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2015 is a year of historic anniversaries but children won't know them, claims Schools Minister

Waterloo, Agincourt and Magna Carta all have century anniversaries

Richard Garner
Wednesday 07 January 2015 13:52 EST
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Nick Gibb, the Schools minister
Nick Gibb, the Schools minister (Susannah Ireland/The Independent)

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The general knowledge of today’s pupils is so weak that key historic anniversaries this year will mean little to school leavers, Schools Minister Nick Gibb has warned.

“2015 is a year of historic anniversaries – 800 years since the signing of the Magna Carta, 600 years since the Battle of Agincourt and the bicentenary of the Battle of Waterloo,” he writes in The Independent today. “Sadly, these seminal events will mean little to many young people.”

Mr Gibb cites as evidence a survey by Cardiff University showing 83 per cent of undergraduates did not know that Wellington won the battle of Waterloo and 88 per cent could not name a single 19th-century Prime Minister.

The reason, he says, is a deep-seated ideology that regards knowledge as “second fiddle to so-called skills”.

He calls for a return to the use of traditional textbooks, claiming their use is now rare – particularly in primary schools. Those that are in use, he adds “tend to be geared to passing exams rather than inspiring a love of a particular subject”.

2015 anniversaries

200 years Battle of Waterloo, 18 June 1815

600 years Battle of Agincourt, 25 October 1415

800 years Signing of the Magna Carta, 15 June 1215

83 per cent of undergraduates did not know that Wellington won the battle of Waterloo (Getty)
83 per cent of undergraduates did not know that Wellington won the battle of Waterloo (Getty) (Getty Images)

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