Does your 90% come from Mr West? Given that you have shown us that he is prepared to use spurious and dishonest arguments in order to push his political agenda, I am afraid I am not prepared to take anything on trust from him. If you show me some stats from an respectable source we can discuss the issue
Ive shown you stats from a book by an acknowledged expert in the field (he has a centre for the study of education named after him at Newcastle University) edited by a Professor and a PhD student and published by one of the UK's leading think tanks. You have produced...
...nowt. What figures do you have? At the moment ol' EG is the only game in town.
And given your readiness to slander West, you are not the first...
But it was a review in the New Statesman, in extraordinarily intemperate language, by Dr (now Professor Emeritus) A. H. (‘Chelly’) Halsey, of Nuffi eld College, Oxford, which illustrates most profoundly how the ideas upset the prevailing intellectual climate: ‘Of all the verbal rubbish scattered about by the Institute of Economic Affairs,’ Halsey begun, ‘this book is so far the most pernicious.’ ‘Mr West’s ideas’, he wrote, ‘are a crass and dreary imitation of those published several years ago by Professor Milton Friedman – a man whose brilliance in argument is made futile by the absurd irrelevance of his 19th century assumptions.’ ‘Mr West’, said Halsey, ‘is a man who knows nothing about psycho logy, sociology, and who has less understanding of economics than first year students’; as for history: ‘When it comes to the history of education in the 19th century, Mr West goes beyond tolerable error.’ Philosophically, his discussion of ‘equality of opportunity’ was ‘hopeless’. Far from being an ‘impartial enquiry’, West had written, Halsey opined, ‘a gross distortion of the role of the state in education’. The final nail in the coffi n, as far as Halsey was concerned, was that West was far from being ‘civilised . . . like J. S. Mill’.
As it happened, that review was not the end of the matter for the New Statesman. A sober piece in the Daily Telegraph of 27 July 1966 reports the outcome:
Yesterday, after a statement in open court, an unusual action, involving two leading academics, was ended with an apology and costs from the New Statesman to the Institute of Economic Affairs.
The Institute last year published a book by Dr Edward [sic] West . . . Its theme was less State and more parental influence in education.
In the New Statesman Dr Halsey, Head of the Department of Social and Administrative Studies at Oxford, violently criticised the book, Dr West and the Institute. The Institute held that the attack went beyond the limits of fair criticism.
So the New Statesman has apologised handsomely and paid costs. It is consoling that the wider future of education can generate such heat in the Senior Common Room.
In the High Court on 26 July 1966, the magazine gave an unreserved apology for its ‘unjustified attack’ on Dr West and the IEA. Its review, it said, gave a totally misleading impression of West’s argument. The New Statesman published an apology in its edition of 22 July 1966.