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Family & Education

A more flexible national curriculum could benefit Jewish studies

An often crowded timetable constrains the number of lessons dedicated to Hebrew and other Jewish subjects

May 13, 2025 16:01
Chief Rabbi's Schools Review.png
photo: the Chief Rabbi's Schools Review
2 min read

Since the national curriculum was introduced into state schools in England in 1988, it has undergone periodic reviews. The latest one, recently carried out, produced an interim report.

What is clear is there is not going to be any radical overhaul. The review team say they “intend to retain the mainstay of existing arrangements”. Their approach will be “evolutionary” rather than “revolutionary” . The present set-up has had a positive impact on numeracy and literacy in comparison with other countries. However, improvements could be made, they believe, as the system does not work well for everyone.

They are not minded to propose changing the number of subjects taken by children at GCSE, for example - commonly nine - and they believe exams should remain the “primary means” of assessment.

Nevertheless, they do wonder whether the English Baccalaureate (EBacc) measure - which was designed to encourage the take-up of traditional academic subjects - has unnecessarily constrained the choice of subjects. For EBacc, children need to take English, maths, two sciences, a modern language and history or geography at GCSE.