Silly Time and the Death of Merit in Education

According to todayโ€™s Sunday Mail, โ€œAlmost a third of pupils are getting extra time in GCSE and A-level exams under rules to help the soaring numbers of children with special educational needs.โ€

No surprise there for me. The expansion of what everyone but the po-faced education bureaucrats who administer it calls โ€œsilly timeโ€โ€”extra exam time awarded for claimed learning difficultiesโ€”is both a symptom and a cause of collapse in British education. At my school, everyone knows the game: you pay ยฃ250 to a friendly private doctor who will furnish you with a diagnosis of ADHD, autism, dyslexia, or some other conveniently nebulous condition. What youโ€™re really buying isnโ€™t treatment but an extra 25 per cent of exam time. Most of these conditions are either fabricated outright or just the medicalisation of stupidity.

A System Built on Pretence

The justification for silly time is fairness, the claim that students with โ€œlearning difficultiesโ€ need extra time to demonstrate their abilities. But when nearly a quarter of pupils in some schools are granted this advantage, the claim stretches credulity. Does anyone seriously believe that one in four people my age suffers from a genuine, debilitating condition? Or is it more likely that the system is being gamed by those with the money and knowledge to exploit its weaknesses?

This culture of gaming the system doesnโ€™t stop with silly time. Courseworkโ€”a substantial part of many gradesโ€”is often ghost-written by parents, tutors, or AI tools. I know someone in my class who handed in a piece of coursework without being able to pronounce or understand some of the words in it. He got a decent mark for that, no questions asked. The entire process is a farce, where marks are given for work that everyone knows was written by ChatGPT. It makes education less a ladder for the able than a prop for the mediocre.

Broken Exams and an Open Secret

Even without silly time, exams themselves are a joke. They donโ€™t measure intelligence or creativity; they reward formulaic thinking and the ability to mimic expected answers. I know this from my own experience.

When preparing for my GCSEs last year, I didnโ€™t study for months on end. Instead, I spent a fortnight in April downloading past papers and their mark schemes. I dissected the bland, repetitive questions and analysed the predictable, checkbox answers. The system was so shallow that success felt like cracking a code in a childrenโ€™s puzzle book. What I found was equal parts enlightening and depressing: the key to top marks wasnโ€™t intelligence or insight but a willingness to play along with a system designed to reward mediocrity. The questions were brain-dead; the answers prepackaged.

I walked away with top marks in everything, but the experience left me cold. Exams should test originality, critical thought, and the ability to argue under pressure. Instead, they reward conformity and punish students who let on too plainly they are thinking for themselves.

Silly time only deepens this absurdity. It grants some students an extended play session in an already trivial game, further bending an already broken system. Far from levelling the playing field, it entrenches inequality, rewarding those who can afford to buy an advantage while penalising those who rely on their own ability.

The Role of Classics in Restoring Standards

The solution is not to patch up the current system but to replace it entirely with something that values excellence and effort. One radical reform would be to require proficiency in Latin or Greekโ€”or bothโ€”for entry to any taxpayer-funded university. I know this will sound at least eccentric, and perhaps Iโ€™ve been spending more time than is good for me with Dr Gabb as my tutor, but itโ€™s based on a plain truth: mastering these languages demands intellectual rigour, and the ability to grapple with complexity. These are the qualities that education ought to encourage and reward.

Learning Latin or Greek isnโ€™t just about translating ancient texts. Itโ€™s an exercise in critical thinking, Itโ€™s about precision, and engagement with ideas that have shaped our civilisation. Unlike todayโ€™s soft humanitiesโ€”with their endless pandering to the lowest common denominatorโ€”the classics demand real intellectual effort. They are a filter, separating the capable from the incapable.

A Defence of the Classics

Proposals like Oxford Universityโ€™s to drop the compulsory study of Homer and Vergil in their original languages illustrate the downsampling of education. The argument is that studying these poems in translation makes them more โ€œaccessible.โ€ What it really does is render them meaningless. Stripped of their linguistic complexity, the classics become an excuse for ideological posturing. Without the trouble of studying Greek or Latin, itโ€™s easy to churn out nonsense about โ€œpost-colonial narrativesโ€ in Vergil or โ€œgender fluidityโ€ in Aeschylus.

Requiring Latin and Greek for university entry would serve as a narrow filter. It would ensure that only those with the aptitude and discipline for serious study receive taxpayer support. It would turn education to a more sensible purpose: identifying and cultivating talent.

A Ruthless Return to Excellence

The aim of education should not be universal participation but the pursuit of excellence. Most students would be better served by vocational training or immediate entry into the workforce. Put bluntly, most of the boys in my class would better serve themselves and their country sent out to address the shortage of agricultural labour. Most of the girls would do better with rings on their fingers and babies at their breasts. The fiction that everyone can benefit from it has devalued education and left us with a glut of graduates unqualified for anything except bureaucratic make-work.

A better system would limit exams to the top 20 per cent of pupils at age 16, narrowing this further to ten per cent at age 18. University should be reserved for the top five per cent with public funding only for those who demonstrate exceptional ability. Everyone else should be expected to go out and find some job suited to his real abilities.

Exams themselves must be rethought. Humanities subjects should be assessed by three-hour, closed-book exams with unexpected essay questions that test originality and critical thinking. Most students, if allowed to waste the taxpayerโ€™s money by sitting them, would failโ€”and that is as it should be. Education should not be about accommodating mediocrity but discarding it.

