Skip to main content
New union sets agenda for defending education
In his second article, KEVIN COURTNEY writes that teachers have natural allies in parents and other trade union members. Working with these people will have a transformative effect on how teaching is delivered

The scale of the challenges the NEU — National Education Union — will face are immense.  The Global Education Reform Movement (GERM) is a phenomenon that has introduced a number of far reaching neoliberal policies and methods into education around the world over the past decade.

Central to the GERM are ideas that include: competition between schools and teachers drives up standards; that to have competition you need a high degree of standardised testing; that education workers rewards should be directly linked to test outcomes; that private companies are better suited to this environment; and that education unions are an obstacle to be overcome.

These policies are promoted not only by national governments, but also international bodies such as the World Bank, IMF, OECD — and, not to forget, global “edu-businesses” that seek to make a profit from what is a universal human right.

  • Kevin Courtney is general secretary of the NUT.
The 95th Anniversary Appeal
Support the Morning Star
You have reached the free limit.
Subscribe to continue reading.
Similar stories
WORKING CLASS SOLIDARITY: Pickets mass outside the Rupert Murdoch's new News International printing plant in support of the print unions on February 22 1986
Workers' Rights / 24 January 2026
24 January 2026

A past confrontation permanently shaped the methods the state will use to protect employers against any claims by their employees, writes MATT WRACK, but unions are readying to face the challenge

BRAVE NEW WORLD? Annual British Educational Training and Technology conference in London, January 2025, where Education Secretary Bridget Phillipson set out plans to use technology to ‘modernise’ the education system, support teachers and ‘deliver’ for pupils
Technology / 27 June 2025
27 June 2025

NICOLA SARAH HAWKINS explains how an under-regulated introduction of AI into education is already exacerbating inequalities