rate of children have not mastered basic skills in Maltese and English. This cohort of children was in the first year of primary schooling when the National Policy and Strategy for the Attainment of Core Competences in Primary Education was launched in 2009. The failure of this strategy is clearly shown in the table below which is being published for the very first time:
| Maltese (%) | English (%) | |
| Relates a story in response to a set of pictures |
52.6 | 35.6% |
| Communicates with peers |
87.7 | 35.6 |
| Expresses needs |
89.5 | 51.5 |
| Reads accurately unseen text |
51.5 | 51.2 |
| Infers meaning from text and predicts outcomes | 45.6 | 37.6 |
| Writes a few sentences or a short paragrap | 37.6 | 26.3 |
| Uses upper and lower case letters |
35.1 | 34.4a |
A number of recommendations were internally put forward in order to improve the above worrying situation:
- More time on task and creative use of both languages needs to be allocated;
- The need to increase the use of English in the classroom as part of the daily routine;
- A need for an evaluation of the resources being used in the school and classroom;
- A need for an evaluation of the time allocated for oracy;
- A need for an evaluation of the methods being used in the teaching of writing and reading;
- The need for the children to read and decode texts in real reading situations with connected text;
- The need for a reading programme.
Education and Training Monitoring (2012), a report by the European Commission, shows that participation in early childhood education and care in Malta in 2006 and 2010 declined from 95.6 (which at that time was higher than the EU average, 89.3) to 89.0 (which is lower than the EU average, 92.3) respectively.
A third international report, PIRLS (2012), shows that school headteachers and teachers emphasise academic success and their career satisfaction is quite high. They have to spend their time managing students' behaviour while the issue of bullying in our schools is reported as being high.
The report makes a number of recommendations such as the need for improvement in the teachers' conditions of work, the need for more quality training in literacy, reading and the theory of reading, and an improvement in teachers' formal education and training. Another identified need in our system is that of collaboration between teachers with the ultimate aim to improve teaching.
This study shows that while students are motivated and inclined towards reading, their confidence towards reading needs support and improvement due to the fact that it weakens when compared with their motivation. In our case, we need to narrow the gap between the students that achieve basic skills and the others who fall behind and address the fact that boys tend to achieve less reading skills than girls.
The report recommends that students start their primary education with sound literacy basic skills through better and increased emphasis in early grades on reading skills and strategies. The need for more books in classroom libraries and the possibility of further use of technologies during reading lessons are also highlighted. The report recommends an improvement in the parents' educational expectations of their children's achievement and that their children can succeed.
The report by McKinsey& Co (2010) shows how there is no direct correlation between expenditure per student and their educational outcomes. It concludes that despite an increase in expenditure, a large number of systems either stagnated or regressed, and that systems with similar expenditure classify in different categories. Its recommendation for such systems is not to abandon the desire for educational improvement but to adopt a different approach, hopefully guided by the experiences of other school systems that have succeeded in improving over the longer term.
In our case, Malta's current government spend of €1,095.82 per student is less than the average OECD countries' (OECD, 2012). The report Education and Training Monitoring (2012) refers to the total public investment on education as part of its GDP in 2009, where Malta had 5.46% of its GDP and it was higher than the EU average (5.41%). Interestingly enough, at the pre-primary, primary and tertiary levels, Malta featured below the EU average investment with that on the secondary level being higher (though 15 EU countries had a higher investment than ours).
Evarist Bartolo is shadow minister for education
-
National
Fearne, Cutajar return to Cabinet an ‘abandonment’ of accountability, Repubblika says
-
National
Who’s who in the new Cabinet
-
National
Over 50 pigeons found dead in loft during animal cruelty inspection
More in News-
Business News
Navigating the new era of FinTech: MFSA launches high-level masterclasses on AI, crypto, and MiCA compliance
-
Business News
Alkagesta participates in IATA Aviation Energy Forum amid SAF market transition
-
Business News
Economic sentiment moderates towards long-term average in April
More in Business-
Sportsbetting
What new Irish betting regulation could mean for Maltese bookmakers
-
Sportsbetting
Neptunes crowned BOV U18 champions after decisive win over Sliema
-
Football
Futsal Malta 2025/26: Young challengers face Luxol in Laferla Men’s Trophy final
More in Sports-
Books
The 2026 Doreen Micallef National Poetry Contest is now open for entries
-
Books
New Queen Elizabeth II biography launched at the Phoenicia Malta
-
Art
Malta Biennale 2026 comes to a close
More in Arts-
Opinions
We choose to build Momentum. Not because it is easy, but because it is hard
-
Editorial
Labour must now show it is deserving of the electorate’s renewed trust
-
Opinions
Robert Abela can make some courageous reforms, he has nothing to lose
More in Comment-
Articles
Richard England launches new book Katabasis: A Stygian Odyssey
-
Recipes
Steak, onion and mushroom pie
-
Recipes
Lemon and herb swordfish with tomatoes and mushrooms
More in Magazines