A System That Embraces Mediocrity

The broader problem goes beyond schools and universities. Weโ€™ve become so obsessed with inclusivity and fairness that weโ€™ve forgotten the value of excellence. Education, once a tool for cultivating talent, has become a means of levelling outcomes. The result is a system that rewards mediocrity and punishes merit.

Conclusion: Education That Discards Mediocrity

Silly time is more than a farce; it one scandalous element of a system that rewards excuses over effort and privilege over talent. Ending it would be a small step toward restoring integrity. But true reform requires more.

We need an education system that ruthlessly discards incapacity and mediocrity, one that prizes effort, originality, and intellect. Requiring Latin or Greek for university entry would be a powerful symbol of this shift, a return to the values of discipline and rigour that once defined education.

Education should not level the playing field. It should reward those who play the hard game and win.

 


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6 comments


  1. It doesn’t matter if you do have a ‘problem’ (significant or otherwise). The whole point of a test/exam is that it tests everyone the same way. If you are blind, for example, then clearly doing the exam requires a different format but then it is a different exam and so should have a different name/qualification.
    Otherwise please enter me for the 100m at the next Olympics, my conditions mean I need some ‘help’ but I am sure that with a 90m head start I could soon be an Olympic champion. And if not then at least an Olympian.


  2. I agree with the essay but would amend a nuance of one important point made and say that if prospective university entrants are required to obtain Latin or Greek, it should merely be an O-level pass as a condition of matriculation, with condonable alternatives such as short summer courses available for students who have not or cannot achieve a pass, perhaps because they never had the opportunity to study those dead languages in the first place. I also differ a little in my view of the relevance of such languages. I don’t believe Latin or Greek can cultivate the mind any more than French or German, it is not a practical or pedagogical point that is at issue. It is more of a political point and a matter of culture and the need to preserve a civilisation by recognising that university entrants will form the socio-political leadership class of society and therefore should have a basic familiarity with one or both of those languages, even if it is very rudimentary and most of them view it as a waste of time. One of the central aims of education is to pass on the baton of culture, and while impractical, the requirement to study Latin or Greek even just a little bit would bring back a sense of seriousness and status to higher education.

    I came to realise long ago that I was robbed of an education because I did not have the opportunity to learn anything in the classical field and there was no influence that could have steered me in that direction. I attended an awful comprehensive and would like to see the end of the mediocrity that has prevailed since the ill-advised reforms of the 1960s onwards – I agree with the author of this piece about all that. I would also like to see the reintroduction of O-levels as the standard post 16 examination, with high standards and exams that intelligent pupils can fail.

    Maybe 80% of children should be following a technical/trades route at dedicated schools and leaving at 15 or 16 for apprenticeships or jobs or training and/or attending polytechnics.

    Polytechnics should be brought back. Most of the existing universities should be closed. Student loans should be abolished.

    However, my dictatorial attitude ends there. The role of the state should be to provide the building infrastructure and set and dictate the public examination standards, and the standards for the academic route should be forbidding. But how each youngster gets there – and even how soon they arrive at a point that they are prepared to sit these forbidding exams – should be down to the pupil, the parent and teachers, not the state. The state should stay out of the classroom.

    Home education/deschooling, with an emphasis on play and fun with a core curriculum in the essentials such as reading, writing, maths, and geography, should be the norm until secondary school age (about 11). At about 12 or 13, it should be apparent in most cases whether a child is going to follow the ‘academic’ route (O- and A-levels, then professional articles, management or university) or the ‘technical’ route (NVQs, maybe O- and A-levels, then polytechnic), or just leave at 14 or 15 for a job or training.

    Accommodation v Modification
    Somebody above mentions the example of a blind candidate. In my opinion, it is reasonable to accommodate this because the issue for the candidate is physiological rather than cognitive. A reasonable accommodation would be to allow the blind candidate a Braille version of the exam paper and to dictate his answers to a scribe. This involves no unfair detriment to other candidates. The blind candidate is still submitting to the same examination, using a comparable method. Possibly slightly more time could be permitted to accommodate the different arrangements. The same applies to a candidate who cannot write due to a physical disability.

    However, if the blind candidate protests and requests that the examination should be conducted by viva or other oral means, that should be refused because it is not a mere accommodation, rather it is a modification that results in the possibility of an unfair advantage to the detriment of other candidates.

    To take another example, let us say we have a candidate who struggles with his English. His first language is Frisian, he was brought up on an island off the German coast. The candidate requests that the examination paper be conducted in either his native language or German. This request should be refused because although it would be an accommodation of the candidate, it relates to a cognitive factor. By entering himself for the examination, the candidate knew that he would be examined in English and that his competence in English usage is an implied part of the assessment of his learning in the subject. His inability to communicate with the examiner is an intellectual problem, his own problem.

    The same must apply to students with any sort of learning difficulty. These are cognitive problems and cannot be fairly accommodated without the possibility of detriment to other candidates. If the point of the exam is to assess learning and you have a learning difficulty, then you are at a disadvantage, but it is a natural disadvantage for which the exam is intended to discriminate against you and this is fair, in much the way that a person of low intelligence must accept that he will have to work harder than other students if he wants to pass and cannot be permitted more time in an exam just so that he can be on a par with brighter students.

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